At least eight major media outlets did not quote a single transgender person in any of their online reports following President Joe Biden’s order to repeal the Trump-era ban on trans people serving openly in the military. This follows a broader trend of media outlets failing to produce adequate and intentional reporting on issues facing the trans community.
On January 25, Biden signed an executive order overturning the Trump-Pence administration’s discriminatory ban, which was crafted with members of the extreme anti-LGBTQ group Family Research Council and right-wing think tank the Heritage Foundation. Biden’s new executive order “immediately prohibits any service member from being forced out of the military on the basis of gender identity” and requires the military to “reexamine the records of service members who were discharged or denied reenlistment due to gender identity issues under the previous policy.”
Top outlets that did not include a trans person in their reports on the story include:
- The Boston Globe, CBS News, Chicago Tribune, The Dallas Morning News, NBC News, New York Post, NPR, and The Wall Street Journal.
A report from The Associated Press news wire included a quote from Nicolas Talbott, a trans man who sued the administration in order to serve. He remarked, “I’m thrilled and relieved that I and other transgender Americans can now be evaluated solely on our ability to meet military standards.” The Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune, and The Dallas Morning News published similar reprints of the AP report that did not include Talbott’s quote.
Moreover, The Boston Globe published an additional story on Monday about Biden’s LGBTQ policies that quoted Andrew Beckwith, the president of the extreme anti-LGBTQ group Massachusetts Family Institute, yet the piece still did not quote one trans person (it did, however, quote other LGBTQ advocates). The article quoted Beckwith dehumanizing Biden’s pick for assistant health secretary, Dr. Rachel Levine, saying she is “in a constant denial of objective biological reality.” Levine would be the first openly transgender federal official confirmed by the U.S. Senate and has been the target of an anti-trans smear campaign
Several top outlets -- including ABC News, Los Angeles Times, Reuters, USA Today, CNN, Newsday, and The Washington Post -- produced reports on the story that quoted at least one trans person. For instance, The New York Times included the voices of at least five trans people in its report: