A blog for LGBTQIA+ migrating to more welcoming states or counties
Author: Bob McCranie
I am so proud to run Texas Pride Realty Group. We set out on a mission in 2009 to serve the diverse communities of Texas and to hire kick-ass agents who practice the highest ethics and professionalism. I believe that the agent's role is to help the consumer make well-educated decisions, even if those decisions lead away from a purchase or sale.
I believe that education is vital in this industry. I currently have over 1300 hours of real estate courses on my transcript with the State of Texas. Additionally, I am a Real Estate Business Coach at Tom Ferry International, the largest-real-estate specific coaching company in the world. I coach agents in the US and Canada, and have coached clients in Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, and Switzerland. I also have knowledge of the UK and Irish markets.
Opening Texas Pride Realty was always a goal of mine and I am working night and day to be sure it is successful. The best way to do that is to be sure clients are satisfied and agents are busy. What better legacy could someone leave in this industry than a group of well-trained, high-quality brokers who do your job better than you?
In a bid to attract high-value global investors and reduce its reliance on tourism, the Maldives has launched its first-ever investor visa program, allowing foreign nationals to secure long-term residency through investment in premium real estate.
The agreement to establish the program was signed with Henley & Partners during the Maldives–Singapore Business Forum 2025, held on Sentosa Island. It aligns with President Dr. Mohamed Muizzu’s Vision 2040 strategy to build a resilient and diversified economy.
Real estate at the core of the new residency route
Under the new scheme, investors will be granted long-term residence in return for investment in approved real estate projects. The program will be backed by a strict due diligence process to ensure only reputable and eligible applicants are accepted, with final approvals resting with the Maldivian government.
Henley & Partners, which has designed similar programs globally, will advise the government on policy structure, compliance, and implementation. The firm has facilitated over USD 15 billion in foreign direct investment worldwide.
“The residence by investment program will provide state-of-the-art properties with the utmost privacy and exclusivity,” said Philippe Amarante, Managing Partner and Head of Government Advisory EMEA at Henley & Partners. “As a safe, stable, and peaceful island nation, the Maldives presents the ultimate hedge against geopolitical conflict or global pandemics.”
Government aims for long-term economic impact
Economic Development and Trade Minister Mohamed Saeed said the program aims to position the Maldives not only as a top-tier travel destination but also as a long-term investment hub.
“With this program, we aim to extend that legacy to discerning global investors who see value in our people, our potential, and our future,” said Saeed.
The government expects the initiative to stimulate growth in hospitality, services, and infrastructure, while supporting job creation and financial stability.
Henley & Partners will help finalise the policy framework and real estate listings. The program is expected to launch once regulatory approvals are in place.
Democrats labeled it “yet another example” of GOP extremists “stirring up divisive social issues to create problems where none exist.”
Republicans in Idaho’s House of Representatives are contemplating a formal statement urging the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse its landmark 2015 ruling that legalized same-sex marriage.
The resolution, proposed by Republican state Rep. Heather Scott, characterizes the court’s decision as an “illegitimate overreach.” Scott’s proposal calls for the restoration of the “natural definition of marriage,” despite the fact that various forms of marriage, including same-sex unions, have existed throughout history.
Rep. Heather Scott stated that the purpose of her resolution is to “affirm our state authority to regulate marriage” during a Tuesday hearing.
The 2015 Supreme Court ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges legalized same-sex marriage nationwide, following decades of LGBTQ+ activism. At the time of the ruling, many states still had bans on gay marriage, despite growing public support for such unions.
The decision, made by a 5-4 vote, preceded the appointments of three conservative justices during the presidency of Donald Trump—Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett. Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito have since called for a reconsideration of the Obergefell decision.
While Scott’s resolution holds no legal authority, it will be forwarded to the Supreme Court for consideration. The state committee advanced it on Tuesday, and a public hearing will be scheduled at a later date.
