The Politico-Legal Transgender Tipping Point

The Politico-Legal Transgender Tipping Point

“I am gratified that Saks reversed its decision to advocate against the rights of transgender employees under the Civil Rights Act. We look forward to the opportunity to demonstrate our case at trial.” — attorney Jillian Weiss

This week has seen what I believe will be another tipping point, this time politico-legal, in the campaign for full trans freedom and equality.

I’ve recently written about trans employment legal powerhouse, Jillian Weiss, and most recently about her representation of Leyth O. Jamal in the federal court case, Jamal v. Saks. The striking action in this bit of legal theatre happened before the New Year when Saks filed a Motion to Dismiss, claiming that “it is well settled” that Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act does not cover trans persons.

Until now, such legal maneuvering would have occurred almost completely behind closed doors, with the plaintiff and her underpaid attorneys, or, if she was lucky, one of the movements’ great legal impact organizations, doing the unnoticed grunt work on her behalf. Occasionally the legal team would address a local LGBT group to inform them of the work, but little was discussed and there was minimal press coverage. For the most part the gay community paid little attention to these trans cases. This was the case with the major victories of Salem, Schroer, and Glenn, and even with the huge breakthrough of the Macy case, attention was immediate but extremely short-lived, with very few exceptions.

No longer. Following that filing by Saks of its Motion to Dismiss, the media attention grew and grew. Just google Jamal v. Saks to get a sense of the breadth of coverage. After claiming that its HR handbook listing of employment protections, including gender identity, was not legally binding, the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), which had given Saks a score of 90/100 this past year, withdrew Saks completely from the Corporate Equality Index (CEI). And, most importantly, on the heels of that media wave came the announcement of an investigation by New York Attorney general, Eric Schneiderman, and amicus briefs from the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) and the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), as well as amici from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the United States Department of Justice (DoJ).

I find this stunning. This is the first time the Department of Justice has clearly stated that Title VII covers transgender persons directly, and not just via discrimination based on sex stereotypes. The use of terms in the brief such as “straightforward” and “plain meaning” are those we’ve been pushing for years, and it’s gratifying to see them spoken by the government. Commissioner Feldblum of the EEOC, the architect of the Macy decision, tweeted:

Chai Feldblum

Saks withdrew its Motion to Dismiss today in a case alleging transgender discrimination by Leyth Jamal. Saks will continue to defend its actions on the merits (assuming there isn’t a settlement), but it won’t pursue its argument that discrimination on the basis of transgender status is not covered under Title VII as a form of sex discrimination. DOJ filed a brief arguing for such coverage, as did the EEOC. DOJ’s brief is fantastic and relies on (among other things) EEOC’s 2012 decision in Macy v. DOJ. Ever since EEOC ruled in the Macy decision that discrimination on the basis of transgender status is covered under Title VII, Jillian Weiss has been a tireless advocate for bringing cases on behalf of transgender individuals under that law. Today’s news is good for her & her client. Read Chris Geidner’s story & be sure to click on the links. ow.ly/HYkoO

The speed and the power of this response have left me breathless. As a disclaimer, I will admit that nothing is settled until there is a settlement or the judge rules, and one can never take anything for granted in the court system, particularly the one in Texas in the Fifth Circuit, but just the fact that Saks saw fit to withdraw its Motion to Dismiss due to the overwhelming support for Ms. Jamal’s claim from the government and the LGBT community, and the positive coverage of the complaint in the media, is testimony to the cultural change in this country.

My friend, Greg Nevins of Lambda Legal, enjoys relating his experience listening to oral arguments in the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta when he was arguing the Glenn v. Brumby case. When opposing counsel asked, incredulously, one of the judges of the panel, William Pryor, thought by many to be the most anti-gay judge in the federal court system, if his words meant that transgender persons were now covered under the 14th Amendment, and the Judge answered, “Yes, I believe I do mean that,” Greg fell out of his chair. A week later the decision was published and it turned out the Court had meant exactly that. Five months later came the Macy decision from the EEOC, and the world changed for the trans community.

This turn of events may not turn out for the best. Given the weakness in Saks’ case, had they held to their belief that Title VII does not apply to trans persons, and Jillian then went on to win in court and on appeal, the result would have further solidified the ground upon which we stand. If that doesn’t happen, who knows what the next case will be that goes all the way to a federal court of appeals? We could be subject to a loss in the same Circuit due to the mishandled case of Eure v. Sage Corporation, which didn’t even brief the court on the Macy decision.

But the most important takeaway for me is the rapid cultural change that caused Saks to back off. Their attorneys, like all attorneys, don’t like to lose, and given the array of adversaries to their untenuous position, we may very well have begun to work in a new world where businesses are learning that discrimination is wrong, even against a class they thought was immune from protections, and that discretion will now lead them to treating all with fairness in the first place. Such is the dialectic of the legal and the cultural — win a major legal case, which drives employment attorneys to warn their employers to revise their HR manuals, which cuts down on discrimination in the first place. And when a corporation’s HR policy is blatantly ignored, both practically and legally, and that company then gets spanked in court and the court of public opinion, that experience then becomes an object lesson that further limits discrimination as more attorneys take notice and act to save their employers embarrassment and money. We are in an accelerating virtuous circle, and it feels great.

www.huffingtonpost.com/dana-beyer/the-politicolegal-transge_b_6550502.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Blogger Andrew Sullivan Announces Plan To Call It Quits

Blogger Andrew Sullivan Announces Plan To Call It Quits

sullivanbigI’m a human being before I am a writer; and a writer before I am a blogger, and although it’s been a joy and a privilege to have helped pioneer a genuinely new form of writing, I yearn for other, older forms. I want to read again, slowly, carefully. I want to absorb a difficult book and walk around in my own thoughts with it for a while. I want to have an idea and let it slowly take shape, rather than be instantly blogged. I want to write long essays that can answer more deeply and subtly the many questions that the Dish years have presented to me. I want to write a book.”

