- United States
- Mich.
- Letter
The Kettering-Gallup Democracy for All Project recently surveyed 20,338 adults and found that only 10% of LGBTQ+ people believe democracy is functioning well, compared to 24% of Americans overall. This disparity should alarm anyone who values representative government. When a significant portion of your constituents lose faith in our democratic institutions, it signals a fundamental failure that threatens us all.
The data reveals why this crisis exists. According to the Human Rights Campaign's 2020 report, 24% of LGBTQ adults have been prevented from voting in at least one election due to ID requirement issues. For transgender people of color, that number jumps to 46% who didn't vote in one or more elections because their ID listed an incorrect gender, name, or photo. The Williams Institute estimates hundreds of thousands of transgender voters in states with strict ID requirements face potential disenfranchisement due to mismatched documents.
Beyond voting access, LGBTQ+ constituents face systematic exclusion from other democratic pillars. Public hearings on anti-transgender legislation routinely ignore overwhelming opposition testimony. Montana State Representative Zooey Zephyr had her microphone shut off on the House floor for speaking about harm caused by anti-transgender laws. College professors lose their jobs for teaching LGBTQ+ topics. Courts permit LGBTQ+ foster children to be placed with families that oppose their identities, exposing them to conversion therapy risks.
These aren't abstract policy debates. They represent constituents being denied equal protection, free speech, the right to petition government, and voting access. History shows that anti-democratic tools rehearsed on vulnerable populations never stay confined to one group. They normalize, then expand to target anyone who falls out of favor with those seeking power.
I urge you to oppose any legislation that restricts voting access, limits free speech protections, or denies equal treatment under law for LGBTQ+ constituents. Democracy cannot function when it works for some but fails others. Your constituents are watching how you respond to this crisis of democratic legitimacy.