Joe Biden believes 'good Republicans ⦠who don't have a prejudiced bone in their body' are letting far-right elements of their political party intimidate them out of stances that would protect LGBTQ+ rights, he said in the first interview that a sitting US president has given to an LGBTQ+ news outlet.
In a conversation that the Washington Blade published on Monday, Biden also said Donald Trump 'was a different breed of cat' who had been 'anti-LGBTQ ⦠across the board'.
The Democratic president's remarks about his Republican predecessor and the Maga (Make America Great Again) movement behind him come as Trump seeks a return to the White House in the 5 November election.
Trump has offered contradictory comments on LGBTQ+ rights, claiming to be 'fine' with same-sex marriage during his victorious 2016 campaign but then stripping away protections for medical patients who are transgender once he was in the Oval Office.
Then, in June 2023, three US supreme court justices appointed to the bench during Trump's presidency joined three conservative colleagues in dealing a major blow to the LGBTQ+ community by ruling that a Colorado law that compels groups to treat same-sex couples equally violated the constitutional right to free speech.
Republican-led state legislatures, meanwhile, have enacted a broad array of laws banning gender-affirming care for transgender youth and, in some cases, adults. They have also placed barriers to schoolchildren to express their gender, whether by the pronouns they use or the sports team on which they compete.
Without naming anyone, Biden told the Blade he met 'a lot of really good Republicans' in particular when he previously served as a US senator. He said they 'don't have a prejudiced bone in their body about this but are intimidated â" because if you take a position, especially in the Maga Republican party now, ⦠they're going to go after you'.
'Trump is a different breed of cat,' Biden added. 'I mean, I don't want to make this political, but everything he's done has been anti, anti-LGBTQ â" I mean across the board.'
Biden ruled out running for re-election in July and endorsed Vice-President Kamala Harris to succeed him. Drawing a contrast with Trump, the president said that the Biden-Harris administration had made a number of decisions to advocate for the LGBTQ+ community.
He singled out the Respect for Marriage Act, which he signed in 2022 and in part required all states to recognize the validity of same-sex marriages. He also alluded to how the Food and Drug Administration during his presidency implemented a new rule allowing sexually active gay and bisexual people to donate blood so long as they had not had sex with new or multiple partners.
Biden furthermore touted what he described as having appointed a record-breaking number of LGBTQ+ officials across his administration, including the transportation secretary, Pete Buttigieg, and White House press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre. And the president also noted how â" days after his inauguration in 2021 â" he issued an executive order reversing the Trump administration's ban on transgender military service members.
'They can shoot straight,' Biden said to the Blade, which described the president as lowering his voice for emphasis. 'They can shoot just as straight as anybody else.'
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