State House Minority Leader Ilana Rubel (D) and Senate Minority Leader Melissa Wintrow (D) dismissed Scott’s resolution as a “sad distraction,” criticizing it as another attempt by the far-right of the Republican Party to “gin up divisive social issues to create problems where none exist.” They emphasized that “big government has no business telling consenting adults who they should love.”
They added, “This resolution may be a helpful gimmick for winning in closed GOP primaries, but it should be offensive to all Idahoans who value their individual rights and freedoms and just want to live their lives without egregious government interference.”
In 2021, Rep. Scott compared Idaho’s mask mandate to Nazi Germany’s policies. Despite a federal judge ruling that Idaho’s ban on same-sex marriage violates the U.S. Constitution, the ban remains on the books. Recent polling shows that more Idahoans support same-sex marriage than oppose it.
California must stand strong in support of our trans community members.
Out California State Sen. Scott Wiener (D) has introduced a bill aimed at protecting the privacy of trans people in anticipation of the incoming Trump administration. Wiener warned that Trump’s hostility toward trans individuals and his planned rollback of their rights would “only embolden abusive right-wing extremists.”
The proposed legislation, S.B. 59, known as the Transgender Privacy Act, seeks to create an automatic process to seal all court records related to an individual’s gender transition in the state. This would include retroactively sealing existing records. The bill also ensures that any gender transition records that reference a person’s dead name or sex assigned at birth would be kept sealed.
A similar law protecting youth was passed in 2023, but Wiener’s bill specifically targets individuals over 18.
“The incoming Trump administration and Republican congressional leadership have made it clear that targeting and erasing trans people is one of their highest policy priorities, and California must stand by our trans community members,” Wiener said in a statement. “Making personal identifying information public after someone transitions—such as their dead name or the fact that they are trans or nonbinary—needlessly exposes trans and nonbinary Californians to harassment and potential violence.”
If passed, California would join Washington, Oregon, and New York in enacting privacy laws that protect trans people from being forcibly outed through state records.
“When I learned I was unable to change my name in California without being forcibly outed online and exposed to harassment, I was appalled,” said Hazel Williams, a trans activist who worked with Wiener on the legislation, according to the Bay Area Reporter. “I’m proud to help rally community members and advocacy organizations to fix this. There are 220,000 transgender and nonbinary adults in California. All of us deserve privacy and safety, and this legislation is a vital step in that direction.”
The bill follows a ruling last year by Fresno’s 5th District Court of Appeal, which granted a trans woman the right to seal her transition-related records after being outed on social media, harassed by anonymous users, and forced to close all her accounts. While the decision set a precedent for judges to allow requests to seal such records, it does not mandate it in the way Wiener’s bill would.
“As Trump and his cronies continue their cynical incitements of violence against transgender people, it’s critical that we fight back with progressive protections at the state level,” said Syd Simpson, co-chair of the Harvey Milk LGBTQ+ Democratic Club’s Transgender Caucus, in an interview with the Bay Area Reporter.
“It’s really scary to know that there are people out there who want to hurt you, and that your personal information is just sitting there for them to exploit. The right to privacy and the right to be safe are precious to our community, and we’ve got to fight for them.”
Vaccine skeptics RFK Jr. and the state’s governor are leading the covert initiative.
In October and November, Louisiana officials held a series of meetings informing Department of Health staff that the state would no longer permit them to promote COVID, flu, and mpox vaccinations.
The new policy was to be enforced quietly, without being put in writing, according to four health department employees who spoke to NPR on the condition of anonymity.
In October and November, Louisiana officials informed Department of Health staff that they would no longer be allowed to promote COVID, flu, and mpox vaccinations. The new policy was to be quietly implemented without written documentation, according to four anonymous health department employees who spoke to NPR.
Employees were told they could not issue press releases, give interviews, organize vaccination events, present, or create social media content encouraging vaccination. They were also prohibited from posting signs at department clinics announcing the availability of vaccines.
One staff member expressed concern, saying, “I mean, do they want to dismantle public health?”
