National
Gay House candidate wins in R.I.
Cicilline poised to become 4th out member of Congress

A gay Rhode Island mayor on Tuesday trounced his competition in pursuit of the Democratic nomination for a U.S. House seat.
David Cicilline, mayor of Providence, won the Democratic primary by securing 37 percent of the vote in his bid to represent Rhode Island’s 1st congressional district and succeed retiring Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-R.I.).
Richard Luchette, spokesperson for the Cicilline campaign, said Cicilline’s win on Tuesday demonstrates voters want a candidate who will “fight for ordinary men and women by working hard to create new jobs” and would break “the connection between money and politics in Washington D.C.”
“These are the issues that we will continue talking about from now until Election Day,” Luchette said.
The win for Cicilline in the primary could set him up to become the fourth sitting openly gay member of Congress if he wins in November. Still, other out Democrats ā Steve Pougnet in California and Ed Potosnak in New Jersey ā are also seeking U.S. House seats this fall.
Cicillineās opponents in the primary trailed him by double-digit points in the four-way race.
Anthony Gemma, a businessman, received 23 percent of the vote; David Segal, a Rhode Island State House member, received 20 percent; and William Lynch, a former head of the Rhode Island State Democratic Party, also won 20 percent of the vote.
The win for Cicilline on Tuesday means he’ll face in the general election John Loughlin, a former Rhode Island Assembly member and Army veteran.
Cicilline has the backing of national LGBT organizations, including the Human Rights Campaign and the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund. Chuck Wolfe, CEO of the Victory Fund, praised Cicilline in a statement.
“Adding more authentic LGBT voices to Congress is a Victory Fund priority, and Mayor Cicillineās win tonight puts us one giant step closer to doing just that,” Wolfe said. “Weāre proud to have supported Mayor Cicilline throughout his political career, and thrilled about this historic victory.ā
In a statement, Joe Solmonese, HRC’s president, said his organization is “thrilled” with Cicilline’s primary victory and looks forward “to working with him to ensure Rhode Islandās first district is represented by a fair-minded legislator.”
“He has proven himself as a state senator and strong mayor and will no doubt be an active and effective congressman in promoting equality for all people,” Solmonese said.
Running in a heavily Democratic district, Cicilline is favored to win in the general election. The most recent reports on the Federal Election Commission website show that as of the end of August, Cicilline had raised $1.36 million and has $446,000 in cash on hand. Comparatively, Loughlin has raised $470,000 and has $67,000 in cash on hand.
Dan Pinello, a gay government professor at the City University of New York, said Cicilline is in “pretty good standing” as he heads into the general election.
“Rhode Island is, of course, a traditionally very Democratic state, and Providence, as an urban center is traditionally Democratic,” Pinello said. “It would seem to me that he would be labeled the favorite at this point.”
The results for other non-incumbent gay candidates running for office were a mixed bag on Tuesday.
In New York, Harry Bronson, a small business owner, won the Democratic nomination to pursue a seat representing Rochester, N.Y., in the State Assembly.
A win in November would make him the sixth out member of the New York Legislature and the only out Assembly member from upstate New York.
However, Phil LaTessa, another gay small business owner, lost his bid for the Democratic nomination to represent Syracuse, N.Y., in the state Assembly.
In Massachusetts, lesbian Karen Payne, a former president of a local National Association for the Advanced of Colored People chapter, lost her bid for the Democratic nomination for a state House seat.
U.S. Federal Courts
Second federal lawsuit filed against White House passport policy
Two of seven plaintiffs live in Md.

Lambda Legal on April 25 filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of seven transgender and nonbinary people who are challenging the Trump-Vance administration’s passport policy.
The lawsuit, which Lambda Legal filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland in Baltimore, alleges the policy that bans the State Department from issuing passports with “X” gender markers “has caused and is causing grave and immediate harm to transgender people like plaintiffs, in violation of their constitutional rights to equal protection.”
Two of the seven plaintiffs ā Jill Tran and Peter Poe ā live in Maryland. The State Department, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and the federal government are defendants.
“The discriminatory passport policy exposes transgender U.S. citizens to harassment, abuse, and discrimination, in some cases endangering them abroad or preventing them from traveling, by forcing them to use identification documents that share private information against their wishes,” said Lambda Legal in a press release.
Zander Schlacter, a New York-based textile artist and designer, is the lead plaintiff.
The lawsuit notes he legally changed his name and gender in New York.
Schlacter less than a week before President Donald Trump’s inauguration “sent an expedited application to update his legal name on his passport, using form DS-5504.”
Trump once he took office signed an executive order that banned the State Department from issuing passports with “X” gender markers. The lawsuit notes Schlacter received his new passport in February.
“The passport has his correct legal name, but now has an incorrect sex marker of ‘F’ or ‘female,'” notes the lawsuit. “Mr. Schlacter also received a letter from the State Department notifying him that ‘the date of birth, place of birth, name, or sex was corrected on your passport application,’ with ‘sex’ circled in red. The stated reason was ‘to correct your information to show your biological sex at birth.'”
“I, like many transgender people, experience fear of harassment or violence when moving through public spaces, especially where a photo ID is required,” said Schlacter in the press release that announced the lawsuit. “My safety is further at risk because of my inaccurate passport. I am unwilling to subject myself and my family to the threat of harassment and discrimination at the hands of border officials or anyone who views my passport.”
Former Secretary of State Antony Blinken in June 2021 announced the State Department would begin to issue gender-neutral passports and documents for American citizens who were born overseas.
Dana Zzyym, an intersex U.S. Navy veteran who identifies as nonbinary, in 2015 filed a federal lawsuit against the State Department after it denied their application for a passport with an āXā gender marker. Zzyym in October 2021 received the first gender-neutral American passport.
Lambda Legal represented Zzyym.
The State Department policy took effect on April 11, 2022.
Trump signed his executive order shortly after he took office in January. Germany, Denmark, Finland, and the Netherlands are among the countries that have issued travel advisories for trans and nonbinary people who plan to visit the U.S.
A federal judge in Boston earlier this month issued a preliminary injunction against the executive order.Ā The American Civil Liberties Union filed the lawsuit on behalf of seven trans and nonbinary people.
Federal Government
HHS to retire 988 crisis lifeline for LGBTQ youth
Trevor Project warns the move will ‘put their lives at risk’

