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Here's how LGBTQ+ rights—including gender-affirming care and trans rights—fared in the 2024 election after Donald Trump was elected the 47th president of the United States.
According to Tuesday’s Williams Institute report, voters in 27 states will face new restrictions for the 2024 general election that were not present for the 2020 general election. Nearly 173,000 ...
More than 20 states have bans or restrictions on best practice health care for transgender youth, making it even harder to find a college in a state that respects trans lives and protects access ...
New York State and New York City both passed legislation in 2014 to ease the process for changing sex on the birth certificate, eliminating the requirement for proof of surgery. [51] [52] A subsequent 2021 bill also removed the newspaper publication requirement. [53] Nevada eliminated the surgery requirement in November 2016.
Though it remained comfortably Democratic, New York was the state that had the biggest Republican swing out of any state in the nation in the 2024 election, with Trump greatly improving his performance by winning 43.31% of the state's vote, compared to 36.75% in the 2016 election and 37.74% in the 2020 election. New York follows a trend of blue ...
Trump announced that Florida would be his home state for this election, rather than New York as it had been previously. [4] This was the first presidential election in New York to allow no-excuse absentee voting. [5] Despite Donald Trump's longtime association with the state, New York was considered to be a state Biden would win or a safe blue ...
Wade’s election on Tuesday came as Sarah McBride, a state senator in Delaware, became the first transgender person elected to U.S. Congress. It also comes as state Rep. Gerri Cannon, a ...
She was narrowly defeated in the 2017 election for town supervisor of New Castle (a position equivalent to mayor) and the 2020 Democratic primary election for New York's 93rd State Assembly district. Her candidacy for town supervisor made her the first transgender person to run for office on a major party ticket in New York.