National/Federal Know Your Rights - Page 29 of 59 - GLAD Law
تخطي العنوان إلى المحتوى
GLAD Logo تخطي التنقل الأساسي إلى المحتوى

مدونة

A change of administration ushering in the pro-equality leadership of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris promises much hope for the LGBTQ community. As we go to press, whether we will also have a pro-equality Senate remains a question. But no matter the outcome, the Biden-Harris administration can take steps through executive action to repair much of the damage of the past four years. GLAD is already working with our partners to ensure the new administration uses every tool it has to put the country back on track towards equal justice.

We expect President-elect Biden will carry through on his campaign promise to lift the transgender military ban within the first few days of his inauguration. GLAD challenged the ban almost immediately upon its announcement and will not rest until it’s gone.

In addition to its vicious attack on courageous transgender service members, the Trump administration has relentlessly and systematically reversed protections and launched new initiatives to make already vulnerable people even more so. One of the first attacks came from the Department of Education.

Within weeks of Trump’s inauguration. the Department of Education withdrew key guidance the Obama administration had issued to schools across the country to ensure full inclusion of transgender students. Since then, the hostility has only escalated. Most recently, the Department threatened to deny federal funding for school districts with trans-inclusive policies, staking out the extreme position that inclusive policies are in conflict with Title IX, the federal civil rights law requiring equal educational opportunities without regard to sex. The new administration can get Education moving in the right direction again, to make it more possible for LGBTQ young people to thrive.

We also hope the Biden-Harris administration will repair federal prison policy. The Trump administration reversed Obama-era guidance that made placements for transgender people based solely on assigned birth sex unlawful, a complete about-face on sound policy that puts incarcerated transgender people at heightened risk of assault and sexual violence.

Health care policy is also of immediate concern, all the more so because of the ongoing pandemic. Just this June – with astounding cruelty on the anniversary of the Pulse nightclub shooting – the Trump administration reversed a federal rule that clarified the Affordable Care Act’s non-discrimination provision prohibits denial of health care services to transgender people. GLAD is challenging that reversal in its case on behalf of hospice nurse Alexander Pangborn (بانجبورن ضد أسيند) as are several other national LGBTQ organizations in federal court cases proceeding across the country. As that litigation moves forward, the incoming administration can also take steps to reinstate crucial healthcare protections.

GLAD is also keeping an eagle eye out for other damaging rules the Trump administration may seek to finalize before its departure, including in the areas of asylum and housing access for transgender people. The Department of Homeland Security has threatened to gut asylum rules, with the potential for devastating consequences for refugees, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development has proposed an alarming rule that would allow homeless shelters to turn transgender people away. GLAD has worked for decades across New England to ensure transgender people are treated with dignity and respect when accessing essential services, including shelter. As winter sets in, we are working with partner organizations to ensure LGBTQ people can secure existing protections and get the shelter they need. We also stand ready to challenge any effort to roll back protections at the federal level.

As welcome as it will be to once again have a President and Vice President who are committed to LGBTQ equality, our work is far from over come inauguration day. We will all need to work together to hold Biden and Harris to their promises, to press Congress to take action when necessary, including passing the Equality Act, and to move our state and local legislatures to advance justice for all Americans. GLAD is full steam ahead – in our policy work, in our ongoing litigation in both state and federal courts, and in community building. We need you to join our work to realize the promises and commitments made to the queer community.


Click here to learn more and read the entire Winter 2021 issue of GLAD Briefs.

مدونة

This November, the U.S Department of Justice released a scathing report concluding that policies and practices of the Massachusetts Department of Correction (DOC) fail to ensure the mental health of those it incarcerates. DOC personnel and policies wrongfully and repeatedly placed individuals under mental health watch in solitary confinement for prolonged periods of time. This barbaric treatment led to a number of deaths by suicide, a transgender man and a gay man among them.

The report underscores what advocacy groups have been fighting against for years. When incarcerated, LGBTQ people are subjected to unsafe housing conditions, harassment, sexual violence and extended time in solitary confinement (a practice that has been globally condemned as torture). In response to the Department of Justice report, the Massachusetts LGBTQ community joined together to demand sweeping policy change, independent oversight, and staff accountability at all levels.

GLAD and Black and Pink Massachusetts issued a community response statement to this report which was joined by nearly every Massachusetts-based LGBTQ organization. “As organizations working on behalf of LGBTQ liberation in Massachusetts and nationally, we are keenly aware of the degrading and demeaning experiences suffered by members of our community held by DOC. The Commonwealth’s failure to provide for the most basic needs of those it locks up undermines social progress for the LGBTQ community and beyond,” the statement explains. “[DOC] should seriously consider abandoning the use of solitary confinement,” said Michael Cox, Director of Policy at Black and Pink MA. “They should be disciplining [implicated staff], including termination of all of the guards and DOC personnel involved and who provided weapons to people and encouraged people to hurt themselves.”

Solitary confinement is an inappropriate punishment that demands reform within the corrections system. This summer, GLAD worked with several task forces focused on eliminating the over-policing and incarceration of Black, Latinx, and Native people. In Massachusetts, the Senate budget included amendments to reform police standards and to increase transparency within the DOC by requiring tracking of the numbers of LGBTQ people held in solitary confinement, euphemistically referred to within the corrections system as “restrictive housing.” Corrections officers place LGBTQ people in solitary confinement at disproportionately higher rates than the general population of incarcerated people. Both the police reform and data collection amendments have been included in the final budget sent to Governor Baker.

Recent case developments

GLAD’s work in the prison system rests on an abolition model and includes advocating for people to be housed in the facility consistent with their gender and to be able to access necessary and appropriate healthcare. In recent months, our work has also included calling for the early release of people who are medically vulnerable because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Although Connecticut, Massachusetts and a small number of others have passed laws requiring that transgender people be properly housed based on their gender identity, transgender people who are incarcerated continue to experience high levels of discrimination, lack of access to healthcare, harassment, and violence. Much work remains to ensure that no LGBTQ people face the degrading and dehumanizing conditions that are intrinsic to our prison systems.

Beyond the discrimination that so many face, some of GLAD’s prison work is concerned with protecting very basic levels of safety. In October 2020, GLAD together with the Center for Constitutional Rights, Lambda Legal, and Boies, Schiller, Flexner LLP, joined an amicus (friend-of-the-court) brief in support of a transgender woman who was sexually assaulted in federal custody. The brief, filed in جلادني ضد الولايات المتحدة, challenges a dangerous district court decision that found prison officials enjoy immunity even when they fail to protect transgender people in their care.

LGBTQ people face particularly formidable barriers to accessing healthcare in prison. The obligation of the Department of Corrections to protect people in prison extends to ensuring that people get the medicine and treatment that their doctors prescribe for them, as they do for gender dysphoria. GLAD joined an amicus brief along with Lambda Legal, the Center for Constitutional Rights, and Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale And Dorr LLP filed in the case of Idaho Department of Correction v. Edmo.

Adree Edmo is a transgender woman who was refused medically necessary treatment for nearly five years while she was incarcerated. Though she was able to access hormone therapy and counseling, she was denied surgery. Through the months that Ms. Edmo wasn’t able to get surgery, her mental health worsened, and she attempted self-harm more than once. Because of her medical need, the district court ordered the Idaho Department of Corrections to provide the surgery she needed to treat the gender dysphoria from which she continued to suffer. The Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court order and Ms. Edmo finally received the care she needed. In October, the Supreme Court denied a petition for certiorari filed by the Idaho DOC, effectively refusing to change the ruling made by the Idaho 9th Circuit Court in Ms. Edmo’s favor. GLAD will continue to fight for the rights of transgender people to receive medically necessary care while incarcerated.

GLAD will continue to advocate for incarcerated LGBTQ people, including people of color, those living with HIV, and anyone impacted by the criminal justice system, including their loved ones and family members.


Click here to learn more and read the entire Winter 2021 issue of GLAD Briefs.

مدونة

Dismantling the transgender military ban: Open service once again is a promise on the horizon

Since the ban against transgender people serving in the military went into effect in April 2019, many highly trained servicemembers and those who have aspired to enlist have seen their dreams and their careers put in jeopardy. GLAD hopes to soon see a military that once again welcomes everyone who is qualified and willing to serve their country.

During President-Elect Biden’s campaign, he committed to reversing the transgender military ban. GLAD is already working with our partners to see that happen. Based on past practices, a President Biden can end the discriminatory ban by issuing an executive order, which we expect to see on day one of his presidency, if not quickly thereafter.

Nic Talbott
Aspiring servicemember Nic Talbott

GLAD plaintiff Nic Talbott has been fighting against the ban since its announcement and exemplifies the high standards and commitment that the military has been missing out on since this damaging policy was put in place. “It’s a huge relief to know that we are now closer than ever to seeing it actually lifted,” Nic says. “Once the ban is gone, I can finally move forward with my life and have the opportunity to pursue my dream career, serving my country as an officer in the military. I look forward to being allowed to re-enroll in ROTC so that I can continue to train, keep up my fitness to serve, and become the best Army officer I can possibly be.” 

While GLAD and our partner organizations are optimistic that a Biden-Harris administration will dismantle this harmful ban, we aren’t slowing down in the fight for justice or idly waiting. On October 30, GLAD filed a fourth case challenging the ban on behalf of a transgender woman who served 10 years in the Army and now is a member of the Michigan Army National Guard. Specialist Blaire McIntyre faces involuntary discharge after coming out as transgender. In addition to being a member of the National Guard, Blaire works as a uniformed civilian technician. Because her civilian job rests on her continued participation in the National Guard, she is at risk of losing both positions, a situation that would be devastating to Blaire and her family (she and her wife are raising two young children). Given her expertise, it would also be a tremendous loss to the National Guard.

Blaire McIntyre
بلير ماكنتاير، أخصائي الحرس الوطني في ميشيغان

The Palm Center just released a report authored by former military Surgeon Generals and scholars that details the harms that the ban has caused to military readiness. The study found that the policy compromises recruitment, retention, unit cohesion, medical care, and many other critical armed forces needs. “This new report proves that discharging qualified, capable, and battle-tested transgender servicemembers like me is a detriment to our military’s strength and unity,” Blaire explains. “My superiors expect the same of me as any other servicemember, and they give me the tough assignments because they know I can handle them. All I want is the opportunity to continue doing my job—a job that I do well and that helps me provide for my family.” Like so many other dedicated transgender servicemembers, Blaire faces losing the career she loves and her family’s livelihood because of a baseless and damaging policy with which military experts, and the majority of Americans, disagree.

GLAD is working in collaboration with the National Center for Lesbian Rights and other groups to quickly overturn the transgender military ban. As Jennifer L. Levi, GLAD’s Transgender Rights Project Director says, “Military leaders agree that the ban harms our military by depriving it of qualified, talented transgender recruits. It’s well past time we return to a policy that permits all those who have dreamed of serving their country, and those who have made it their calling in life, to do so.”


Click here to learn more about the transgender military ban.

Click here to learn more and read the entire Winter 2021 issue of GLAD Briefs.

مدونة

ملحوظة: تم نشر هذه المقالة أصلا في سراويل شتوية من GLADديسمبر 2020. وقد تم تحديثه بعد إعادة تقديم قانون المساواة في مجلس النواب الأمريكي في 18 فبراير 2021.

دعونا نتأكد من أن هذا الكونجرس الأمريكي هو الذي إقرار قانون المساواة ونوفر بيئة عمل متكافئة لأفراد مجتمع الميم في جميع أنحاء البلاد. نبذل الكثير لمجتمعاتنا وعملنا وعائلاتنا، ونحتاج ونستحق نفس الكرامة والإنصاف والاحترام الذي يتمتع به الآخرون.

تسعى قوانيننا الوطنية للحقوق المدنية إلى تقريبنا من وعد تكافؤ الفرص للجميع من خلال منع التمييز لمجرد هويتنا في الوظائف، والسكن، والأماكن العامة، والمدارس، وغيرها. توفر هذه القوانين بالفعل حمايةً أساسيةً ضد التمييز على أساس العرق، أو اللون، أو الأصل القومي، أو الجنس، أو الدين. سيُحدّث قانون المساواة قانون الحقوق المدنية لعام ١٩٦٤ (CRA) وغيره من قوانين الحقوق المدنية الفيدرالية للتأكيد على أن التوجه الجنسي والهوية الجندرية مُدرجان بوضوح وصراحة ضمن هذه الحماية.

لا يمكن أن يأتي هذا قريبًا بما فيه الكفاية، خاصة بالنسبة لأولئك الموجودين عند التقاطعات من مجتمع الميم، ومن السود، أو السكان الأصليين، أو اللاتينيين، أو أي شخص ملون آخر. يُسهم التمييز في تفاقم الفقر وغيره من النتائج الضارة. إذا لم يتمكن الناس من الحصول على وظيفة لكونهم مثليين، ولم يتمكنوا من الحصول على سكن لعدم وجودهم، وأصبحوا أقل أمانًا عند عدم امتلاكهم سكنًا، فإن الأمور تتجه نحو اتجاه متزايد الصعوبة. مع أن تحديث قانون الإيرادات المجتمعية وقوانين الحقوق المدنية الأخرى لتشمل مجتمع الميم ليس حلاً سحريًا، إلا أنه خطوة مهمة في الطريق الطويل نحو تكافؤ الفرص.

