Texas Democrats Take a Stand Against Anti-Transgender Legislation

Texas Democrats Take a Stand Against Anti-Transgender Legislation

Post submitted by David Topping, HRC Texas Field Manager

Last month, ten Senate Democrats in Texas stood up for the LGBTQ community by speaking against the anti-transgender bill SB 6. During the Senate hearing and on the floor, these ten legislators took their colleagues to task for pushing discrimination against the LGBTQ community. As a thank you, HRC Federal Club member Danielle Skidmore and local HRC volunteer Steve Alcocer delivered framed “Thank You” cards to the ten heroes. These cards were signed with the names of constituents and other advocates who came to Austin for All In For Equality Advocacy Day on March 20.

SB 6 — dishonestly titled the “Privacy Protection Act” — is a bill expressly intended to discriminate against and block facility access for transgender Texans. The bill would overturn non-discrimination ordinances currently providing critical protections in several major Texas cities; further, it would force state agencies, municipalities, public schools and public universities to discriminate against transgender people. By making it illegal for transgender people in Texas to be afforded access to facilities consistent with their identity, it opens them up to increased discrimination and harassment as they simply live their everyday lives. It also exposes Texas to tremendous risk of the kind of financial, legal, and political blowback that North Carolina has reckoned since the passage of HB2.

Volunteer to join us.

HRC has opened four offices throughout Texas: Austin, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio. We have a team of five organizers working to mobilize our members and supporters against anti-LGBTQ discrimination. Live in Texas and want to get more involved in the fight against discrimination in Texas? Contact HRC Texas Field Manager David Topping for more info.

www.hrc.org/blog/texas-democrats-take-a-stand-against-anti-transgender-legislation?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

VIDEO: Tarell Alvin McCraney dedicates 'Moonlight' GLAAD Media Award to women of color

VIDEO: Tarell Alvin McCraney dedicates 'Moonlight' GLAAD Media Award to women of color

Jeremy Kleiner, Tarell Alvin McCraney, Mary J. Blige, GLAAD President & CEO Sarah Kate Ellis, and Trevante Rhodes at the 28th Annual GLAAD Media Awards in Los Angeles on April 1, 2017A24’s Moonlight took home the GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Film – Wide Release at the 28th Annual GLAAD Media Awards at the Beverly Hilton in Los Angeles on Saturday. Joined onstage by star Trevante Rhodes and producer Jeremy Kleiner, out playwright and story writer Tarell Alvin McCraney accepted the award, which was presented by Grammy Award-winning music icon Mary J. Blige. 

Tune in to Logo TV on Thursday, April 6 at 10:00 p.m. ET/PT to watch the 28th Annual GLAAD Media Awards in Los Angeles!

Accepting the award, McCraney urged more support for women of color and paid tribute to his bisexual mother who died of AIDS-related complications. “What does it mean to have won?” McCraney put forth, celebrating the win while calling for raising the standards for winning to include the most marginalized. “We win when we give our children – the ones who are going missing in the night, or wondering how much they matter to us, to each other, to the law – [… ] the courage, the tools, and resources to scatter their light across the cinema walls across this great world. That’s how we win.”

“We won for Moonlight today, yes,” McCraney said. “But how are we winning tomorrow?”

Moonlight is a coming-of-age story following Chiron – a young, black, queer man growing up in an impoverished Miami neighborhood – in three acts, from childhood to teen years to adulthood.  Chiron’s journey of struggling with his sexual identity is interwoven with themes of poverty, intimacy, masculinity, and mass incarceration. Directed and written by Barry Jenkins, the film was inspired by McCraney’s short play In Moonlight Black Boys Look Blue.

In February, Moonlight made history by becoming the first film with an LGBTQ lead to take home the Academy Award for Best Picture.  Among its numerous accolades are also Academy Awards for Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Supporting Actor (for Mahershala Ali); a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture – Drama; and five Independent Spirit Awards, including Best Film. 

