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Why Trump is renewing attacks on trans people in the final days of his campaign

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Wed, Oct 30, 2024 11:00 AM

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Plus: Open AI's for-profit transition, the racism at the heart of election denialism, and more. Octo

Plus: Open AI's for-profit transition, the racism at the heart of election denialism, and more. October 30, 2024 [View in browser]( [Aja Romano]( is a senior culture reporter for Vox, focusing on the ethics of culture, as well as criticism and commentary on internet culture, movies, TV, theater, and other media. [Aja Romano]( is a senior culture reporter for Vox, focusing on the ethics of culture, as well as criticism and commentary on internet culture, movies, TV, theater, and other media.   The cruel truth behind Trump’s attacks on trans people [an illustration of a girl looking at her ipad dreamily] Alex Kent/Getty Images Editor's note: With the US election just days away, Today, Explained is devoting this week to looking at the highly consequential stakes of the presidential election for the world, for immigrants, and more. To support this work, [become a Vox Member](. Independent journalism is under attack, but it's needed more than ever. Your support makes a difference. Today, senior culture reporter Aja Romano explores why Donald Trump's campaign has renewed attacks on trans people. With mere days left on the 2024 political campaign trail, you might have noticed the Trump camp has increasingly turned to scapegoating familiar targets, including immigrants, the press, and women. It has also increasingly doubled down on attacks on trans people. A recent [report]( by ABC News revealed that nearly a third of recent campaign funds — or $21 million, per ABC’s report — for television advertising has been spent on transphobic messaging from the Trump campaign and various conservative political groups. The independent journalist collective [the Bulwark]( pushed the total even higher, to $40 million poured into transphobic advertising within the last five weeks. The ads, paid for by the Trump campaign, use a [litany of transphobic coding](, including photoshopping Kamala Harris to appear as though she’s posing beside a nonbinary person in a mustache and a dress, despite plenty of evidence that this strategy is a turn-off for voters. “Kamala even supports letting biological men compete against our girls in their sports,” one ad declares. All three ads [attack Harris]( for supporting gender-affirmative care for trans prisoners, including surgery where medically necessary. “Kamala is for they/them,” each ad concludes. “President Trump is for you.” Given that trans people make up [barely half of 1 percent]( of the US adult population and that trans-related issues are [low on the priority list]( of most voters, many might find it baffling that Trump has focused so much of his attention on singling out trans people. Indeed, two different media research groups, the left-leaning [Data for Progress]( and video marketing firm [Ground Media](, working in partnership with [GLAAD](, each released studies last week finding that the ads had no real impact on voter decision-making and instead alienated many viewers, even among Republicans, who felt they were “mean-spirited.” So then why do them? Well, there’s “winning” in terms of appealing to voters, and then there’s “winning” in terms of determining the conversation. Keeping the focus on trans people — Harris’s actual policy proposals [do almost nothing]( to advance the status of trans citizens — fires up a certain base and crowds out other discussion. But the fallout here isn’t voters distracted from the real issues. The fallout instead comes in an important detail from one of those aforementioned studies. [Ground Media]( found that while the negative messaging didn’t change viewers’ minds about Kamala Harris, it did significantly increase viewers’ negativity about trans and nonbinary people across all demographics. In other words, these ads help to reinforce the idea of a common enemy. They are continuing — which is to say winning, in a very real sense — the larger [ongoing culture war]( against [queer]( and [trans people](. The willingness of Trump and his supporters to invest in these ads arguably indicates that even if Harris wins the election, marginalized communities in red states will still be under threat from Trump supporters and from growing legal restrictions on those regions. But trans people aren’t isolated targets. They are scapegoats in the historical sense — canaries in the coal mine for the growing march of fascism in the US. That puts all of us in danger. Trump centering transphobia in his campaign strategy is not new. It’s the culmination of a decade-long conservative political strategy of weaponizing anti-trans messaging to undermine and reverse what was a broad cultural shift toward LGBTQ equality. In 2013, in a landmark move, the American Psychiatric Association [reclassified]( gender dysphoria — the feeling of not being aligned with your presumed-at-birth gender — so that it was no longer classified as a mental disorder, thereby setting the stage for a much-needed societal shift toward accepting and understanding trans people. The following year, Time magazine placed Orange Is the New Black star Laverne Cox on its cover, [declaring]( that trans rights were “America’s next civil rights frontier.” The backlash was almost instantaneous. A month later, the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest protestant religious group in the country, passed [a resolution]( singling out trans people and stating, “[W]e oppose all cultural efforts to validate claims to transgender identity.” As the Supreme Court’s 2015 decision to legalize same-sex marriage took effect, conservative groups turned away from targeting queer people to instead target trans people in a “divide and conquer” strategy, as a conservative organizer named Meg Kilgannon [summarized](in a 2017 Family Research Council panel: “For all of its recent success, the LGBT alliance is actually fragile,” she told the assembly. “If you separate the T from the alphabet soup, we’ll have more success.” To do this, conservatives joined forces with unlikely allies, including “[trans-exclusionary radical feminists](,” to drum up antagonistic sentiments against trans people. Right-wingers spread alarmism, [rolling out dozens of anti-trans bathroom laws]( across the nation, then using them to introduce other transphobic ideas into local conservative platforms, all of them coming [straight out of the moral panic playbook](. These tactics didn’t directly address