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On Senate Floor, Senator Murray Stands With LGBTQ+ Community, and Condemns Far-Right Attacks on Transgender Kids

Murray: “I’ve got a newsflash for everyone who’s trying to act like companies selling their products to every community they can is something new, or some nefarious conspiracy: gay and trans people drink beverages, they eat food—they buy things… LGBTQ people have families! They are parents, aunts, uncles, and grandparents!”

Murray to GOP: “
If you continue down this dangerous path—bullying kids, erasing LGBTQ people, and demonizing them with dangerous rhetoric—I will rise against you every step of the way. And I will do so with Pride.”

***RELOJ: Senator Murray speaks on the Senate floor ***

Washington DC – Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA), President Pro Tempore of the Senate, spoke on the Senate floor in celebration of Pride Month. In her remarks, Senator Murray laid into far-right efforts to demonize and erase the LGBTQ+ community and made clear she will not stop fighting back against these efforts.

“Far-right lawmakers are using their megaphones and their positions of power to bully kids. That’s what it comes down to. They are attacking people—attacking kids—for being different. For being themselves,” dijo el senador Murray.  “I said it last year on the Senate floor, and I am here again, because I still have to say it: We all have a responsibility to stand up and make clear: this is not right.”

Senator Murray spoke forcefully against a slew of recent efforts by far-right voices to ostracize transgender people, and even vilify kids. Republican presidential candidates have blamed transgender kids for the youth mental health crisis and signed bills banning gender-affirming care for youth and bills erasing LGBTQ+ representation in schools. Senator Murray’s speech comes as Republican-led states are trying to pass and implement similar far-right proposals to take gender-affirming care away from people who need it and even investigate parents for child abuse if they help their kids get such care.


“We’ve got to push back against these attacks on trans kids every way we can: in the courts, with legislation, through executive action, and by speaking out—and speaking up. Which is why I’m here today to tell everyone facing these hateful attacks that you are not alone and you have so many people in your community and in your corner,” dijo el senador Murray. “I am proud to stand with these kids, their families, and the whole LGBTQ community. This Pride Month, we commit ourselves to making sure these kids are not just safe in our country, not just welcome in our country, but allowed to be themselves here, allowed to be joyful and confident about who they are in every part of our country.”

Senator Murray closed her remarks calling for Republicans to stop their cruel attacks, and making a firm vow to continue standing firm against them.

“You do not have to bully people because they are different. You do not have to champion hatred, fear, or anger. You can make a different choice. It’s really not that hard to listen, and learn, and respect, and accept people for who they are. To have compassion. And I promise it will make your world brighter, and your heart lighter,” dijo el senador Murray. “Finally: if you continue down this dangerous path—bullying kids, erasing LGBTQ people, and demonizing them with dangerous rhetoric—I will rise against you every step of the way. And I will do so with pride.”

Senator Murray also shared the words of a young transgender activist she spoke with el año pasado.

Senator Murray is a strong supporter of—and fighting to pass—the Ley de Igualdad, which would expand federal civil rights laws to protect LGBTQ+ people from discrimination in employment, housing, credit, jury service, and federally-funded programs. Senator Murray is also a lead sponsor of legislation to ban conversion therapy in the United States, working to pass her Ley de prevención del fraude terapéutico. Under the Trump administration, Senator Murray repeatedly fought back against Trump’s attempts to roll back protections for LGBTQ+ Americans and stood up against judicial nominees who had troubling anti-LGBTQ+ records. Senator Murray also wrote and introduced the Ley contra el acoso de educación superior Tyler Clementi, legislation that would address bullying and harassment—including cyberbullying—at colleges and universities around the country. The legislation is named after a freshman at Rutgers University, who tragically lost his life to suicide in 2010 after his roommate and another student invaded his privacy and harassed him due to his sexual orientation.

Los comentarios completos del Senador Murray, tal como fueron pronunciados, se encuentran a continuación:

“Thank you, M. President. I’m thrilled to join people across Washington state, and across the country, in recognizing Pride Month.

“Pride is an opportunity every year for people across our country and across the world to mark the progress we’ve made and the work left to do, and to celebrate the LGBTQ community.

“It is a joyful, beautiful thing—and it stands in stark contrast to the bigotry some voices on the far-right have been fanning.

“It’s impossible to watch a Pride parade today without seeing just how far we have come as a nation.

“And unfortunately, it’s also impossible to follow the news without seeing a reminder of how far we still have to go and how hard a bigoted minority of people is fighting to pull us back.

“Some far-right provocateurs have been twisting the most basic, mundane gestures of inclusion into so called ‘controversies’ through blatant distortion and demonization.

“I mean, imagine calling for an investigation into a private company because they sent their product to a trans person with a massive online audience?

“Imagine being outraged because a company cares about having a diverse, equitable, inclusive workplace?

“Imagine getting worked up because of rainbow logos, or a pride sale, or an adorable little rainbow baby onesie?

“I’ve got a newsflash for everyone who’s trying to act like companies selling their products to every community they can is something new, or some nefarious conspiracy. Get this: gay and trans people drink beverages, they eat food—they buy things!

“And for suddenly everyone to be outraged over some cute baby clothes? You know what? LGBTQ people have families too! They are parents, they are aunts, and uncles, and grandparents!