In 2023, Louisiana recorded 652 COVID-related deaths, including five children, and had the highest flu rate in the U.S. The state saw 586 flu-related deaths in 2022. As of August 2024, there had been 60 deaths and 33,435 cases of mpox in the U.S., with 309 cases reported in Louisiana through February 2023, before the state ceased reporting cases.
Kimberly Hood, former leader of the Office of Public Health, criticized the lack of transparency, saying, “I’m very surprised that anyone would call a state meeting, not provide an agenda for that meeting, not provide a written set of notes from that meeting… it sounds like people are trying to avoid public records laws.”
The policy change is linked to Gov. Jeff Landry (R), an outspoken vaccine skeptic, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a Landry ally. As attorney general during the COVID pandemic, Landry opposed adding the COVID vaccine to the childhood immunization schedule, with Kennedy testifying alongside him and presenting false claims about the vaccines.
As governor, Landry has signed legislation rolling back vaccine requirements and questioning vaccine safety. He also appointed Dr. Ralph Abraham, a vaccine skeptic, as the state’s surgeon general. Abraham has linked vaccines to autism and claimed COVID vaccine adverse effects have been “suppressed.”
In a statement to NPR, the Louisiana Department of Health said it is “reevaluating both the state’s public health priorities as well as our messaging around vaccine promotion, especially for COVID-19 and influenza,” shifting from “one-size-fits-all paternalistic guidance” to allowing individuals to choose immunization, mask-wearing, and social distancing. The statement did not address mpox vaccinations.
Dr. George Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association, called the policy “malpractice,” emphasizing that vaccination is one of the most important public health interventions. He stated, “Anyone who’s articulating that these vaccines are not well tested, they’re not safe, they’re not effective, is not giving you the science as we know it today.”
Former health staffer Hood described the spread of false claims as a “step backwards,” adding, “It’s a medical marvel that we’re fortunate enough to live in a time where these vaccines are available to us, and to not make use of that tool is unconscionable.”
Valentina Gomez, who ran for Missouri Secretary of State this year using slurs and hateful rhetoric during her failed campaign, has now relocated to Texas and is running for Congress. She continues to promote extreme anti-LGBTQ+ views while also attempting to capitalize on her social media following.
In a video posted to her platform, she declares, “I’m running for Congress in Texas, and I’m taking down a RINO and a dinosaur once and for all because Congress is full of crooks like Speaker [Mike] Johnson, who is just a little man with no balls who funds Ukraine. And Dan Crenshaw, who is only good at betraying his fellow Navy Seals.”
Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX) represents Texas’ Second Congressional District, which encompasses the northern and eastern suburbs of Houston. The term “RINO,” which stands for “Republican in name only,” is often used by Republicans to accuse fellow party members of not being conservative enough.
Gomez did not clarify how she is running for office in Texas so soon after her campaign in Missouri, but she did promise that she’s “coming to Texas to speak the truth, cook the crooks, and save the children.”
“Buckle up, Texas, because this ain’t my first rodeo,” she added. Her “first rodeo” likely refers to the GOP primary for Missouri Secretary of State earlier this year, where she finished a distant sixth place.
In a video posted to X just yesterday, Gomez announced that she is now accepting subscriptions on the platform, allowing people to pay for access to exclusive content. She boldly stated that “0% of the profits will go to an LGBTQ cause.” In the video, she claimed she would be “catching a pedophile” and shooting a gun, among other actions, all while wearing a shirt that read, “Don’t be weak and gay.”
Earlier this week, Gomez made the unfounded claim that “the LGBTQ is a terrorist organization,” despite the fact that “LGBTQ” does not refer to any kind of organization. She went on to assert, “If they can’t groom your children, they will kill them,” adding that “pedophiles that hide under the LGBTQ flag are the next mass shooters.” She also said, “Christians are being hunted and killed and now multiple kids in a Christian school are dead,” referencing the school shooting in Madison, Wisconsin earlier this week. However, the shooter was not LGBTQ+ in any way, and evidence suggests she had been influenced by neo-Nazis and far-right ideologies.