Janson Wu and Mary Bonauto in front of the Supreme Court
المدير التنفيذي لمنظمة GLAD، جانسون وو، ومديرة مشروع الحقوق المدنية، ماري بونوتو، أمام المحكمة العليا الأمريكية

قال الرئيس بايدن إن إقرار قانون المساواة أولوية. إذا اتفق الكونغرس الأمريكي والرئيس على التشريع في هذه الدورة، فسيكونان بذلك قد كرّموا إرادة الشعب الأمريكي. بأغلبية كبيرة ومستقرة على مر السنين، يرى الأمريكيون أن مجتمع الميم جزء من "نحن الشعب". لطالما أشارت هذه العبارة إلى الانتماء المدني في هذا البلد لقرون، وقد حان الوقت لقادتنا وقوانيننا للاعتراف بما هو متفشٍ كالهواء الذي نتنفسه: أن مجتمع الميم بشر مثل أي شخص آخر، ويريدون ببساطة أن يكونوا. معاملتهم بكرامة واحترام.

يُوسّع قانون المساواة أيضًا نطاق الحماية المهمة لجميع المشمولين بقانون الإيرادات المجتمعية، وذلك بتحديث الأحكام الرئيسية، بالإضافة إلى تضمين التوجه الجنسي والهوية الجنسية صراحةً. بإضافة حظر على التمييز على أساس الجنس (بما في ذلك التوجه الجنسي والهوية الجنسية والحمل) في الأماكن العامة، لن يكون من القانوني استبعاد المُرضعات (سواءً من مجتمع الميم أو غيره) من الأماكن العامة، أو فرض رسوم إضافية على النساء مقابل السلع والخدمات. كما يُوسّع مشروع القانون نطاق ما يُعتبر مكانًا عامًا يتجاوز الإطار المرجعي لعام ١٩٦٤ (الذي كان ضيقًا للغاية) ليشمل مجموعة واسعة من تجار التجزئة الذين يقدمون السلع والخدمات، والأماكن العامة الحديثة، والنقل، بما في ذلك خدمات السيارات مثل Lyft وUber، وسيارات الأجرة، والقطارات، وشركات الطيران، حيث يواجه الأشخاص ذوو البشرة الملونة تمييزًا مستمرًا.

تغييرٌ آخر يُشير إلى أهمية تتبع مسار المال! يُلزم الباب السادس من قانون الإيرادات المجتمعية الجهات العامة والخاصة التي تتلقى مساعدات من أي وكالة اتحادية باتخاذ خطواتٍ ملموسة لضمان عدم التمييز في برامجها وأنشطتها. بحظر التمييز على أساس "الجنس" (بما في ذلك التوجه الجنسي والهوية الجندرية والحمل) في أي برنامج أو نشاط يتلقى مساعدة مالية اتحادية، يُطبّق القانون على جميع المجتمعات في البلاد. تُوزّع هذه الأموال الفيدرالية على جهاتٍ مثل المدارس الحكومية ومؤسسات الرعاية الصحية وأجهزة إنفاذ القانون ورعاية الطفل وأنظمة العدالة، بالإضافة إلى خدماتٍ ودعمٍ مثل ملاجئ المشردين وعلاج الإدمان والإغاثة من الكوارث والقروض العقارية ومساعدة الإسكان لذوي الدخل المحدود وبرنامج المساعدة الغذائية التكميلية (SNAP) والوجبات المدرسية، وغيرها الكثير.