“I mean—where have you been?

“They are queer, they are here—and they have been for years. And get used to it! They are not going anywhere.

“And let’s be clear, these attacks on the LGBTQ community aren’t just ridiculous—they are dangerous.

“Because we aren’t just talking about a handful of far-right voices complaining about companies.

“There is a truly insidious and ugly effort to demonize, and ostracize, and erase the LGBTQ community—and our trans friends, neighbors, and loved ones, in particular.

“Far-right lawmakers—across our nation and across different levels of government—are spewing some of the most hateful rhetoric, peddling some of the most bigoted conspiracies, and passing some of the most hateful anti-LGBTQ laws, I have seen in a long while.

“Over the past few years, these far-right politicians have taken books with LGBTQ characters off the shelves, they’ve demonized drag performers with dangerous rhetoric, they have investigated parents for helping their kids get the care that they need—and blocked kids from that care.

“It’s extreme, cynical, and hateful—to a degree that is even hard to believe.

“Far-right legislators are happy to ignore the First Amendment to ban books and keep kids away from the entirely made-up ‘danger’ of drag shows, but they are nowhere to be found when it comes to a serious discussion of the Second Amendment and protecting kids from gun violence—an actual public health threat and the leading cause of death for children in the United States.

“One Republican Presidential candidate is shamelessly—and falsely—suggesting trans kids participating in youth sports might be to blame for the teen mental health crisis and insidiously ignoring the reality that the same kids they are using as a political punching bag, face some of the highest rates of depression and suicide of anyone.

“Another Republican Presidential candidate championed a bill that is silencing and erasing LGBTQ kids, and parents, and teachers from schools by banning discussion about gender identity and sexual orientation and banning books for the slightest acknowledgement that LGBTQ people even exist.

“One school district in Florida even banned a kids book about a penguin—a penguin!—with two dads. Seriously?!


“Then there is the wave of laws we are seeing that are meant to cut kids off from age-appropriate, gender-affirming health care that they rely on, like the law that passed in Idaho, right across the border from my state, that criminalizes doctors for providing kids with the gender-affirming care that they need—care that is overwhelmingly recommended by medical experts as safe and even lifesaving.

“Or the vile effort to falsely accuse loving parents whose kids are getting this care they need of child abuse!

“Now I have said it before, M. President: It truly feels like far-right, Republican lawmakers are in a race to the bottom in pursuit of the most extreme, hateful agenda they can think up.

“And their attacks have been especially cruel to the trans community, and to trans kids.

“There are real consequences to this hateful rhetoric.

“We know the trans community is more likely to face suicide, and homelessness, and violence.

“And yet, far-right lawmakers are using their megaphones and their positions of power to bully kids.

“That’s what it comes down to. They are attacking people—attacking kids—for being different. For being themselves.

“I said it last year on the Senate floor, I am here again, because I aún have to say it: We all have a responsibility to stand up and make clear that this is not right.

“Trans people are our friends, they are our neighbors, they are our family.

“They deserve to be kids, just kids. To play sports, to go to school, to see a doctor, to get health care.

“They should be able to get the same opportunities as any other kid to learn, and grow, and play and thrive—free from fear and discrimination.

“And parents should be able to make their own parenting decisions—with their medical providers—to do what is best for their kids’ health.

“They should not have to worry about what a right-wing politician thinks is best for their kids.

“And they definitely should not live in fear that a state legislature is going to intervene in their parenting decisions and hurt their child.

“We’ve got to push back against these attacks on trans kids every way we can: in the courts, with legislation, through executive action, and by speaking out—and speaking up.

“Which is why I’m here today to tell everyone facing these hateful attacks you are not alone and you have so many people in your community and in your corner.

“I am proud to stand with these kids, and their families, and the whole LGBTQ community.

“This Pride month, we commit ourselves to making sure these kids are not just safe in our country, not just welcome in our country, but allowed to be themselves here, allowed to be joyful and confident about who they are in every part of our country.

“And in that spirit, I want to share some wisdom from Stella, she’s a young trans activist in Washington state who spoke with me last year about the dangerous laws targeting the trans community: ‘Opinions cannot stop us from existing. They cannot stop me from living my dream to the fullest and following all of my dreams. And opinions do not change who we are as transgender and non-binary people.’

“I certainly am proud to be a voice for young people like Stella here in the United States Senate. 

“Stella—I hope you are having a great pride!

“And M. President, my message today to everyone who has been encouraging—or complicit in—the attacks on the LGBTQ community is simple.

“First: leave kids and families alone. You are not their doctor. You are not their parent. You have no idea what they are going through, what they have gone through, or what is best for them. It is not your say, and it is not your business.

“Second: be kind. Be kind. You do not have to bully people because they are different. You do not have to champion hatred and fear, or anger. You can make a different choice. It’s really not that hard to listen, to learn, to respect, and accept people for who they are. To have compassion. And I promise it will make your world brighter, and your heart will be lighter.

“Finally: if you do continue down this dangerous path—bullying kids, erasing LGBTQ people, and demonizing them with dangerous rhetoric—I will rise against you every step of the way. And I will do so with pride.

"Gracias."

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