Former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot understands the impact of representation and how her leadership role has inspired young people in the LGBTQ+ community. The positive impact being a role model for queer and trans people has had on their lives inspires her, she says.
βI learned really early on β certainly when I was campaigning the first time, but [absolutely] once I got into office β about the power of me being in the position that I was in and the impact it had on our community writ large,β Lightfoot tells The Advocate. βI think there were high hopes and expectations, which hopefully I was able to fulfill.β
She adds, βThe way that it resonated for me is a number of parents who came to me, pulled me aside at an event [and] whispered in my ear, βmy son, my daughter, has just come out as queer, as trans, and thank you for being a role model.ββ
Lightfoot notes that Republicansβ culture war battles, particularly those targeting minority groups, take a page from the old GOP Southern strategy anti-civil rights playbook to divide and conquer. She says the rightβs effort elevates the importance of the fight for LGBTQ+ rights. It also emphasizes the need for allies and the urgency to solve the challenges faced by the trans community, she says.
βIt started with Nixon back in the day, and theyβre just adding chapters,β Lightfoot explains. βBut itβs the same playbook, which is divide and conquer. Focus on somebody or some issue that you think is a wedge that canβt speak up for themselves and then use that to divide people but also, frankly, to get them to vote against their own best interests.β
She says economically, it makes no sense for state legislatures to spew forth the level of hatred with which Republicans target the trans community.
βWe are not going to step back as a community,β she says. βWe are just not going to do that. And we have many more tools now than weβve ever had to fight the hate.β
She says that excellent advocacy groups like Lambda Legal and others who work on powerful litigation exist as a bulwark against the stripping of rights.
βWe are not just going to sit down and take it and be fearful,β she says. βThatβs not where we are in the arc of our history. However, we need to make sure that weβre unmasking them wherever it happens and being proactive and doing that work.β
She notes that Republican-dominated legislatures will be judged harshly by history.
βThereβs a through line between the fight to take away womenβs bodily autonomy and the fights that weβre facing specific to our community and particularly our trans siblings. Theyβre connected,β she says.
βThereβs a reason why Clarence Thomas wrote that concurring opinion [in the Dobbs case], giving the road map to deconstruct all the rights we have earned and have lived with since Roe, right? The right to privacy is the legal underpinning for so many of the things that benefit our community. So in some ways, itβs not different than what weβve seen, but the fact that theyβre viciously going after children and families and criminalizing being. Just being is now a crime. Living your authentic life is now something that subjects you to villainy under state law. Thereβs no way that that can be constitutional.β
She says that what is alarming are federal court decisions that promote far-right ideology.
"We all fear whatβs happening in the federal courts because theyβve stocked the federal courts from the trial court to the appellate court and now the Supreme Court with people who are more than willing to strip us of our rights and our dignity and donβt see us.β
She adds, βIβd like to remain optimistic and think this is a cycle that will evolve. Itβs not a permanent state of being but a frightening time.β
She says that as a high-profile member of the LGBTQ+ community and as an out lesbian, sheβs familiar with the vitriol spewed by those on the right.
βThose are real and unfortunately continue to this day,β she says. βSo what we need to do is not just take it; we need to fight back. But we also need our allies to stand with us, arm and arm. Thatβs a big reason why, aside from, I think, the legal nexus between us and the fight over bodily autonomy, we have to have allies, and weβve got to push our allies to stand up and fight back and not be silent in the face of these specific targeted actions to vilify us and take away our hard-fought legal gains.β
Pictured: Lightfoot and her wife, Amy Eshleman