Additional awards will be presented at the GLAAD Media Awards in New York City at the New York Midtown on May 6th. Tickets are available now at glaad.org/mediaawards. To receive the latest updates on the GLAAD Media Awards, follow @glaad on Twitter and use the hashtag #glaadawards. The 28th Annual GLAAD Media Awards are presented by Delta Airlines, Hilton, Ketel One Vodka, Liberty Mutual Insurance, and Wells Fargo.

The GLAAD Media Awards recognize and honor media for their fair, accurate and inclusive representations of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) community and the issues that affect their lives.  They also fund GLAAD’s work to amplify stories from the LGBTQ community that build support for equality and acceptance.

 

April 5, 2017

www.glaad.org/blog/watch-tarell-alvin-mccraney-accepts-outstanding-film-award-glaadawards

7th Circuit Says Anti-Gay Discrimination is Sex Discrimination Under Title VII: An Analysis of the Ruling

7th Circuit Says Anti-Gay Discrimination is Sex Discrimination Under Title VII: An Analysis of the Ruling

Kimberly Hively

Kimberly Hively

Yesterday, a federal appellate court held, in Hively v. Ivy Tech Community College, that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination in the workplace “on the basis of sex”, also prohibits an employer from firing someone because he or she is gay. This is, as they say, a big f*in deal. Although the argument and decision are pretty straightforward, let’s break it down and discuss how we got here.

It has been a refrain among LGBT lawyers and advocates that, in states without their own anti-discrimination statute that included sexual orientation, an employee could be fired simply for being gay. After Obergefell, for example, it was true in some states that a man could marry a man in the morning and get fired in the afternoon. This was the case because federal nondiscrimination law did not explicitly cover sexual orientation.

Then the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, an executive agency that hears employment discrimination cases, concluded that, actually, Title VII’s sex discrimination provision does cover sexual orientation discrimination. Think of it this way: Firing a man because he is married to a man is discrimination on the basis of sex because you wouldn’t fire a women for being married to a man. Only a man can be fired for being married to man, and only a woman could be fired for being married to a woman. Therefore, you are treating the sexes differently. That’s discrimination “on the basis of sex.”

But the ruling of an executive agency is not the law of the land. And there had been contrary court decisions from federal district and appellate courts affirming that Title VII was written to protect women in the workplace, not gays.

A lot has changed since Title VII was written and passed by Congress in 1964. In particular, the legal status of gay persons has changed. And anti-discrimination law itself is broader. In a case called Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, the Supreme Court held that Title VII’s ban on sex discrimination can be triggered when an employee is discriminated against for failing to conform to gender stereotypes.

In that case, a female employee alleged that she was denied a promotion because the partners at Price Waterhouse thought her “too masculine.” They made fun of her appearance; suggested she wear lipstick, dresses, and high heels; and suggested that she was too “macho” and lacked “charm.” Notice how this kind of discrimination is not the classic form of sex discrimination. Ms. Hopkins was not denied a promotion because she is a woman; she was denied a promotion because she didn’t act like a stereotypical woman.

Hively, a lesbian, is also not a stereotypical woman. In fact, according to the majority opinion, she is the “ultimate case of failure to conform to the female stereotype” because she married a woman. Suddenly, discriminating against lesbians for being too masculine sounds a lot like sex discrimination.

Another Supreme Court case, Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Services, had a hand in this. This is a complicated case, one that we’ll turn back to in time, and one that isn’t entirely on our side. But for now, note that Oncale was about male-on-male sexual harassment taking place on what may be among the most “masculine” workplaces out there short of a rugby team locker room and a police department: an oil platform. Supervisors and crew members taunted, threatened, assaulted, and humiliated Oncale, suggesting he was gay. One of them even threatened Oncale with rape. The company didn’t do anything about it.

The case made it all the way up to the Supreme Court because a lower court had found that men could not sexually harass men under Title VII. That, Justice Scalia said, was “argle bargle,” to use one of his choice phrases from another case. Giving us his best textualism, Scalia said that there is nothing in the statute that said that a man cannot discriminate against another man. The prohibition protects both men and women and even though the drafters of Title VII may not have thought at all about male-on-male harassment, they wrote a statute that said nothing about the sexes of the parties involved, only the nature of the discrimination and harassment.

Put these two cases together and sexual orientation discrimination is sex discrimination. A man harassing another man for allegedly loving men is actionable under Title VII per Oncale. A man firing a man because he isn’t masculine enough is actionable under Hopkins. In a way, Oncale and Hopkins adequately describe what being gay in the workplace is like. Many of us do not conform to gender stereotypes with respect to our behavior, mannerisms, attitude, and dress. And we all are attracted to persons of the same sex. Therefore, protecting sexual orientation discrimination under sex discrimination makes sense.

In the next column, we will discuss what happens next. Stay tuned.

The post 7th Circuit Says Anti-Gay Discrimination is Sex Discrimination Under Title VII: An Analysis of the Ruling appeared first on Towleroad.


7th Circuit Says Anti-Gay Discrimination is Sex Discrimination Under Title VII: An Analysis of the Ruling

Four Highlights from Day One of HRC’s Global Summit

Four Highlights from Day One of HRC’s Global Summit

Post submitted by Saurav Jung Thapa, Associate Director of Research, HRC Global and Jay Gilliam, Senior Global Programs Officer, HRC Global 

HRC’s second annual Global Innovative Advocacy Summit program began yesterday in Washington, D.C.

Read about and see pics of the top four highlights from its first day. 

Global Innovative Advocacy SummitGlobal Innovative Advocacy Summit

  1. Storytelling is the foundation for global equality action.

Global Innovative Advocacy Summit

The first day of the Global Summit focused on storytelling and its importance to LGBTQ work everywhere around the world.

HRC Project One America Director Ben Needham moderated a panel on building public awareness through storytelling. Global innovators from Bangladesh, Sudan and Uganda participated in the panel along with HRC Associate Director of Video Ben Shallenberger, who has produced many viral videos for HRC in the last nine years. 

Global Innovative Advocacy SummitGlobal Innovative Advocacy Summit

The panelists discussed the power of videos to capture stories of LGBTQ lives, challenges and opportunities and convey it with impact and meaning to the community and to wider audiences. 

  1. HRC has a rich history of stories.

Global Innovative Advocacy SummitGlobal Innovative Advocacy Summit

The global innovators heard about HRC’s remarkable 37-year journey from amazing leaders – who led and continue to lead – the organization.

Two former HRC leaders, Vic Basile and Joe Solmonese, and Senior Vice President for Development & Membership Cathy Nelson, a 27-year veteran of the organization, shared their inspiring stories in a session moderated by Senior Vice President for Programs, Research and Training Mary Beth Maxwell.

Basile marveled at HRC’s tremendous growth and described how the organization had only three staff and a 600 square feet office in the early 1980’s when he was its leader.  

  1. Innovation talks showcase work from around the world.

Global Innovative Advocacy SummitGlobal Innovative Advocacy Summit

Global innovators from India, Peru, Tunisia and Croatia gave Innovation-talks modeled on the TEDx Talks.

For example, Abhina Aher of India showed a video and talked about how Dancing Queens, a transgender dancing troupe she founded, is working with allies and raising social awareness in her country on LGBTQ issues and challenges.

  1. Marketplace brings global innovators together with others in the global equality movement.

Global Innovative Advocacy Summit

Global Innovative Advocacy Summit

Global Innovative Advocacy Summit

Global innovators networked with a variety of LGBTQ organizations from around the U.S. to learn more about how these organizations support global equality advocates and organizations.

