Democrats splinter over trans rights, DEI
Some Democrats are starting to publicly second-guess the party's stances on transgender rights and DEI programs β positions they've long embraced on principle, but now see as potential political liabilities.
Why it matters: The issues are creating a divide among some of the most powerful people in the party, including California Gov. Gavin Newsom and a few others widely seen as potential 2028 candidates for president.
- Newsom sent ripples through the party last week during a podcast interview with MAGA influencer Charlie Kirk. Echoing a GOP talking point, Newsom said he believed transgender women and girls playing in women's sports was "deeply unfair."
The big picture: The remark by Newsom, a former San Francisco mayor and longtime supporter of LGBTQ causes, stung many progressives as a betrayal.
- Whether it represented a true shift in belief or a move of political convenience, it reflected a growing argument between Democrats β whether they should be more pragmatic on some social issues, or stand on principle at a critical moment.
- The backdrop for the debate is how Democrats β namely presidential nominee Kamala Harris β struggled last year to respond as Republicans spent tens of millions on ads bashing transgender women and girls in sports, and declaring that "Kamala is for they/them, Donald Trump is for you."
Some Democrats quietly agree with Newsom. Others say emphatically that the party should support transgender people and others now targeted by Trump administration policies.
- The Human Rights Campaign, a prominent LGBTQ+ advocacy group, said in a statement: "Our message to Gov. Newsom and leaders across the country is simple: The path to 2028 isn't paved with the betrayal of vulnerable communities. It's built on the courage to stand up for what's right, and do the hard work to actually help the American people."
Asked if Newsom supports any changes in the law to address fairness in women's sports, the governor's office declined to specify any.
- On his podcast, Newsom also criticized how some Democrats introduce themselves with their pronouns. "I had one meeting where people started going around the table with the pronouns," he said. "I'm like: 'What the hell? Why is this the biggest issue?'"
Rahm Emanuel β former Chicago mayor and U.S. ambassador to Japan, who has played coy about a 2028 White House run β told Axios: "Some kids in the classroom are debating which pronouns apply, and the rest of the class doesn't know what a pronoun is. That's a crisis."
- Emanuel has said Democrats in power should focus on the historic decline in children's reading abilities in the aftermath of the pandemic.
- Democrats "can't be a party that believes in equity and allows two-thirds of your kids who can't read," he said last week in a speech at the Economic Club of Chicago.
Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, a 2028 presidential contender who's openly gay, removed his pronouns from his profile on X in recent months, according to the Internet Archive.
- A Buttigieg spokesperson didn't respond to Axios' request for comment.
Zoom in: Democratic lawmakers also are fracturing about their positions on DEI programs and how to talk about race.
- Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.), the ranking Democrat on the House Armed Service Committee, told The New Yorker that some DEI programs go "off the beam, to my mind, when they imply that racism, bigotry and settler colonialism is the unique purview of white people. ... You don't need to imply that all white people are racists, and that all white people are oppressors."
- Newsom told Kirk that "not one person ever in my office has ever used the word LatinX."
Between the lines: The term "woke" went mainstream during Black Lives Matter protests in 2014 and through Trump's first term, signifying a person who was alert to prejudice and discrimination that much of society didn't acknowledge.
- For millions of Americans, Trump and Republicans have turned "woke" into an insult β and a political dog whistle.
- "Our country will be woke no longer," Trump said in his address to Congress.
Zoom out: Trump has tried to put Democrats on the defensive on these issues in his first weeks in office.
- He signed several executive orders aimed at transgender and DEI policies implemented by President Biden, schools and businesses.
- One order banned transgender women and girls from competing in girls' and women's sports, prompting the NCAA to change its policy on transgender athletes.
During last week's address, Trump highlighted the story of a high school volleyball player who suffered brain damage when a transgender girl hit the ball hard onto her head.
- "From now on, schools will kick the men off the girls' team or they will lose all federal funding," Trump said. "We've ended the tyranny of so-called diversity, equity and inclusion policies all across the entire federal government."
Republicans in Congress have been forcing Democrats to take votes on legislation focused on transgender people.
- Republicans last week brought up legislation to prohibit schools receiving government funding from allowing transgender women and girls to participate in women's sports.
Democrats unanimously opposed the measure in the Senate. But privately, they're workshopping their future responses to GOP attacks on transgender rights, Axios' Stephen Neukam and Hans Nichols report.
- Some Democratic lawmakers have disagreed with the GOP-led legislation, but not the issue.
"I support fair play and safety and do not support transgender athletes competing in girls' and women's sports when it compromises those principles," Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) said in a statement after the vote.
- But Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.), who has voted against his party on various issues, voted no and wrote on X: "The small handful of trans athletes in PA in a political maelstrom deserve an ally, and I am one."