Gomez has a long history of using anti-gay slurs, including during her failed campaign for Missouri Secretary of State, where she recently referred to anyone who didn’t vote for her as a “faot.” One of her main campaign slogans was “Don’t be weak and gay,” and she gained attention earlier this year when a video of her running in a Kevlar vest went viral. In the video, she said, “In America, you can be anything you want. So don’t be weak and gay. Stay fking hard.”
Her extreme rhetoric also cost her a job with Nestle Purina. After being let go for her anti-LGBTQ+ actions, she posted a video saying, “Today, I fired them. No amount of money, stock, or bullying will make me compromise my values. So I will never support a company that wants to empower and protect pedophiles and groomers in our schools and libraries.”
As her primary campaign drew closer, Gomez became more unhinged, regularly calling LGBTQ+ people “pedophiles.” She even posted a video this past week where she used the slur “fa***ts,” falsely claimed that unnamed individuals tried to poison her dogs, and referred to Vice President Kamala Harris as an “Indian hoe.” She also made derogatory remarks about Democrats, saying they are all “gay, vaccinated, and cannot reproduce.”
“There are many people who clearly do not want us to be here.”
Police in Santa Cruz, California, have charged 45-year-old James Eason with vandalizing The Neighbor’s, a queer bar, just days after it opened. Eason faces charges of vandalism, arson, and committing a hate crime.
The incident occurred early last Tuesday morning when a suspect set fire to a button panel outside the bar’s front door, which is used to assist disabled patrons. The vandal also attempted to push burning napkins through the door’s cracks and carved a homophobic slur into the glass, according to bar owner Frankie Farr, who spoke with Lookout.
“I was like, ‘You’ve got to be kidding, we’re not even open a week,’” Farr said. “[We are] still a bit in shock that it happened so quickly… There are clearly many people who do not want us to exist.”
They contacted the police, and detectives were able to identify the suspect after reviewing surveillance footage from nearby businesses. At the time Eason was named a suspect in the vandalism, he was already in custody at the county jail for an unrelated offense.
The bar opened in early December with a ribbon-cutting ceremony attended by Santa Cruz Mayor Fred Keeley, City Councilmember Sonja Brunner, and more than 100 patrons eager to explore the new space.
Although the city is home to LGBTQ+-inclusive businesses, Farr felt there was a lack of dedicated spaces for queer individuals to meet, socialize, and build a sense of community. In addition to offering food and serving as a performance venue for regional DJs, queer performers, and drag artists, Farr hopes the bar can also support environmental and social movements and attract LGBTQ+ tourists to Santa Cruz.
“It’s pretty depressing to think of all these people driving over the hill or all the way to San Francisco just to find [queer] community when we have it right here,” Farr said.
Months before the opening, Farr shared, “I really want [the bar] to be a place for people who aren’t out or in unsafe situations where they can’t disclose their sexuality to family or others they live with—where they can give a sly little wave and say, ‘I’m just going to hang out at The Neighbor’s.’”
Despite the attack, the bar resumed normal business hours right away. Farr expressed gratitude that the incident wasn’t worse.
“We’re very fortunate that nobody was inside,” Farr said. “However, there are apartments above, and those residents don’t deserve this either. They could have been seriously injured.”
“I wish people would set aside their personal biases in this situation,” the local police chief stated.
Police in Madison, Wisconsin, have urged the public to stop speculating about the gender identity of the individual responsible for the tragic shooting at Abundant Life Christian School on Monday. The shooting resulted in three fatalities, including the suspected shooter, and left six others injured. Among those expressing condolences for the victims were openly gay U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan (D-WI) and lesbian Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-WI).
The suspect, 15-year-old student Natalie Rupnow, opened fire with a handgun around 11 a.m. local time in a study hall, according to CNN. She took her own life, as well as that of a teacher and a student, and left six others injured, two of whom remain in critical condition. Authorities have not yet released any details regarding the shooter’s gender identity or the motive behind the attack. However, transphobic groups have wrongfully used this incident to spread false claims that the shooter was transgender, aiming to further stigmatize the trans community as dangerous.
