Behold the myopia of the American voter--based on your views on youth sports, I'll threaten to vote for the guy who doesn't even want there to be elections! I'll do it!!!! Guys I'm about to vote for the fascist!!! You're making me do it!!!
I think the issue runs deeper than what’s immediately visible.
Whether we like it or not, people often vote based on social and cultural issues that touch their everyday lives. When many voters see debates around this topic, they interpret it as part of a broader cultural shift they’re uncomfortable with. And frankly, I don’t think trans rights activists have helped their own cause in how they’ve approached it.
Fifteen or twenty years ago, when same-sex marriage was being debated and gradually legalized across the U.S., advocates for gay rights managed to win over the mainstream by appealing to empathy. “Joe Sixpack” might not have understood why two men would want to be together, but he did understand love. Even if his church disapproved, he didn’t see how two men or two women getting married directly affected him.
The trans rights movement, by contrast, has often adopted a “you’re either with us or against us” approach—something reminiscent of George W. Bush’s rhetoric after 9/11. That strategy might mobilize a base, but it alienates the middle. It worked well enough for Bush to get reelected, but he left office with a 25% approval rating for a reason.
When same-sex marriage became legal, the average straight person’s life didn’t really change. Maybe their lifelong bachelor uncle finally married his “roommate,” and everyone was happier for it. But what people see now feels very different. They hear activists insisting that children are “assigned gender at birth,” and they see workplaces mandating pronouns in email signatures or doctors approving major medical decisions for minors. They see biological males competing in women’s sports, and they’re told that even questioning any of this could cost them their job.
So yes, on its own, this might seem like a small issue. But to many, it’s part of a broader cultural wave they feel has gone too far—and they’re reacting to that. Personally, it wasn’t enough to make me vote for Trump—I’m still fully aware of his reckless foreign and domestic policies and general incompetence—but it’s clear that this issue has pushed many moderates rightward, and caused some liberals to disengage altogether.
In short, this is a losing issue for Democrats. They’d be wise to recognize that and move on.