حكم المحكمة العليا الصادر في الصيف الماضي في بوستوك ضد مقاطعة كلايتون يمنحنا هذا زخمًا. لقد برّر هذا الانتصار لرجلين مثليين وامرأة متحولة جنسيًا عقودًا من المناصرة في حركة مجتمع الميم، مجادلةً بأن إساءة معاملة أفراد مجتمع الميم بسبب هويتهم تُعدّ تمييزًا على أساس الجنس. بوستوك نشأت في سياق مكان العمل، لكن منطقها ينطبق على نطاق أوسع بكثير، كما هو الحال تم تأكيد الأمر التنفيذي الذي أصدره الرئيس بايدن في 20 يناير. ال بوستوك إن صدور الحكم وأمر الرئيس بتطبيقه في جميع الوكالات الفيدرالية يُعدّان خطواتٍ هائلة إلى الأمام، لكننا في مأزق. يجب علينا مواصلة جهود التقاضي في سياق مكان العمل وخارجه؛ ومواصلة العمل في الولايات التي لا تتضمن قوانينها حمايةً صريحةً للتوجه الجنسي والهوية الجندرية؛ وتعديل قانون الإيرادات المجتمعية، وقانون الإسكان العادل، وقانون تكافؤ فرص الائتمان، وقانون اختيار هيئة المحلفين وخدماتهم، والقوانين التي تحكم التوظيف الفيدرالي تعديلاً نهائياً. سيُحقق قانون المساواة كل هذا؛ فوجوده سيساعد على منع التمييز، بما في ذلك التمييز ضد الفئات الأكثر ضعفاً، ومعالجته.

بسيط وواضح، أليس كذلك؟ بالطبع، لكننا نعلم أن الأمر لن يكون سهلاً. صوّت مجلس النواب الأمريكي لصالح قانون المساواة لعام 2019، لكن مجلس الشيوخ لم ينظر فيه بعد. ما زلنا نسمع نفس الهراء من معارضي الحماية التي سيوفرها قانون المساواة - مخاوف وتلفيقات حول تهديد مجتمع الميم للآخرين من جهة، أو سخرية من فكرة وجود تمييز ضدهم من جهة أخرى. هذا يُنبئنا بأن علينا بذل المزيد من الجهد - ولكن الآن هو الوقت المناسب!

علينا أن نبذل جهدًا كبيرًا. هذا يعني أخذ أنفاس عميقة، والاستماع باهتمام، والسعي الجاد لإقناع المحاكم والكونغرس. لكن الزخم، وغالبية الشعب الأمريكي، في صفنا. قد يكون هذا العام هو العام الذي ننجح فيه في ضمان الكرامة والاحترام اللذين يحتاجهما ويستحقهما مجتمع الميم، وجميع الناس، ليعيشوا حياتهم ويساهموا في مجتمعاتهم.

اطلب من عضو مجلس الشيوخ الأمريكي الخاص بك دعم قانون المساواة

Statement on Supreme Court’s Denial to Review Box v. Henderson

Patience Crozier, GLAD Senior Staff Attorney and member of the Uniform Law Commission’s national Uniform Parentage Act Enactment Committee, issued the following statement in response to the Supreme Court’s denial to review Box v. Henderson:

“Ensuring that children have a clear legal tie to their parents from birth is core to children’s well-being and stability. Indiana law provides a marital presumption of parentage for children regardless of genetic connection between parent and child. For Indiana, or any State, to carve married LGBTQ parents out of that protection and seek to make married LGBTQ parents legal strangers to their children is not only unconstitutional, it is dangerous and cruel. By rejecting Indiana’s petition, the Court yet again makes clear that States have an obligation to provide all children equal access to the security of legal parentage regardless of the gender of their parents.”

DADT Repeal 10-Year Anniversary Celebration

Join service members, veterans, their families and special guests from around the world to celebrate the 10-year anniversary of the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” (DADT) and to support the fight for transgender service members. Thanks to the repeal of DADT, over the past decade, lesbian, gay, and bisexual service members have served openly and proudly in the Armed Forces without fear of being dismissed because of who they are or whom they love.

Celebrate this virtual event with the White House and Congressional leaders who led the fight for repeal in 2010. You’ll hear extraordinary stories from service members of all branches and learn more about the renewed fight for transgender military service.

Click here to learn more and register

 

Questions? Email RSVP@modernmilitary.org.

مدونة

The recent shift on the Supreme Court, the pivotal federal election, and what it will all mean for our community in 2021 and beyond have been on all our minds.

On Wednesday, November 11, GLAD’s Executive Director Janson Wu moderated a discussion with Legal Director Gary Buseck and Transgender Rights Project Director Jennifer Levi on what’s next for LGBTQ rights at the nation’s highest court and under a Biden/Harris administration.

YouTube #!trpst#trp-gettext data-trpgettextoriginal=148#!trpen#فيديو#!trpst#/trp-gettext#!trpen#

The main cases discussed include فولتون ضد مدينة فيلادلفيا, argued November 4, and California v. Texas regarding the Affordable Care Act, argued November 10.

