Sarah McBride on Why the Left Lost on Trans Rights Sarah McBride is a freshman congresswoman from Delaware, where she was formerly a state senator She’s the first openly trans member of Congress, and her view is that the trans rights movement
Sarah McBride argues for new path on trans rights: “We’ve . . . With overwhelming support on issues such as protecting trans people against hate crimes (+36), banning employment discrimination (+33) and allowing trans people to serve in the military (+22), the
Sarah McBride: Trans rights fight got too far ahead of . . . Sarah McBride has divided activists after explaining her take on why trans rights have regressed in the US The only openly transgender US representative told New York Times columnist Ezra Klein that left-leaning LGBTQ+ activists had “lost the art of change-making over the [past] couple of years”, adding: “By every objective metric
Sarah McBride on why support for trans rights ebbed - Yahoo LGBTQ+ people and allies have lost support on transgender rights not because of trans people themselves but likely because they’ve had a false sense of security about queer and trans rights
From the RN+R: Sarah McBride critiques the left on trans rights This week on the Ezra Klein Show—the longform, New York Times-produced politics and culture podcast—Klein interviewed Rep Sarah McBride from Delaware, the nation’s first openly transgender member of Congress Over 95 minutes, McBride expressed her take on some of the political and social
Trans Dem Rep. McBride suggests party went too far with . . . Rep Sarah McBride, a transgender Democratic lawmaker elected to Congress in 2024, suggested the party overplayed its hand on trans issues Sarah McBride at the Human Rights Campaign Greater
Sarah McBride on Why the Left Lost on Trans Rights | The Ezra . . . Sarah McBride is a freshman congresswoman from Delaware, where she was previously a state senator And she is the first openly transgender member of Congress In our conversation, Representative McBride reckons with the trans rights movement’s shortcomings, what liberalism should look like in a profoundly illiberal time and how to win hearts