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Fact Sheet

On March 28, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed a controversial bill into law known as the "Don't Say Gay or Trans" bill. The law, which is broad and vague, prohibits instruction about sexual orientation or gender identity in grades K-3 and bans instruction about sexual orientation or gender identity in grades 4-12 if it is deemed "not age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate for students." Because primary school instruction is generally discussion-based, some schools have interpreted the law to restrict anything that might elicit discussion about LGBTQ+ people or issues. The law has also imposed new notification requirements on teachers and schools, causing fear that schools will be forced to “out” students and subject them to harm. The result is that the law has silenced LGBTQ+ people and families and left students, teachers, and families guessing about what it means to comply with the law. 

Given the law's ambiguity, there may be confusion about what it does and means for LGBTQ+ youth and their families. Here are some frequently asked questions:

 

Our democracy relies on a judicial system that is non-ideological in order to ensure fairness and impartiality and make good on the constitutional promise of equal access to justice for all. However, as most strongly evidenced by the Supreme Court’s recent 2021-2022 term, especially with its decision to gut abortion rights on legally unsound grounds, it is clear that a majority of Justices on our nation’s highest court are more loyal to an extreme far-right conservative agenda than they are to the Constitution. The clearest way to restore the integrity of our democracy and protect our civil rights is through court reform.

Here’s what you need to know about court reform and why it is essential to protecting the civil rights of LGBTQ+ people and everyone living with HIV.

What is court reform?

Court reform is the idea of restoring legitimacy to the judicial system through policy reforms and legislative action in order to ensure equal access to justice for all — a promise made to everyone in the United States by our Constitution.

Why is Lambda Legal calling for court reform? Why does this matter?

Our democracy is crumbling. During the end of the Obama Administration and throughout the Trump presidency, then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and then-Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley abandoned important Senate norms and corrupted the confirmation process. They essentially stole a Supreme Court seat from each of Presidents Obama and Biden and oversaw confirmation hearings for judicial nominees at all levels that were not thorough and ensured only the most committed ideologues were confirmed to the federal bench. As a result, the public no longer has confidence in the courts, especially the Supreme Court, to be non-partisan. Furthermore, the Supreme Court itself has eroded its own legitimacy. Unless faith is restored in the Supreme Court and the rest of the federal judiciary through court reform, our civil rights — including the right to access non-discriminatory health care, bodily autonomy, the right to engage in private consensual sexual relationships, the right to marry a person of the same sex, and all the rights and benefits that flow from those fundamental liberties — can be taken away. Our families, our relationships, our self-determination, our privacy, and our very identities, are all under threat.

While most of these rights are still recognized as constitutionally guaranteed, the threat is very real. In Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, the majority opinion relied on cramped, selective history to justify its decision to revoke the fundamental right to abortion. This ideological approach leaves the door wide open to take away other constitutionally protected rights, like the freedom to decide who to have sex with, who to marry, or what health care we can access. Additionally, in a chilling concurring opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas reinforced that danger, writing, “We should reconsider all of this Court’s substantive due process precedents, including Griswold, Lawrence, and Obergefell,” making it explicit that overturning the right to use contraception, the right to engage in private consensual sexual activity with a same-sex partner, and the right to marry a person of the same-sex is firmly within his sights. We must reform our courts now.

What reforms does Lambda Legal support?

At Lambda Legal, we have called for immediate, essential reforms of the U.S. Supreme Court, including adding additional seats to match the number of federal Circuit Courts of Appeals and adopting an enforceable ethics code for Supreme Court Justices. We are also calling for expansion of the lower federal courts in accordance with the increased caseloads these courts have come to bear as our society has grown, causing unreasonable workloads, backlogs, and barriers to access to justice.

Additionally, we have called for reforming the filibuster to allow Senate consideration of court reform and voting rights legislation such as the Judiciary Act of 2021, which would add those additional seats to the Supreme Court; the For the People Act of 2021, which would make federal elections fairer, safer, and more accessible and would strengthen government and judicial ethics rules; the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act of 2021, which would prevent voter suppression efforts, most of which target communities of color; and the Washington, D.C. Admission Act, which would enfranchise the citizens of our nation’s capital by making it the 51st state.

What is the filibuster?

The filibuster is a tactic used by minority members of the U.S. Senate to prolong debate and delay. It is a procedural move that requires 60 votes to end debate and allow a vote to be taken on a legislative proposal. Historically, it was understood that this counter-majoritarian tactic was only to be used sparingly for the most contentious proposals. And the history of its use is deeply steeped in racism as it was used to protect slavery in the early 1800s and then, systematically, to protect Jim Crow laws and to block civil rights advances in the 1990s. It has come to be used routinely by the current minority party to prevent the party in the majority from advancing legislation with a simple majority vote of at least 51 but less than 60 votes. The way to end a filibuster is by a vote of at least 60 members, known as a cloture vote. Because the minority party has been using the filibuster this way, many pieces of legislation need 60 votes — a supermajority — to end the filibuster and pass. This has led to entrenched stalemates on important and popular pieces of legislation and some key nominations.

There are, however, exceptions to the rule. The two major political parties have agreed that the filibuster cannot be used to block Presidential appointments, federal court nominations, the annual budget reconciliation process, certain trade agreements, and certain other types of legislation. While the current filibuster rule requires 60 votes to invoke cloture before allowing legislation to move forward to a floor vote, only 51 votes are needed to change the filibuster rule. This approach could be used to allow the Senate to consider court reform and voting rights legislation. The recent practice of filibuster abuse further exacerbates the counter-majoritarian power wielded by states with small populations but equal representation in the Senate. By requiring 60 votes to allow consideration of broadly popular legislation, including democracy-restoring legislation, the minority party has come to hold our democracy hostage. This must end.