Influential and often controversial blogger Andrew Sullivan announcing plans to pursue other interests in a lengthy post on The Dish

Jeremy Kinser

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Madonna Forces Reporter to Drink Tequila for Asking a Dumb Question: VIDEO

Madonna Forces Reporter to Drink Tequila for Asking a Dumb Question: VIDEO

Madonna

Madonna’s 13th studio album Rebel Heart is not due until March 10 but an undoubtedly well-coordinated media blitz got underway this week in Australia, with an interview with Richard Wilkins on the Today show.

At the beginning of the interview, Madonna instructed Wilkins that it was not an interview, but a drinking game.

“If you ask me a stupid question, and I’m going to be the judge of that, you’re going to drink a shot of tequila. If you ask me an amazing question that sets my world on fire, I’m going to drink a shot of tequila.”

Guess who walked out of the interview sober?

Wilkins’ questions about Taylor Swift, Lourdes, and the hacker who was arrested for leaking Rebel Heart pass the shot test, but things take a turn when he asks her about reinventing herself.

Watch, AFTER THE JUMP


Andy Towle

www.towleroad.com/2015/01/madonnadrinking.html

Michigan's Right-Wing Crusader

Michigan's Right-Wing Crusader
In a column that ran in the Detroit Free Press on Monday morning, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette laid out a weak and hypocritical argument regarding his opposition to marriage equality in Michigan.

He also — most likely inadvertently — gave us a great hypothetical that only serves to riddle his own political narrative full of holes.

Schuette begins by asking people to “Imagine what would happen if the attorney general of a state ignored a federal court ruling, failed to uphold the state constitution and paid no attention to the results of an election supported by 59 percent of the people statewide.”

No need to “imagine” anything. Schuette has already done all three of those things since taking office.

In June of 2012, the United States Supreme Court ruled that the Affordable Care Act (aka Obamacare) was constitutional, and yet, Schuette continues to use his political capital and elected office to fight against the law. No need to imagine our AG ignoring a federal court ruling — he’s actively doing it.

When voters rejected Gov. Rick Snyder’s anti-democratic emergency manager law in November of 2012, it was viewed as a win for preserving the constitutional right of Michiganders to decide the fate of their state. Enter Bill Schuette, who used “pretzel logic” to skirt the state constitution and push the EM law on Michigan communities regardless.

In 2008, Michiganders overwhelmingly voted to approve medical marijuana use in Michigan (63 percent supported it), but that hasn’t stopped Schuette, who campaigned against the proposal and has been trying to gut it at every turn since it became law. Ignoring the will of the people? Check.

It’s no secret that Schuette has gubernatorial aspirations for 2018 and he’s spent his entire political career towing along the right-wing agenda that he thinks will lead him to the highest office in Michigan.

When defending his ill-fated fight against marriage equality in the opinion piece, Schuette begins to blur the lines between justification and juxtaposition: he compares marriage equality to the death penalty.

“Michigan law does not allow for the death penalty. Yet nationally, a majority of citizens support the death penalty for convicted murderers,” Schuette writes. “Under the theory advanced by some gay marriage defenders, the attorney general and other elected officials should ignore Michigan’s prohibition and apply the death penalty.”

Comparing state-sponsored execution to marriage between two loving people may seem like a bit of hyperbole, but for far-right conservatives like Schuette, they’ll grasp at any straws they can to maintain the status quo even if it means embarrassing Michigan, costing taxpayers tens of thousands of dollars, and keeping loving families from experiencing justice and security.

Attorneys General are supposed to be defenders of the people and democracy, not backwards ideology. Schuette is not a defender of democracy or the people — he’s nothing but a right-wing crusader.

www.huffingtonpost.com/sam-inglot/michigans-rightwing-crusa_b_6556398.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Domino’s Considered Running This Bondage-Inspired Ad To Sell You Pizza

Domino’s Considered Running This Bondage-Inspired Ad To Sell You Pizza

rs_634x845-150128095844-dominos-600x800We’re going to be honest here — even before this ad surfaced, Domino’s pizza already left a bad taste in our mouths.

But we’ll never be able to get this image of a tongue dressed up in bondage gear out of our heads. It was never actually run, but was a pitched idea to promote their sriracha pizza.

“It’s real,” Domino’s spokesman Tim McIntyre told People. “The ad was created and pitched by an agency to the independent franchise in Israel. It never ‘officially’ appeared anywhere, because it was ill-advised, unfunny and not brand-appropriate,” McIntyre explained. “In a word, it was stupid.”

The ad reads, “You’re going to suffer and enjoy every moment,” but if they were going for accuracy they would have ended the sentence after “suffer.”

Back to the drawing boards.

 

Dan Tracer

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