Virginias Most Anti-LGBT Lawmaker Might Lose His Seat To States First Openly Transgender Candidate
Danica Roem, a transgender woman and former journalist, beat out three challengers on Tuesday night to secure the Democratic nomination in what will inevitably be one of Virginias most-watched races this fall. The campaign to represent the states 13th District will put Roem, the first openly transgender candidate for the Virginia House of Delegates, up against longtime incumbent Bob Marshallone of the states most anti-LGBT lawmakers.
Marshall, a delegate since 1992, was the author of the amendment that enshrined discrimination into the states constitution in 2006, by defining marriage as being between one man and one woman. And when he ran, unsuccessfully, for US Congress in 2014, he was described by the Atlantic as basically the culture wars four-star generala profile he continues to live up to. In January, he introduced what LGBT advocates described as one of the most dangerous bathroom bills in the country; the proposed legislation would have mimicked other bathroom bills across in country in forcing people to use the bathroom corresponding to their sex assigned at birth, but it also went a step further, requiring schools to out students to their parents within 24 hours if they asked to be recognized or treated as the opposite sex. When far-right conservatives held a news conference calling on GOP leadership to hold an up or down vote on the matter, a transgender man asked where they thought he should go to the bathroom. Not here, Marshall responded. Even the states GOP leadership didnt want anything to do with the controversial proposal, and a Republican-led committee killed the bill.
Let me make this really clear for you: When the people of the 13th District elect a transgender woman to replace the most anti-LGBT legislator in the South, it will be an act of certainty, and it will be a defining moment that will resonate across the country, Roem said at an event in May, according to the Washington Blade.
Still, while Roem acknowledges the significance of the race, her focus is primarily on local issues. [Marshall] is more concerned with where I go to the bathroom than where his constituents go to work, she recently told the Washington Post. Im running a race on improving transportation rather than ensuring discrimination. At the top of Roems platform is relieving traffic congestion on the notorious Route 28, so morning rush hour isnt unbearable. Among her many other proposals is increasing teacher pay in the district so its competitive with the rest of Northern Virginia in order to recruit better teachers and encourage them to stay.
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2017/06/virginias-most-anti-lgbt-lawmaker-might-lose-his-seat-to-states-first-openly-transgender-candidate/