The 2016 presidential election was bizarre in a variety of ways, but one of the most important curiosities was the effort to present Donald Trump as some kind of moderate. The New York Times ran this report in April 2016, just as he was wrapping up the Republican Party’s presidential nomination, which said the future president’s moderate views on the LGBT community “set him apart” from others in his party.
Readers were told at the time that while Republicans have opposed civil rights for LGBT Americans, Trump is “far more accepting of sexual minorities than his party’s leaders have been.”
It was an impression Trump seemed largely comfortable with, at least to the extent that he could exploit the dynamic for votes. As regular readers may recall, there was an odd point in the 2016 campaign, shortly after the Orlando nightclub massacre, in which the future president insisted that LGBT voters, en masse, should move to the right and vote Republican. Trump, in apparent seriousness, said he, not Hillary Clinton, would be the “better friend” of the “LBGT” [sic] community. Just two days after the Orlando shooting, Trump added, “Thank you to the LGBT community! I will fight for you.”
That was in June 2016. In June 2020, almost exactly four years later, the president made clear how much those earlier commitments were worth.
The Trump administration on Friday finalized its rollback of protections against gender identity discrimination in health care regulated by the Affordable Care Act. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said in a statement it would recognize “sex discrimination according to the plain meaning of the word ‘sex’ as male or female and as determined by biology.”
As NBC News’ report added, as a result of the new policy, ACA-regulated plans “can deny services to transgender people.” HHS said it is reverting to a time when the government “declined to recognize sexual orientation as a protected category under the ACA.”
As regressive as the administration’s policy is, the timing was of particular interest: Team Trump made the move late on a Friday — these guys do love their news dumps — during Pride Month.
What’s more, the policy was announced on the anniversary of the Pulse nightclub massacre, and almost exactly four years after then-candidate Trump publicly vowed to “fight for” the LGBT community.
But as striking as the symbolism was, it’s the substance that’s going to do the most harm. Vox’s report added:









