Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R-Va.) (Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)
Republican Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin has a lot at stake with the potential for his party to win control over both chambers of the state’s General Assembly in November and the growing chorus high profile GOP donors urging him to run for president.
Appearing before a crowd of Republican voters last month in Salem, Virginia, alongside state Sen. David Suetterlein (R-Roanoke), the governor was flanked by a huge sign that read, “Parents Matter,” a message that Youngkin’s 2021 gubernatorial campaign had used to fire up conservative Virginians concerned about education policies, including LGBTQ+ matters.
However, the Washington Post notes that while “parental rights” arguments were previously focused on opposition to pro-LGBTQ+ policies, pandemic mask mandates, and the teaching of critical race theory in Virginia schools, “this year’s edition is decidedly more middle-of-the-road.”
During campaign events for GOP state legislature candidates in battleground districts across the state, Youngkin has been “treading carefully around the red meat occasionally served up by his audiences,” steering “comments back toward the catchall idea of parents being involved in their kids’ lives,” the Post reports.
For instance, during last month’s event with Suetterlein, a member of the audience said her daughter had been “brainwashed” on social media into believing it possible for someone to be both gay and a Christian, which Youngkin addressed by urging parents to “be engaged” in their kids’ lives and educate them on the dangers of social media.
At the same time, Youngkin’s tenure as governor has seen a flurry of anti-LGBTQ+ policies, especially targeting youth, schools and the transgender community, which, unlike his “parents’ rights” rhetoric, has not abated or become less extreme.
Last month, the governor reportedly took down a page on the Virginia Department of Health’s website that offered two links for LGBTQ+ youth to access resources after the right-wing news outlet The Daily Wire inquired about it.
Last year, the Human Rights Campaign wrote, “Youngkin unveiled a new directive restricting the rights of transgender students in schools, ordering all 133 school districts to adopt policies that would require transgender students to use facilities and participate in activities corresponding with their sex assigned at birth.”
When running for governor in 2021, Youngkin appeared on Fox News to defend a teacher who was suspended for refusing to use a student’s preferred pronouns, vowing to “stand up for teachers and parents against these kinds of cancel culture initiatives.”
HRC and Equality Virginia in March counted more than two dozen anti-LGBTQ+ bills that were introduced by Youngkin’s GOP allies in the legislature during this session, all of which were ultimately defeated as Democrats have retained control of the upper chamber.
These included:
-A measure to ban gender affirming care for transgender youth, which also sought to erode anti-discrimination protections for health insurers and permit the companies to opt out of covering gender affirming care for adults,
-A policy requiring schools to “out” students by informing parents when their child has disclosed experiences of gender dysphoria or asked any employee of their school to participate in their social transitioning, such as by using preferred names or pronouns, and requiring parental consent “prior to the implementation at such school of any plan concerning any gender incongruence”,
-A requirement for students to obtain a court order to change a student’s name on any school record, and
-Legislation requiring parental consent and notification when their child participates in any Gender-Sexuality Alliance or Gay-Straight Alliance (GSA) club at school.