Sarah Brannon, she/her/hers, Managing Attorney, ACLU Voting Rights Project
Kate Ruane, Former Senior Legislative Counsel, ACLU
Tomorrow, the
Gabriel Arkles, Former Senior Counsel, Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund
The Supreme C
Alesdair H. Ittelson, Legal Director and Chief Operating Officer, interACT: Advocates for Intersex Youth
Intersex peop
In March 2018, the city of Philadelphia learned that two of the agencies it contracted with to provide foster care services would not, based on religious objection, accept same-sex couples as foster parents. The city told the agencies their contracts with the city were in jeopardy unless they complied with basic nondiscrimination requirements.
When we launched the podcast miniseries, At the Polls, we asked listeners to send us their questions about voting this year. While over 44 million people have already cast their ballots, some questions remain about our rights and options as voters. Listen to the full podcast for your most frequent voter questions, answered.
Carl Takei, Former Senior Staff Attorney, ACLU’s Trone Center for Justice and Equality
In early June
Ronald Newman, Former National Political Director, ACLU
The intense f
Do you have a plan to cast your ballot on November 3rd or before during early voting? We’re all are asking this question, but for many transgender people it invokes an extra layer of questions and anxiety. Will I need to show ID? If so, can I get my name and gender marker changed on my ID in time? Did I change my name on my voter registration? How should I dress? Will a poll worker embarrass me, out me, or challenge my identity? WIll I get harassed for being trans or some other reason? Transgender voters encounter a number of barriers that make exercising our right to vote complicated, intimidating and unnecessarily difficult.State ID laws have created a web of barriers for transgender residents to cast their ballot. There are around 378,450 voting-eligible transgender people across the country who do not have accurate IDs. And 81,000 transgender voters live in states with the strictest photo ID requirements.
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