“I don’t know whether the shooter was transgender or not,” Police Chief Shone Barnes stated during a press conference on Monday evening. “I don’t think whatever happened today has anything to do with how she or he or they may have wanted to identify.”
Barnes emphasized, “I wish people would leave their own personal biases out of this. Whether or not she was, he was, or they were transgender is something that may come out later. But for what we’re doing right now, eight hours after a mass shooting, it is of no consequence.”
While there have been reports suggesting that Rupnow may have left behind writings later shared online by someone claiming to be connected to her, police have not yet verified the authenticity of these writings. The suspected shooter’s parents are reportedly cooperating with investigators and, at this time, face no legal charges, according to authorities.
There have been at least 83 school shootings in the U.S. so far this year, CNN reports. In the aftermath of some incidents, right-wing figures have spread misinformation about the shooters identifying as transgender.
Following Monday’s shooting, anti-LGBTQ+ activist Chaya Raichik, known for running the LibsOfTikTok account, shared a video of Chief Barnes using different pronouns to refer to the shooter. Raichik suggested that Barnes did so due to Rupnow’s gender identity.
In early January, Raichik made a similar claim, posting misinformation that suggested five recent school shooters had identified as nonbinary or transgender. Her image also falsely asserted that the 2022 Uvalde, Texas school shooter was transgender—this was not the case, and the person shown posing with a trans flag in her image was not the actual shooter.
The transphobic billionaire Elon Musk amplified Raichik’s inaccurate post, commenting with “!!” to further spread the misinformation.
In response to the recent shooting, Rep. Pocan issued a statement: “‘Thoughts and prayers’ offer comfort to the families and communities affected but have not changed our unique reality as Americans. It’s time for action. I am a co-sponsor of several gun violence prevention and youth mental health bills that will help prevent future tragedies like this. It’s time for my Republican colleagues to grow a backbone and put our children above the gun lobby by passing commonsense gun safety laws that will save countless lives.”
He continued, “My heart goes out to the victims of the Abundant Life Christian School shooting, their loved ones, and our entire community.” He also expressed gratitude toward the police and first responders who assisted the school.
Sen. Baldwin shared her thoughts on X, saying that her “heart breaks” for the community, which has been “scarred forever.” She added, “My thoughts are with the families mourning, the injured, the teachers and staff, and the entire Madison community that has been traumatized by this senseless gun violence.”
“No one in America should have to suffer like this—let alone kids in school,” she wrote. “I refuse to sit idly by and am committed to being part of the solution to end the scourge of gun violence.”
Echoing the false claims about a trans shooter, right-wing figures like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO), and former Fox News host Tucker Carlson have repeatedly argued that trans people are dangerous because they are “mentally ill.” These transphobes assert that transgender individuals are mentally unstable and seek to “groom” and “sexualize” children with what they call “gender ideology,” which they claim confuses and coerces kids into pursuing “irreversible” medical procedures that will “mutilate” them for life. Boebert has even suggested that affirming trans people’s identities directly contributes to school shootings.
However, the truth is that the vast majority of mass shooters in the U.S. are cisgender males. The right-wing focus on linking trans identity to violence and mental illness often serves to stigmatize queer individuals while distracting from the real issue—gun control. Proposals for stronger gun regulations are often ignored, despite their potential to prevent mass shootings in the first place.
A CNN analyst criticized conservatives for scapegoating trans people in the wake of school shootings. Rather than focusing on the shooter’s gender identity, the analyst emphasized the need to address broader issues, such as mental health, child protection, school security, and firearm safety reforms, as essential steps in preventing future tragedies.
Residents sought councilmembers focused on solving real issues rather than spreading fear.
Voters in Odessa, Texas, have decisively rejected the city’s anti-trans stance by ousting three city council members who backed the controversial bathroom ban and electing the city’s first openly gay councilmember.
Craig Stoker, the executive director of the local Meals on Wheels, ran on a platform centered around improving the city’s infrastructure. In contrast, his opponent, incumbent Denise Swanner, focused her campaign on homophobic rhetoric.
Swanner’s campaign distributed political mailers stating that the only thing she and Stoker had in common was being in relationships with men. Although the race was nonpartisan, this was part of Swanner’s effort to associate Stoker with the Democratic Party.
Craig Stoker remained unfazed by the attacks during the campaign.
“None of it was truly about me,” Stoker told the Texas Tribune. “It was their fear of losing a seat, losing an election, losing the title. I came into this campaign with the mindset that I’m going to have to rely on the work I’ve done in the community and the reputation I’ve built preceding me. That’s all I got.”
He added, “I understood the outcome was too important. If I could pull this off, what I would have the ability to do completely outweighed whatever they were slinging at me. And the ability to represent people who have probably never had a voice in the City Council chamber became too important to me.”
Stoker’s strategy resonated with voters. He secured the at-large seat with 56% of the vote, a remarkable achievement in a county where Donald Trump earned 76% of the vote.
His opponent, Denise Swanner, and two other incumbents—Mayor Javier Joven and councilmember Mark Matta—were key figures in a conservative majority on the six-member council. This group had pushed an agenda that included a $10,000 bounty on transgender individuals who use bathrooms or locker rooms not aligned with their sex assigned at birth.
“Voters said this is not how we want our city run… I agree, and we have to do a better job for the people,” said Cal Hendrick, who defeated Joven, in an interview with the Odessa American, which had dubbed the trio “The Squad.”
The election results have sparked hope among residents that city leadership will pivot away from divisive social issues and refocus on critical local concerns like infrastructure.
Odessa gained national attention for its extreme anti-trans bathroom ordinance, which allows any individual—regardless of residency—to sue a transgender person for at least $10,000 in damages for using a bathroom not aligned with their sex assigned at birth. There is no limit on the potential damages.
Last month, the city council expanded the ordinance to apply to private facilities in addition to public ones. The law also enforces criminal penalties, deeming violations a Class C misdemeanor punishable by a fine of up to $500. Refusal to leave a bathroom after being asked can result in trespassing charges.
The ordinance defines biological sex based on birth certificates, whether issued at birth or amended for clerical errors. This means transgender individuals with updated birth certificates reflecting their gender identity could still violate the law if they use bathrooms aligning with their gender.
The election marks a significant shift in Odessa’s political landscape and a potential turning point for the city’s future direction.
The activists, part of the group Trans Kids Deserve Better, staged an overnight protest outside the Department of Health and Social Care offices.
In response to the announcement by Health Secretary Wes Streeting and the Department of Health and Social Care that puberty blockers for treating gender dysphoria in trans youth would be banned “indefinitely,” a group of trans youth activists set up a temporary encampment outside Streeting’s office. On December 11, Trans Kids Deserve Better and their supporters set up camp outside Wes Streeting’s office, remaining there overnight until the following day, according to an Instagram post from the group. While puberty blockers have effectively been banned in the U.K. since May, when the Department of Health and Social Care imposed an “emergency ban” on the medication for trans youth, Streeting’s recent announcement on Wednesday further extended the ban. He stated that the National Health Service (NHS) and private doctors are prohibited from prescribing or supplying puberty blockers to trans youth for gender dysphoria treatment until 2027. However, existing prescriptions for trans youth will continue to be honored. In contrast, cisgender youth experiencing precocious puberty are still permitted to receive prescriptions for the blockers.
In an article for Huck Magazine, one of the group’s activists, known as Grin, wrote that “while today isn’t a big change, it is a sign that the denial of our healthcare is now institutionalized.” Gender clinics in the U.K. have faced criticism for notoriously long waiting times, with an August study revealing that trans youth wait an average of two years to begin receiving gender-affirming care.
