LGBT advocates are praising President Barack Obama’s selection of two appointees to six-year terms on the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. On Thursday, Obama appointed Assistant Secretary of Education for Civil Rights Catherine Lhamon and attorney Debo Adegbile to the posts.
The bipartisan, independent commission advises the federal government on developing civil rights policy and enforcing federal nondiscrimination statutes. It routinely holds hearings and issues reports on the interpretation of U.S. civil rights laws. Recently, the commission endorsed the Obama administration’s guidance to schools regarding the treatment of transgender students, and issued a statement expressing concern over the increase in hate crimes in the United States. The Commission is required to investigate a federal agency every year and issue a report to the President, Vice President, Senate Majority Leader, and Speaker of the House.
As Assistant Secretary of Education for Civil Rights, Lhamon has advocated on behalf of transgender students and has worked to improve the way college campuses deal with sexual assault. Adegbile, who previously served as senior counsel to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee and as acting president of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, has argued multiple times before the U.S. Supreme Court, including when he defended the Voting Rights Act in 2008.
LGBT groups were ecstatic at the news of the nominations.
“Catherine Lhamon and Debo Adegbile have dedicated their careers to defending and strengthening our civil rights laws,” Sarah Warbelow, the legal director of the Human Rights Campaign, said in a statement. “As the Assistant Secretary of Education for Civil Rights, Catherine Lhamon worked with educators and administrators across the country to ensure that transgender students were granted equal protection from discrimination in our nation’s schools and colleges. And from advocacy to litigation, Debo Adegbile has fought to protect the promise of our civil and voting rights laws in courthouses, at the Supreme Court, and on Capitol Hill.”
“We are so thrilled that these amazing leaders, who have already done so much work resisting injustice and speaking up for the rights of everyone, are being given the opportunity to continue their critical work on the Commission on Civil Rights,” added Mara Keisling, the executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality. “We would also like to thank President Obama for continuing to take action to move civil rights forward through the very end of his administration.”
Eliza Byard, the executive director of GLSEN, also weighed in on the appointments, calling them “remarkable” and a “milestone in the ongoing struggle to fulfill our nation’s founding promise of justice for all.”
“Over more than 10 years with the NAACP, Adegbile fought employment and housing discrimination, led criminal justice reform efforts and repeatedly defended the Voting Rights Act, all areas for urgent focus in the Commission’s work in the years to come,” Byard said.
“Under Catherine Lhamon’s direction, the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights has become the foremost champion of our nation’s most at-risk youth, responding to a record number of complaints from student and families of all kinds who have turned to her office for assistance,” she added. “Lhamon has led OCR through a period of some of the most important action to ensure true educational equity since desegregation. She has been an unrelenting ally to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and questioning students, protecting them from bullying, harassment and discrimination, and ensuring that schools address sexual harassment and assault in ways that do not harm the survivors.”
Delaware State Sen. Sarah McBride (D-Wilmington) has made history by becoming the first out transgender person elected to Congress.
McBride, best known for her former role as spokesperson for the Human Rights Campaign, was declared the projected winner by NBC News with 70% of the vote reporting. The Associated Press has not yet called the race, but McBride was leading James Whalen III, a former police officer, by a margin of 58% to 42% for Delaware's sole congressional seat.
A former White House intern during the Obama administration, employee of the Center of American Progress, and board member of Equality Delaware, McBride has been credited as one of several influential activists who successfully lobbied for the passage of Delaware's comprehensive nondiscrimination law protecting the rights of LGBTQ individuals.
"This year, we had the death of Pauly Likens, who was 14, the youngest victim we've ever recorded," says Dr. Shoshana Goldberg. "We see many victims misgendered and deadening by authorities, and reporting what emerged this year is not surprising. What is unsurprising and heartbreaking is that we just see the same things happen. Even as while the numbers may change from year to year, the same trends continue to emerge."
Goldberg is the director of public education and research at the Human Rights Campaign Foundation, the educational arm of the nation's largest LGBTQ civil rights organization. Earlier today, one day before Transgender Day of Remembrance, which memorializes those trans people who have lost their lives to murder or suicide, the foundation released a report detailing the extent of violence directed against members of the transgender and gender-nonconforming communities in the United States.
Following President-elect Donald Trump's rout of Kamala Harris, many LGBTQ organizations were left reeling. Still, they vowed to continue advocating for their ultimate goal of equality for all LGBTQ people.
They emerged battered but unbowed following Tuesday's election, which was characterized as a populist revolt against inflation and higher prices for consumer goods, foreign interference in global conflicts, unchecked immigration, and liberal viewpoints. The latter issue was motivated, in part, by angst about increased LGBTQ visibility and allegations that schools were "indoctrinating" youth into identifying as LGBTQ.
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