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The toll of America’s anti-trans war

To understand how the anti-trans agenda could reshape all of our lives, The 19th set out to examine how the laws and rhetoric behind it are impacting Americans.

Collage-style illustration featuring elements of surveillance, government, and activism. Security cameras overlooking a group of people, with the U.S. Capitol building in the background. Surrounding these are various symbols of justice and control, including a gavel, a megaphone, and scattered pills.
(Barbara Gibson for The 19th)

The 19th Staff

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2024-08-26 05:00
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August 26, 2024
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Member support made it possible for us to write this series. Donate to our nonprofit newsroom today to support independent journalism that represents you.

For a few years now, whether we’ve noticed it or not, gender has become a test to pass or fail.

Since 2021, at least 177 anti-transgender bills have become law in states across the country, according to the Trans Legislation Tracker. The bills largely aim to keep trans girls out of school sports, support misgendering in schools or prevent doctors from treating gender dysphoria in youth through gender-affirming care. 

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But no bill works as a scalpel; we are all taking this new gender test. How are cisgender women of color being harmed by anti-trans rhetoric in sports? Is anti-trans rhetoric making it harder for low-income girls to access free menstrual products at school? Does it threaten to make jury pools less diverse?

At The 19th, we have been asking deep questions about what anti-LGBTQ+ bills mean for our transgender, nonbinary and gender nonconforming readers. We are also invested in understanding the toll they take on our wider world. Anti-transgender legislation and rhetoric is reshaping all of our lives, from bodily autonomy to education, privacy and the access and use of public spaces. Are we paying attention? 

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Not too long ago, it looked like the movement to pass anti-LGBTQ+ legislation was doomed to fail. In 2017, backlash from entertainers, athletes and corporate America pushed lawmakers in North Carolina to repeal a law that forced individuals to use public bathrooms based on the gender on their birth certificates. In 2018, voters in Alaska rejected a similar measure, while in Massachusetts, they chose to retain LGBTQ+ anti-discrimination protections already enshrined into law. To most, the writing was on the wall: In the land of marriage equality, going after LGBTQ+ rights was a political non-starter. 

Then came 2020. 

Just before COVID shuttered statehouses, Idaho squeaked through two anti-trans bills. One barred trans girls from playing on sports teams. The other blocked trans people from updating their birth certificates. The Idaho laws were among more than 75 anti-trans bills to hit statehouses that year, an unprecedented number. 

The door had been cracked open. 

Within the next two years, Republican lawmakers and conservatives running for office would reach new extremes in anti-trans rhetoric. Schools started banning Pride flags as political speech. States like Texas and Florida became bellwethers for anti-LGBTQ+ policy nationwide. 

Anti-transgender bills flooded state legislatures. This time, these bills strategically did not reference transgender people, even while proposing ways to restrict their lives. Instead, lawmakers framed these measures as a means of protecting cisgender women from trans women — as if trans people were a threat or, worse, as if they did not exist at all. 

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These state bills framed the idea of being transgender as unnatural or biologically impossible; a political “ideology” that contaminated  children — as opposed to being a normal part of life — and seeped into mainstream politics. In a second Trump administration, these once-fringe beliefs could well become tenets of the federal government. Project 2025, a policy blueprint created by the conservative Heritage Foundation, serves at once as foundation and guidepost for this effort, while the virulent language used to describe trans people during the Republican National Convention sets the tone for what may come.  

To understand how the anti-trans agenda could reshape all of our lives, our reporters have set out to examine how anti-trans laws are impacting the lives of Americans, whether or not they are trans. The goal is to connect the dots that will show how these laws, intended to target a small minority, are rewriting the future for all of us, and for generations to come. This is the Toll of America’s Anti-Trans War.

This series will be updated with new stories throughout the week.


Blue and red states were putting period products in schools — then came the anti-trans backlash

For years, bills that put tampons and pads in school bathrooms were gaining traction across states. But the rise of anti-trans legislation has made a health issue political. Read the full story.

  • Read The Full Story:
    Collage style illustration featuring a school building, with an overlay of watchful eyes. Other elements include tampons and pads scattered across the composition, a roll of toilet paper unraveling, and a black-and-white photograph of women.
  • Read The Full Story: Blue and red states were putting period products in schools — then came the anti-trans backlash

How anti-trans policies in Project 2025 could impact all families

The vision for Trump’s second term in the White House purports to protect families — but its anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric is centered in exclusion. Read the full story.

  • Read The Full Story:
    An abstract illustration depicting Donald Trump and the U.S. Capitol Building.
  • Read The Full Story: How anti-trans policies in Project 2025 could impact all families

Could courthouses provide the blueprint for safe transgender bathrooms?

As states move to exclude trans people from using certain public spaces, courtroom accessibility is key to ensuring that jury pools reflect the makeup of the country, experts say. Read the full story.

  • Read The Full Story:
    Collage-style illustration on which on one side, a man in a suit and hat uses binoculars to peer into a row of bathroom stalls. The other side features the interior of a courtroom with columns and gavels are scattered throughout.
  • Read The Full Story: Could courthouses provide the blueprint for safe transgender bathrooms?

Anti-trans violence is coming for cisgender women of color, advocates say

Imane Khelif’s treatment at the Paris Olympics brought gender policing to a global stage. It’s not the first instance — or the last. Read the full story.

  • Read The Full Story:
    An abstract collage depicting the theme of body measurement and gender policing. The composition features various human body parts, including close-ups of a muscular torso, a flexed arm, a waist being measured, and hands using measuring tools. The collage also includes images of a scaffolding structure, rulers, a tape measure, and a compass.
  • Read The Full Story: Anti-trans violence is coming for cisgender women of color, advocates say

Republicans are using bills that benefit everyone to push an anti-trans agenda

For years, lawmakers have been rewriting state legislation meant to benefit students, veterans and beyond — but it’s starting to backfire. Read the full story.

  • Read The Full Story:
    An abstract collage in which is seen a large stack of paper documents on the left, with a vintage-style sketch of wide, alarmed eyes above. In the center, a hand holding a pen appears to be signing or marking text. To the right, a classical government building with columns stands.
  • Read The Full Story: Republicans are using bills that benefit everyone to push an anti-trans agenda

Anti-trans laws may complicate access to the ballot for trans voters

Advocacy groups are mobilizing to safeguard access to the ballot as states implement laws that could deter trans people from voting in November. Read the full story.

  • Read The Full Story:
    collage-style illustration featuring various visual elements related to voting and democracy including a woman's silhouette, a raised hand, an identification card with a fingerprint, and a hand holding a ballot. There are also graphic elements like an
  • Read The Full Story: Anti-trans laws may complicate access to the ballot for trans voters

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