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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Maya Yang

Sarah McBride says Republican attack on trans rights is ‘attempt to misdirect’ voters

woman wearing glasses and checkered blazer looks at camera
Sarah McBride attends an orientation for new members of Congress at the US Capitol in Washington DC, on 14 November. Photograph: Allison Robbert/AFP/Getty Images

Sarah McBride, the first out transgender person elected to Congress, on Sunday condemned Republicans’ latest attack on trans rights as “an attempt to misdirect” voters away from more central issues in communities, such as healthcare costs and economic inequality.

Delaware’s incoming Democratic member of the House of Representatives, who will join Donald Trump’s new administration in January, also hit back against bathroom restrictions for trans people announced by the GOP on Capitol Hill last week.

In a CBS interview on Sunday morning, the congresswoman-elect said: “I think we are all united that attempts to attack a vulnerable community are not only mean-spirited but really an attempt to misdirect. Because every single time we hear the incoming administration or Republicans in Congress talk about any vulnerable group in this country, we have to be clear that it is an attempt to distract.”

McBride added: “Every single time we hear them say the word ‘trans’, look at what they’re doing with their right hand. Look at what they’re doing to pick the pocket of American workers, to fleece seniors by privatizing social security and Medicare. Look at what they’re doing, undermining workers.”

McBride’s remarks come in response to the Republican House speaker, Mike Johnson, last week banning trans people from using single-sex bathrooms on Capitol Hill that match their gender identity. This follows a bill introduced by the South Carolina Republican representative Nancy Mace, who sought similar bathroom restrictions for all trans people using the Capitol, including congressional members, officers and employees.

Last Tuesday, Johnson told reporters: “A man is a man, and a woman is a woman, and a man cannot become a woman. That said, I also believe that’s what [Bible] scripture teaches … but I also believe that we should treat everybody with dignity.”

McBride was asked by CBS whether she believed she was being treated with dignity.

McBride said: “I didn’t run for the United States House of Representatives to talk about what bathroom I use. I didn’t run to talk about myself. I ran to deliver for Delawareans. While Republicans in Congress seem focused on bathrooms and trans people, and specifically me, I’m focused on rolling up my sleeves, beginning the hard work of delivering for Delawareans on the issues that I know keep them up at night.”

She added: “Every bit of time and energy that has been used to divert the attention of the federal government to go after trans people is time and energy that is not focused upon addressing the cost of living for our constituents, and we have to be clear that there is a real cost to the American worker every time they focus on this.”

Supporters of McBride and trans equality, including fellow Democrats in Congress, have rushed to defend her.

The Illinois US senator and Democrat Tammy Duckworth told CNN on Sunday that she believed Mace’s position was “disgusting and wrong”, adding: “I think we have a lot more to worry about than where somebody goes to pee.”

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