Grin wrote that Streeting “has promised ‘clinical trials’ on the effects of hormone blockers.” However, many clinical studies on the subject already exist, and the overwhelming majority conclude that hormone blockers are beneficial to the well-being of trans youth.
“But we already know what happens when we get them. We get to live happier, healthier lives because our bodies won’t be permanently altered in ways we don’t want,” Grin continued. “The real trial or experiment he has now created is to keep us from our healthcare and see what happens when an entire generation of trans people grows up knowing the trauma they’ve gone through was avoidable. I’ve not consented to be part of that experiment — I just wanted healthcare.”
The group has been targeting Streeting since August as part of a separate campaign called Trans Kids Are Dying, Wes Streeting. According to Grin’s article in Huck Magazine, the group has visited the secretary’s office daily since July, delivering “handmade paper coffins” to symbolize the lives of trans people already lost and those still at risk. Grin also mentioned that the group had received an invitation to meet with Streeting, but that it “never happened,” despite “constant emails to follow up on his invitation.”
On this occasion, the activists left a life-sized cardboard coffin outside Streeting’s office, as detailed in an Instagram post by Jude Guitamacchi, who participated in the overnight protest.
In their Instagram caption, they wrote, “This healthcare ban starts with trans+ kids but won’t end with them. This is about all of us. We must work together and do everything we can to challenge the ban and fight for the human rights of the trans+ community in the UK.”
Michigan Democrats are working to pass a bill that would enshrine same-sex marriage in the state’s constitution. This effort comes in response to concerns that the U.S. Supreme Court could overturn its 2015 ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges, which legalized marriage equality nationwide. Additionally, some Republican lawmakers, including one state congressman, have called to “make gay marriage illegal again.”
Although the Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell declared state laws banning same-sex marriage unconstitutional, Michigan is among several states where outdated laws or constitutional amendments still prohibit same-sex marriage. As Fox 2 Detroit reports, voters in Michigan approved a constitutional amendment in 2004 that defined marriage as “the union of one man and one woman” for all legal purposes.
If the Supreme Court were to overturn Obergefell v. Hodges, as Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito have hinted they may, Michigan’s marriage equality ban would automatically be reinstated.
In response, Democratic state Rep. Jason Morgan introduced House Joint Resolution F last year, which aims to remove the 2004 constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman. However, for this resolution to move forward, it must receive support from at least two-thirds of the state Legislature, a goal Morgan says will be difficult to achieve. “I believe the people will vote to support families,” Morgan told Fox 2, though he acknowledged that the legislative support isn’t there yet.
Meanwhile, Republican state Rep. Josh Schriver is actively calling for the reversal of marriage equality. In a recent post on X, Schriver stated that America only “accepted” gay marriage due to a “perverted Supreme Court ruling” and urged that marriage equality be overturned, calling it “not remotely controversial or extreme.” Schriver clarified that his post was meant to pressure the Supreme Court into reversing the ruling that equates “traditional marriage” with gay marriage.
Governor Gretchen Whitmer has strongly opposed any efforts to strip away marriage equality, stating, “Any attempt to strip away gay marriage is wrong.” She reaffirmed Michigan’s commitment to protecting the rights of all citizens, emphasizing that no one should face discrimination based on who they love.
With a 6-3 conservative majority in the Supreme Court that has shown a willingness to overturn longstanding precedents, as seen with the 2022 reversal of Roe v. Wade, and an incoming second Trump administration, many same-sex couples are rushing to marry before Inauguration Day to secure legal protections in states where marriage equality is still guaranteed.
Despite Trump spokesperson Karoline Leavitt stating that overturning marriage equality was never a campaign promise, Morgan remains concerned that the Trump administration poses a threat to marriage equality. “I do believe that marriage equality is at risk under the Trump administration,” he said.
If the resolution doesn’t pass through the legislature, Morgan is committed to continuing the fight to protect marriage equality in Michigan. As Fox 2 noted, a citizen-driven petition could also push the amendment to the ballot. “It’s just so important,” Morgan said. “This is something I’m very passionate about.”
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