Has the Supreme Court ever been expanded before?

Yes! The idea to add seats to the Supreme Court is not novel. The Constitution does not prescribe the number of Justices on the Supreme Court and gives Congress the power to add seats. Since the first Judiciary Act in 1789, which established six Supreme Court seats, Congress has added or removed seats to or from the Court five times. The last time it did so was in 1869 when Congress created nine seats to match the nine Circuit Courts of Appeals existing at the time. Today’s Court still has nine Justices on the bench but there are now 13 federal Circuit Courts of Appeals. Court reform would not only help restore the legitimacy of the Supreme Court, but also improve the administration of justice by again staffing each Circuit with its own designated Justice to consider emergency appeals in the first instance and to handle other matters.

Who else supports court reform?

Lambda Legal is far from alone in calling for court reform. LGBTQ+ litigating organizations GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders, the National Center for Lesbian Rights, and the Transgender Law Center joined our call for court reform. Additionally, organizations and civic leaders who are concerned about a variety of public issues such as abortion rights and reproductive justice, gun control, the environment, immigration, and many others have joined the call to reform the Supreme Court by expanding the number of Justices on the bench.  

The writing is on the wall: protecting our democratic system of government, the rule of law, and the public welfare, requires immediate action to reel in a Court that is deeply partisan and out of control. Because the Court’s new super-majority is destabilizing our legal system so rapidly – overturning decades of settled protective case law with cherry-picked historical references and disregard of obvious facts – many have called for court reform already and the list is growing.

What can I do to support court reform?

There are many things you can do to support court reform. One easy and important place to start is by helping others understand and become comfortable with the idea of court reform. You can do that by sharing this FAQ and talking to your friends and family about it.

You can also contact your members of Congress and urge them to cosponsor the Judiciary Act of 2021, which would expand the number of seats on the Supreme Court to equal the number of Circuit Courts of Appeals in the federal judiciary.

And finally, sign up for Lambda Legal updates as we go all in to save our democracy and defend LGBTQ+ civil rights and the rights of everyone living with HIV.

On June 24, 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization and overturned Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, cases that affirmed the right to access abortion.

The impact of this decision will deeply impact the LGBTQ+ community as lesbian and bisexual women, transgender men, two-spirit, intersex, and nonbinary and gender non-conforming people want, need, and receive abortions. According to the Guttmacher Institute, bisexual, nonbinary, and transgender people are more likely than their heterosexual peers to seek an abortion.

Numerous factors explain LGBTQ+ people's disparate need for abortion, such as the link between poverty and lack of access to contraception and abortion rates; the lack of comprehensive and inclusive sex education in schools, which puts LGBTQ+ youth at risk of unintended pregnancies; and how LGBTQ+ young people—particularly queer and transgender youth who disproportionately experience homelessness and housing insecurity—may engage in survival sex resulting in an unplanned pregnancy and/or sexual assault.

As we recommit to securing abortion rights and access in the United States, we emphasize that abortion bans both reflect and reinforce deeply harmful stereotypes about women, and the relative value attached to women’s lives. We also stress that such bans impact not only cisgender heterosexual women, but LGBTQ+ people, too, depriving everyone who needs an abortion of dignity, autonomy over one’s own body, and the ability to make fundamental decisions that determine the course of a person’s life, such as the structure of one’s family, and the ability to secure an educational and economic future.

Interested in learning more? Here are some frequently asked questions about abortion access and how the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health can impact your ability to access this critical health care.

In the U.S., LGBTQ+ students have a right to attend and enjoy school dances just like anyone else. You also have the right to freely express who you are, including in what you choose to wear. In a public school setting, clothing restrictions must apply evenly across all gender expressions.

According to the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution and Title IX of the Educational Amendmentsof 1972, your public school has a legal obligation to respect the sexual orientation of all its students and not to discriminate against students on the basis of their sex - this includes at school dances.

In other words, your school administrators cannot discipline you for wearing certain clothing unless it violates a gender-neutral dress code. For example, not allowing a female student to wear a tuxedo or a male student to wear address may put the school at risk of breaking the law. Rules must be applied equally - they can’t create exceptions based on the specific items of clothing for individuals.

In public schools in the U.S., LGBTQ+ students have a right to attend and enjoy school dances just like anyone else. You also have a legal right to bring a date of any gender identity and sexual orientation. Even though you sometimes hear about schools barring same-sex couples from dances, doing so is likely to be against the law.

According to the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution and Title IX of the Educational Amendments of 1972, your public school has a legal obligation to respect the sexual orientation of all its students and not to discriminate against students on the basis of their sex - this includes at school dances.

In other words, you can bring anyone you want to as a date to your school’s dance, as long as they are also in high school, regardless who they are. Whether you want to bring your boyfriend, girlfriend, partner, or just a friend, you both have aright to attend your dance together without discrimination, no matter what either of your gender identities or sexual orientations are.

April 22, 2022 is the National Day of Silence, a student-led action sponsored by the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN) in which thousands of students around the country will remain silent for all or part of the school day to call attention to the harassment and discrimination faced by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth.

Over the years, GLSEN and Lambda Legal have heard from hundreds of students, parents and allies who have encountered resistance from their schools and school officials in response to their efforts to participate in Day of Silence activities. The purpose of this FAQ is to provide information about the rights of students to participate in the Day of Silence and what to do if school officials interfere with those rights.

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