Faced with wave of hostile bills, transgender rights leaders are playing "a defense game"

In this photo provided by the ºÃÉ«tv Center for Transgender Equality, Andy Marra, left, the executive director of the Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund, and Rodrigo Heng-Lehtinen, executive director of the ºÃÉ«tv Center for Transgender Equality visit San Francisco's Transgender District in January 2023. In the summer of 2024, their organizations – two of the biggest transgender-rights groups in the U.S. – will merge into a new organization to be called Advocates for Trans Equality. (NCTE via AP)

For decades, the plotline for LGBTQ+ activism in the U.S. was one of advances — often slow-paced and hard-fought but inexorably moving forward. Now, faced with unprecedented attacks in state legislatures, transgender rights leaders acknowledge they are playing defense — and two of the biggest groups are joining forces to counter the onslaught.

“This is going to be a defense game — and a movement-strengthening game,†said Andy Marra, executive director of the Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund. “We have witnessed a sophisticated, well-coordinated and highly resourced effort to dismantle the years of progress that our movement has made.â€

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