the sociocultural progress that trans people were making; instead, they cultivated a new wave of unfounded fear and alarmism about trans people themselves. And the propaganda has only gotten more effective over time. Where transphobic bathroom bills mostly failed a decade ago, they’re now coming back into fashion; last week, [Odessa, Texas, passed a bathroom bill]( that offers a $10,000 bounty paid to anyone who spies a trans person using the “wrong” bathroom. The core elements we see used to attack and oppress trans people in the US in 2024 aren’t really about trans people; we’ve seen these same fearmongering tropes weaponized against numerous marginalized groups throughout history. They serve a greater political purpose — not just to demonize one specific group of people but to reinforce an in-group mentality that can then be deployed against all enemies. These attacks are a political cudgel. This strategy harks back to [another era of fascism](. It’s vital to recognize the parallels to Hitler’s Germany here (especially given John Kelly’s [recent allegations]( that Trump praised Hitler himself): to understand that trans and queer people aren’t being attacked in isolation, but rather in tandem with [immigrants](, the [disabled and mentally ill](, and [women](. The strategy at work deploys moral hysteria, a culture-wide “othering” of marginalized groups, and most importantly a push for a government response to the perceived problem of these outlying groups. By unifying around the public’s negative perceptions of these groups, the Republican Party amasses power and control at all levels of government. Trump has [threatened repeatedly]( to wield that amassed power against his political opponents if he is reelected. And this, ultimately, is the real threat — not just to trans people, but to everyone. [Follow Vox's 2024 election coverage]( Catch up on the big moments you need to know as Vox's writers provide incisive analysis of the news and explain the issues driving voters now.   [Listen]( How Trump could steal the election Donald Trump doesn't want to let losing the election stop him from taking the White House. Politico's Kyle Cheney details the Trump plan to overturn a Harris win and explains what it would take to stop that from happening. [Listen now](         [Sam Altman, chief executive officer of OpenAI, speaks at the Microsoft Build event in Seattle, Washington, on May 21, 2024] Chona Kasinger/Bloomberg via Getty Images OpenAI’s for-profit transition isn’t what you think: When OpenAI was founded in 2015, it began as a nonprofit research lab. Now, the artificial intelligence company is attempting to transition to a more conventional corporate structure. However, nonprofit-to-for-profit conversions are rare, and misinformation has swirled about what exactly this change would even look like. Nonprofit law experts say that [the situation is being widely misunderstood](. How much does early voting tell us about the race? Not as much as we want it to. Historically, Democrats have been more likely to vote early in states where that’s an option, but with just a week before the election, they’re just barely ahead of Republican early votes nationally. However, [that doesn’t mean victory for former President Donald Trump](. What to know about Mexico’s new president: Early this month, Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo was inaugurated as Mexico’s first woman president. A climate scientist by training,[Sheinbaum has already pledged to reshape the country’s energy industry]( by investing in clean energy and reducing greenhouse gas emissions, among other agenda items. Another chance for a blue moment in Texas? A Senate race between Democratic Rep. Colin Allred and incumbent Republican Sen. Ted Cruz is close — close enough that election watchers say it could [inspire Democrats to continue pouring money and time into races in the state](. The racism at the center of election denialism: At former president Donald Trump’s Sunday night rally in New York, speakers like Tucker Carlson and Stephen Miller warned supporters about the threat nonwhite people pose to the election. While in 2020 it was “urban” voters who were coded as perpetrators of voter fraud, [in 2024, immigrants and noncitizens would likely be blamed for another Trump loss.]( And elsewhere ... Steve Bannon released from prison: The controversial right-wing podcaster and former Trump administration official has been released from prison. In 2022, Bannon was sentenced to four months in prison for defying subpoenas from the House January 6 committee and was convicted of two counts of contempt of Congress. [[NBC News](] Hundreds of ballots destroyed: Officials are investigating fires at two ballot drop boxes in Portland, Oregon, as well as a fire at a ballot box in Vancouver, Washington. [[CNN](] [voters at an LA ballot box in October 2024] Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images   69 percent If you’re feeling nervous about the election, you’re not alone. According to this year’s American Psychological Association’s Stress in America poll, that's the percentage of American adults who said that the 2024 presidential election was a “significant” source of stress in their lives. In the lead-up to November 5 — and the possibly uneasy days to follow — there are some strategies that can help quiet your mind. [Here’s your guide to combating the creep of election anxiety.]( [An illustration of a woman with her hair blown back, with phantoms coming from her phone screen. ] Getty Images/iStockphoto   Are you enjoying the Today, Explained newsletter? Forward it to a friend; they can [sign up for it right here](. And as always, we want to know what you think. Specifically: If there is a topic you want us to explain or a story you’re curious to learn more about, let us know [by filling out this form]( or just replying to this email. Today’s edition was produced and edited by senior editor Lavanya Ramanathan, with contributions from staff editor Melinda Fakuade. We'll see you tomorrow!   [Help us reach our goal!](   [Help us reach our goal of 5,000 new Vox Members by Election Day. Support journalism that empowers, informs, and drives the conversation.]( [BECOME A MEMBER](   Ad   [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( [TikTok]( [WhatsApp]( This email was sent to {EMAIL}. Manage your [email preferences]( [unsubscribe](param=sentences). If you value Vox’s unique explanatory journalism, support our work with a one-time or recurring [contribution](. View our [Privacy Notice]( and our [Terms of Service](. Vox Media, 1701 Rhode Island. NW, Washington, DC 20036. Copyright © 2024. All rights reserved.

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