American Principles Project and its president Terry Schilling are at the vanguard of the anti-trans movement, but mainstream coverage of the organization often sanitizes or disregards the group’s open bigotry. The most recent example of this was in Politico, which ran uncritical coverage of Schilling the same day APP released a belligerent, virulently anti-trans ad in Arizona. The commercial was based on misinformation designed to discourage provision of gender-affirming care.
Unfortunately, Politico’s story is illustrative of much of the coverage APP receives, and it doesn’t mark the first time the outlet has written a puff piece on the group. APP has also received write-ups in The New York Times that often focus on the group’s tactics and perceived efficacy, while deemphasizing its extremism, and The Washington Post editorial section published a piece Schilling co-wrote in the run-up to the Virginia gubernatorial election in 2021.
As is all too typical in mainstream outlets, Politico’s story, which is largely about trans people, doesn’t quote any openly trans people. The piece also ignores Schilling’s well-documented history of making bigoted comments about LGBTQ communities.
Politico instead focused on the strategy that APP and fellow conservative organization The 1776 Project have adopted in states throughout the country, pumping money into school board races and trying to juice turnout by pushing anti-LGBTQ policies. Covering that effort is, of course, reasonable and perhaps necessary. But by treating the well-being of trans children simply as an afterthought in a grand game of power politics, Politico is helping to launder APP into mainstream discourse and legitimize a group that is not only anti-trans, but also creates and distributes disinformation.
The recent Arizona ad, for instance, features Dr. Miriam Grossman, an anti-trans activist with a history of downplaying the number of trans people in the world. Grossman is a key voice in the anti-trans film What Is A Woman? from The Daily Wire’s Matt Walsh and has falsely labeled gender-affirming care as experimental. She has also incorrectly claimed that suicidality statistics among trans people are inflated.
The ad also repeatedly shows top surgery scars as a scare tactic, though the procedure is safe and can be a lifesaving technique for trans people who need it. And, like any mark on the body, the results don’t carry any inherent aesthetic value; they are simply the after-effects of a surgical procedure that can be presented in an affirming way or can be demonized, as in the APP ad.