Fenway Health: Project 2025 Poses a ‘Grave Threat’ to LGBTQ+ People

The Fenway Institute of Fenway Health released a policy brief outlining the dangers to equality and public health posed by the policies in the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 Presidential Transition Project, and urging Americans to make sure they understand the potential impact to health care quality, equity, and access if the policies are implemented.

“Project 2025 articulates a dystopian agenda that would radically weaken the nation’s public health infrastructure, further restrict access to reproductive health care, and criminalize efforts to support LGBTQIA+ youth,” said Sean Cahill, PhD, Director of Health Policy Research at The Fenway Institute and co-author of the brief. “It is critical that Americans understand the threats posed to all people living in the United States by Project 2025. The stakes are incredibly high.”

The brief, titled “Project 2025’s threat to LGBTQIA+ equality, safety, and health, racial and gender equity, and sexual and reproductive health,” documents the anti-LGBTQIA+ and racial equity biases of Project 2025’s architects, many of whom served in former President Donald Trump’s first administration. It also explains the ways in which the proposals affecting the Department of Health and Human Services and specific agencies such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would harm people who are LGBTQIA+, BIPOC, newly arrived to the country, living in poverty, living with disabilities, or otherwise disadvantaged or marginalized.

The policy brief summarizes Project 2025, which is a comprehensive framework for governance during a potential second Trump administration. It includes strategic planning and policy proposals that would do the following:

  • Charge adults who support LGBTQIA+ and questioning youth in schools and libraries as sex offenders
  • End federal government and private sector DEI initiatives aimed at increasing racial and gender representation in all levels of the workforce
  • Remove any mention of sexual orientation, gender identity, and reproductive health from all federal regulations, laws, and grant funding opportunities
  • End the collection of gender identity data in disease surveillance systems
  • Remove SOGI nondiscrimination language from federal regulations, and end the enforcement of SOGI nondiscrimination policies
  • End federal government health equity initiatives aimed at people who are LGBTQIA+ and/or BIPOC
  • End federal support for gender-affirming health care for adults and portray such care as harmful
  • Allow faith-based human service providers to discriminate against LGBTQIA+ families

“Many of these proposals would eliminate best practices in public health, such as data collection, that inform interventions to reduce health care disparities that result from inequities based on race, ethnicity, gender, and sexual orientation,” Cahill added. “A lot of LGBTQIA+ health research and racial equity work in healthcare is still just getting off the ground. These proposals would undermine efforts to improve health outcomes for women, people of color, and sexual and gender minority people in our society.”

“Project 2025’s threat to LGBTQIA+ equality, safety, and health, racial and gender equity, and sexual and reproductive health,” is available online here.

Sarah Toce

Screenwriter & Journalist | Sarah Brusig (Toce) is an appointed member of the King County Women's Advisory Board and an elected precinct committee officer (PCO) in Burien, WA. As a healthcare worker, Sarah is represented by SEIU 1199NW. In 2010, Sarah created the online news source The Seattle Lesbian, LLC, which still receives upward of 100,000 readers per month. A recipient of McCormick's New Media Women Entrepreneur Award in 2012, Sarah was invited to the White House by President Barack Obama in 2015. That same year, GO Mag recognized Sarah as one of their Red-Hot Entrepreneurs in media.​ In 2016, the National Diversity Council honored Sarah with their LGBT Leadership Award. Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) recognized Sarah's advocacy work with the Community Builder Award in 2017, the same year Curve Magazine named Sarah one of their Top Women in Media & Publishing. Sarah served a two-year term as president of the Society of Professional Journalists - Western Washington Chapter beginning in 2018 and was elected Communications Vice Chair of the King County Democrats in 2021.

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