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Esquire

Caitlyn Jenner’s Campaign Provides Cover for Republicans’ Hateful, Anti-Trans Legislation

Abigail Covington
3 min read
Photo credit: Gregg DeGuire - Getty Images
Photo credit: Gregg DeGuire - Getty Images

Soon after Caitlyn Jenner declared her candidacy for Governor of California, many high-profile members of the transgender community took to Twitter to express their concerns with her announcement. Caitlyn Jenner is not a trans activist,” tweeted noted trans activist Chase Strangio in response to a New York Times headline declaring her as such. “Caitlyn Jenner is a deeply unqualified hack who doesn’t care about anyone but herself,” tweeted Charlotte Clymer. “Her views are terrible. She is a horrible candidate.”

Jenner’s decision to run has been met with derision in part because of the candidate’s close ties with former President Trump. She was an outspoken supporter of his ahead of the 2016 presidential election (although a recent investigation by Politico revealed she didn’t actually cast a ballot for any candidate in the election) and famously said that Donald Trump “would be very good for women's issues” on an episode of her reality show “I am Cait.”

Her 2018 about-face in which she publicly denounced Trump after a leaked Department of Health memo revealed that his administration wanted to redefine gender as birth-assigned sex, did little to convince the LGBTQ+ community that she had experienced meaningful enlightenment. How could it, her critics reasoned, when she is an ardent member of the party that’s made a hobby out of passing hostile anti-trans legislation. In a thoughtful Broadly profile on Jenner, journalist Diana Tourjee wrote, “Though Caitlyn is taking steps to help the transgender community, that effort is hard for many people to reconcile with her continued support of the Republican Party.”

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For what it’s worth, Jenner is hardly the only member of the LGBTQ+ community to prefer the politics of the GOP. A recent survey by the Williams Institute found that 15 percent of registered LGBTQ+ voters are Republicans and 22 percent are Independent. Jenner has also spoken repeatedly about her desire to fix the Republican party from the inside. But is that not a fool’s errand? Call me cynical, but I’m not convinced that policies like tax cuts and the elimination of Obamacare (which provides critical support to the LGBTQ+ community) can be retrofitted to suddenly benefit the transgender community.

What I’m afraid will happen instead is that Jenner will be weaponized by the very party she belongs to. Republicans will cite her campaign as evidence of their lack of transphobia, while they draft legislation that bans gender affirming healthcare for transgender minors. “How can we be transphobic,” they will claim, “when Caitlyn Jenner is running for governor as a Republican?” It’s the LGBTQ+ version of the “America can’t be racist because we elected Obama'' argument, which Sen. Lindsey Graham used just this morning to defend his opposition to federal law enforcement reform.

I am afraid Republicans will use Jenner just like they have always used the LGBTQ+ community. They will claim ownership of her only to fend off accusations of discrimination when they attempt to pass additional anti-trans legislation. We’ve seen this strategy at work before. “Nobody has been a better friend to the gay community” said Trump, one month before picking arguably the most homophobic governor in the country as his Vice President.

Most of all, I fear that even if Caitlyn Jenner wins her bid to become the next Governor of California, she will not be able to reform her party from the inside. Rather, Republicans will find a way to enlist her historic success in their fight to further strip transgender individuals of their rights, Jenner's included.

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