Global Innovative Advocacy Summit

On Monday, the global innovators visited the World Bank, had a roundtable discussion with U.S. Representatives Joe Kennedy (D-MA) and Alan Lowenthal (D-CA) and attended a reception with the Norwegian Ambassador to the U.S. Kare R. Aas.

Follow the daily Global Summit blogs here and follow conversations online at #HRCGlobalSummit.

www.hrc.org/blog/four-highlights-from-day-one-of-hrcs-global-summit?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

What is Mike Pence and Trump Administration's opinion on Hively v. Ivy Tech court ruling?

What is Mike Pence and Trump Administration's opinion on Hively v. Ivy Tech court ruling?

Last night, the United States 7th Circuit Court of Appeals – the first federal court – issued an historic ruling saying that no employer could fire an employee simply because of their sexual orientation. Ruling in favor of Kimberly Hively, an educator in Indiana, the Court established a new precedent that could ultimately end up at the United States Supreme Court.

So what are former Indiana Governor and current Vice President Mike Pence thoughts on this historic ruling? President Trump’s opinion? Using GLAAD’s Trump Accountability Project as a resource, it’s hard to think the Trump Administration would support the 7th Circuit as it is doing all it can to erase the LGBTQ community from the fabric of American society.

“Yesterday’s federal court ruling that said it’s illegal for an employer to fire a gay or lesbian employee was historic beyond proportion,” said Sarah Kate Ellis, President and CEO of GLAAD. “It’s hard to imagine, though, that Mike Pence or Donald Trump would echo our excitement because they have tried to erase LGBTQ people from this country since Day One of this administration. Now more than ever, LGBTQ Americans must fight harder to ensure full LGBTQ acceptance is a reality for all.”

BACKGROUND INFORMATION: Mike Pence and Donald Trump’s Opposition to LGBTQ Workplace Protections

Vice President Mike Pence

In 2007, then U.S. Congressman Mike Pence voted against the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA), a bill that would have guaranteed workplace protections for LGBT Americans. [The Atlantic, 2.25.11]
 

President Donald Trump

In 2015, GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump vowed to sign and enact the First Amendment Defense Act, a piece of legislation that would allow federal contractors to circumvent protections for LGBTQ workers. [Washington Blade, 12.23.15]

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April 5, 2017
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www.glaad.org/blog/what-mike-pence-and-trump-administrations-opinion-hively-v-ivy-tech-court-ruling

Bill and Hillary Clinton’s Nephew Tyler Clinton Signs with Powerhouse Modeling Agency IMG

Bill and Hillary Clinton’s Nephew Tyler Clinton Signs with Powerhouse Modeling Agency IMG

2_tyler_clinton

Bill and Hillary Clinton’s nephew (not the gay one) Tyler Clinton has launched a modeling career, signing with powerhouse agency IMG, which also represents female modeling stars Gigi Hadid, Bella Hadid, Ashley Graham, and Karlie Kloss.

Tyler is the son of Bill Clinton’s younger half brother, Roger, graduated from Loyola Marymount University, and was arrested once in connection with a bar fight on suspicion of assault after allegedly cracking a man on the head with a bottle.

 

Instagram Photo

 

GQ reports:

At five-eleven-and-a-half inches tall with a 30-inch waist and cloudy age (Radar said 22 last November while US Weekly clocked him in at 18 back in July) Clinton — who is the son of former-President Bill’s brother Roger — seems primed for a career fronting campaigns for brands like J. Crew and Abercrombie & Fitch (especially reminiscent of those sexy Bruce Weber years), and we know that he’s not just all-American in appearance, he’s got patriotism built into his genes. And he comes with a built-in bad boy reputation!

Check out Clinton’s IMG portfolio HERE.

 

Instagram Photo

 

Instagram Photo

The post Bill and Hillary Clinton’s Nephew Tyler Clinton Signs with Powerhouse Modeling Agency IMG appeared first on Towleroad.


Bill and Hillary Clinton’s Nephew Tyler Clinton Signs with Powerhouse Modeling Agency IMG