Click here to help fund the fight for justice and equality.

California v. Texas

Health care is a human right.

In May 2020, GLAD and a group of organizations advocating for people living with HIV filed an amicus (friend-of-the-court) brief urging the U.S. Supreme Court to uphold the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate.

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) ensures that all Americans, including people living with HIV, are able to access quality, affordable health insurance. Gutting the individual mandate would disproportionately harm people who are living with HIV, LGBTQ+, women, disabled, low-income, or BIPOC.

تحديث: On June 17, 2021, the Supreme Court upheld the Affordable Care Act. Read the ruling here.

أخبار

With the results of the presidential election announced today, we now know that millions of Americans across the country have come together to say no more to carelessness, cruelty, and dishonesty.

The election of Joe Biden and the historic election of Kamala Harris, the first woman, first Black woman and first South Asian woman to be elected Vice President, are the result of hard, tireless work that organizers, volunteers, ballot counters, and everyday Americans have put in to make our democracy work. These contributions offer profound hope for the direction of our country.

But today is only the next step in putting our nation on a path toward true equity, liberation and justice for all. The damage done during the years of the Trump administration – the racist rhetoric and policies that have hurt immigrants, Muslims, Black Americans and so many people of color; the complete failure to address the COVID-19 pandemic that has cost hundreds of thousands of lives and livelihoods; the relentless attacks on the LGBTQ community that have not let up from day one – this damage won’t be reversed overnight.

This fight was never just about one election. Our work continues.

President-Elect Biden and Vice President-Elect Harris have stated their commitment to equality and justice, and to governing with reason, fairness, and compassion. We look forward to working with the new administration to undo the harms done to the LGBTQ community under the Trump administration, and to joining with all who care about equity to hold the incoming administration accountable to their commitment.

From creating a world with real lived equality for LGBTQ people, to charting a path to true racial equity and justice, today more than ever we have not just the opportunity but the responsibility to move our country closer to the nation of equals we aspire to be. Our nation has voted, volunteered, and worked hard for this moment. Now, we must make sure we seize that opportunity and rise to that responsibility.

مدونة

It’s been a long week, but today I am celebrating. I hope you are too.

Millions of Americans across the country came together, organized, and voted to say no more to carelessness, cruelty, and dishonesty.

When the democratic process played out, and the votes were counted, the will of the people said yes to putting our nation on a path toward equity, liberation, and justice for all.

An end is in sight to the blatant bias and deceit of the Trump administration. The election of Joe Biden and the historic election of Kamala Harris as the first woman, the first Black woman and the first South Asian woman to be Vice President are thanks to the hard, tireless work that organizers, volunteers, ballot counters, and everyday Americans have put in to make our democracy work. These contributions offer profound hope for me and for everyone who believes in fairness, compassion, and equality.

So I’m celebrating. But I know that today is only the beginning and our work is far from over.

The damage done by the Trump administration – the racist rhetoric and policies that have hurt immigrants, Muslims, Black Americans and so many people of color; the complete failure to address the COVID-19 pandemic that has cost hundreds of thousands of lives and livelihoods; the relentless attacks on the LGBTQ community that you’ve helped GLAD fight from day one – this damage won’t be reversed overnight.

And we can’t turn away from the fact that too many in our country were still willing to ignore or embrace the racism, hatred, and authoritarian tactics of the current administration.

This fight was never just about one election. Our work to create a future of true justice continues.

From creating a world with real lived equality for LGBTQ people, to charting a path to true racial equity and justice, today more than ever before we have not just the opportunity but the responsibility to move our country closer to the nation of equals we aspire to be.

Our nation has voted, volunteered, and worked hard for this moment. And with you by our side, GLAD is prepared to work every single day to make sure we seize the opportunity and rise to the responsibility.

Today we celebrate. Tomorrow, we get back to work.

GLAD is ready. Are you with us?

Donate Now button

arالعربية
نظرة عامة على الخصوصية

يستخدم هذا الموقع ملفات تعريف الارتباط (الكوكيز) لنقدم لك أفضل تجربة استخدام ممكنة. تُخزَّن معلومات ملفات تعريف الارتباط في متصفحك، وهي تؤدي وظائف مثل التعرّف عليك عند عودتك إلى موقعنا، ومساعدة فريقنا على فهم أقسام الموقع التي تجدها الأكثر إثارة للاهتمام والأكثر فائدة.