Trump policy on gay marriage

Donald Trump's same-sex marriage views explained as ruling that legalised it comes under threat The Supreme Court has been formally asked to intervene in a case that could affect the legality of same-same marriages. The Ohio Republican also said he would vote no on the Respect for Marriage Act, which provided federal protections for same-sex and interracial marriages, while campaigning for Senate inciting religious liberty concerns.

The former president has been inconsistent on the issue during his time in the public eye, and his administration rolled back protections for LGBTQ people — especially transgender individuals. Meanwhile, Trump's running mate, Sen. JD Vance, sponsored legislation in that would ban access to gender-affirming care for minors, along with a bill to bar the State Department from allowing the gender marker "X" on passports.

Washington — Among the topics voters may consider in the presidential election are LGBTQ rights — and it's an issue where former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris have starkly different messages and backgrounds.

His wife, Melania Trump, called him "the first president to enter the White House supporting gay marriage" as he sought reelection in On transgender issues, Trump said inamid a controversy over a North Carolina bathroom ban, that transgender people should "use the bathroom they feel is appropriate.

Harris has been criticized by LGBTQ advocates for denying gender-affirming surgeries for transgender inmates when she served as attorney general; she said she was bound by the Department of Corrections policy in place at the time.

In the final months of the campaign, Trump and his allies leaned into anti-trans rhetoric, spending millions on advertisements focusing on the issue in battleground states. As attorney general, she sought to end the " panic defense " that allowed homicide defendants to seek lesser sentences if they attested to being panicked by the victim's sexual orientation.

Compare Trump and Harris

Donald Trump has had varying views on gay marriage in recent decades. But support is stronger in blue states than red states, and has declined overall in recent years — especially among Republicans. And support for same-sex marriage has also seen a slight decline.

Then, when she was elected as California's attorney general inHarris said she would not defend in court a voter-approved measure known as Proposition 8which outlawed same-sex marriage. But how endangered is gay marriage under Trump?

In earlyTrump said he would use his powers, should he return to the White House, to punish doctors who provide gender affirming care for minors and impose consequences for teachers who discuss it with students. In a interview, where he also said he was "very pro-choice" Trump said that "it would not disturb me" for gay people to serve in the military.

But has he ever shown such support?. Here's what to know ahead of his inauguration in The president’s previous support is at odds with his anti-trans hostility now. Trump's administration also tried to repeal health protections for transgender people and sought to end protections for transgender individuals in federal prison, among other policies.

Trump chose a conservative running mate inMike Pence, who had staunchly opposed same-sex marriage, but Trump's own comments on the topic varied. What’s behind the shift?. The former San Francisco district attorney officiated some of the nation's first same-sex marriages inafter then-mayor Gavin Newsom directed the county clerk to approve the marriages although the law didn't yet recognize them.

In the late s and early s, before he entered politics, Trump expressed support for domestic partnership laws that granted couples the same benefits of married couples — a position that the GOP widely opposed at the time — and often showed personal tolerance for LGBTQ issues more broadly.

Years later, Trump said inamid speculation about a possible presidential bid, that he was "opposed to gay marriage. Trump said during his campaign that he would " strongly consider " appointing Supreme Court justices who would overturn the ruling that legalized same-sex marriages.

Then, days after he was elected, he said he was "fine" with same-sex marriage and suggested he wouldn't appoint justices to the high court with the goal of overturning the ruling. The marriages were invalidated months later.

LGBTQ+ conservatives insist that Donald Trump supports same-sex marriage rights. Gay marriage activists and their allies take comfort in the high support that gay marriage enjoys among the American public. Anti-trans sentiments would go on to become a prominent talking point for Republicans on the campaign trail in the midterm elections.

Harris has generally been an early adopter of pro-LGBTQ policies and stances, doing so before other prominent members of her party.