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is planning to retire the national 988 crisis lifeline for LGBTQ youth on Oct. 1, according to a preliminary budget document obtained by the Washington Post.
Introduced during the Biden-Harris administration in 2022, the hotline connects callers with counselors who are trained to work with this population, who are four times likelier to attempt suicide than their cisgender or heterosexual counterparts.
āSuicide prevention is about risk, not identity,” said Jaymes Black, CEO of the Trevor Project, which provides emergency crisis support for LGBTQ youth and has contracted with HHS to take calls routed through 988.
“Ending the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifelineās LGBTQ+ youth specialized services will not just strip away access from millions of LGBTQ+ kids and teens ā it will put their lives at risk,ā they said in a statement. āThese programs were implemented to address a proven, unprecedented, and ongoing mental health crisis among our nationās young people with strong bipartisan support in Congress and signed into law by President Trump himself.ā
“I want to be clear to all LGBTQ+ young people: This news, while upsetting, is not final,” Black said. “And regardless of federal funding shifts, the Trevor Project remains available 24/7 for anyone who needs us, just as we always have.ā
The service for LGBTQ youth has received 1.3 million calls, texts, or chats since its debut, with an average of 2,100 contacts per day in February.
āI worry deeply that we will see more LGBTQ young people reach a crisis state and not have anyone there to help them through that,ā said Janson Wu, director of advocacy and government affairs at the Trevor Project. āI worry that LGBTQ young people will reach out to 988 and not receive a compassionate and welcoming voice on the other end ā and that will only deepen their crisis.ā
Under Trump’s HHS secretary, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., the agency’s departments and divisions have experienced drastic cuts, with a planned reduction in force of 20,000 full-time employees. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration has been sunset and mental health services consolidated into the newly formed Administration for a Healthy America.
The budget document reveals, per Mother Jones, “further sweeping cuts to HHS, including a 40 percent budget cut to the National Institutes of Health; elimination of funding for Head Start, the early childhood education program for low-income families; and a 44 percent funding cut to the Centers for Disease Control, including all the agencyās chronic disease programs.”
U.S. Supreme Court
Supreme Court hears oral arguments in LGBTQ education case
Mahmoud v. Taylor plaintiffs argue for right to opt-out of LGBTQ inclusive lessons

The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday heard oral arguments in Mahmoud v. Taylor, a case about whether Montgomery County, Md., public schools violated the First Amendment rights of parents by not providing them an opportunity to opt their children out of reading storybooks that were part of an LGBTQ-inclusive literacy curriculum.
The school district voted in early 2022 to allow books featuring LGBTQ characters in elementary school language arts classes. When the county announced that parents would not be able to excuse their kids from these lessons, they sued on the grounds that their freedom to exercise the teachings of their Muslim, Jewish, and Christian faiths had been infringed.
The lower federal courts declined to compel the district to temporarily provide advance notice and an opportunity to opt-out of the LGBTQ inclusive curricula, and the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals determined that the parents had not shown that exposure to the storybooks compelled them to violate their religion.
āLGBTQ+ stories matter,” Human Rights Campaign President Kelley Robinson said in a statement Tuesday. āThey matter so students can see themselves and their families in the books they read ā so they can know theyāre not alone. And they matter for all students who need to learn about the world around them and understand that while we may all be different, we all deserve to be valued and loved.”
She added, “All students lose when we limit what they can learn, what they can read, and what their teachers can say. The Supreme Court should reject this attempt to silence our educators and ban our stories.ā
GLAD Law, NCLR, Family Equality, and COLAGE submitted a 40-page amicus brief on April 9, which argued the storybooks “fit squarely” within the district’s language arts curriculum, the petitioners challenging the materials incorrectly characterized them as “specialized curriculum,” and that their request for a “mandated notice-and-opt-out requirement” threatens “to sweep far more broadly.”
Lambda Legal, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, PFLAG, and the National Womenās Law Center announced their submission of a 31-page amicus brief in a press release on April 11.
āAll students benefit from a school climate that promotes acceptance and respect,ā said Karen Loewy, senior counsel and director of constitutional law practice at Lambda Legal. āEnsuring that students can see themselves in the curriculum and learn about students who are different is critical for creating a positive school environment. This is particularly crucial for LGBTQ+ students and students with LGBTQ+ family members who already face unique challenges.ā
The organizations’ brief cited extensive social science research pointing to the benefits of LGBTQ-inclusive instruction like “age-appropriate storybooks featuring diverse families and identities” benefits all students regardless of their identities.
Also weighing in with amici briefs on behalf of Montgomery County Public Schools were the National Education Association, the ACLU, and the American Psychological Association.
Those writing in support of the parents challenging the district’s policy included the Center for American Liberty, the Manhattan Institute, Parents Defending Education, the Alliance Defending Freedom, the Trump-Vance administration’s U.S. Department of Justice, and a coalition of Republican members of Congress.
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