Republicans Have Spent Over US$65 Million On Anti-Trans Election Ads

Republicans Have Spent Over US$65 Million On Anti-Trans Election Ads
Image: Image: EPA/DAVID MUSE

During the current US Election, Republicans are reported to have spent over USD$65 million on television ads about transgender people.

In the final weeks of the presidential campaign, Trump spent big on ads attacking Kamala Harris for her support for trans people and healthcare for prisoners, framing her positions as out of touch with the concerns of everyday voters.听

The ads double-down on Trump鈥檚 viral debate moment, in which he claimed that 鈥渟he [Harris] wants to do transgender operations on illegal aliens that are in prison.”聽

Featuring images of celebrities like Jonathan Van Ness and Pattie Gonia 鈥 who were not informed and did not consent to be in the ads 鈥 the ads play short edited clips of Harris talking to trans people and posing with drag queens. It ends with the catchphrase 鈥淜amala is for they/them. Donald Trump is for you.鈥

Pattie Gonia said she is , while to start a fundraiser for Trans Lifeline and Point of Pride.

$65 million for anti-trans ads, and counting

According to a recent analysis by , Republicans have spent over USD$65 million on television advertisements addressing transgender issues since August, with many of these ads concentrating on transgender women鈥檚 access to women鈥檚 spaces such as bathrooms, locker rooms, and participation in sports.

However, spending has ramped up in recent weeks, with this latest campaign reported to cost .听

鈥淎ccording to data compiled by AdImpact, these ads have aired more than 30,000 times, including in all seven swing states, and with a particular focus on NFL and college football broadcast audiences.鈥 noted political correspondent Susan Davis on .听

鈥淩epublican ads focusing on transgender rights are dominating airwaves all over the country.鈥

Anti-trans ads have also featured on a state level. reports that ads from the Republicans about Democratic Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown has touched on transgender topics, while trans women in sports have been a topic of ads in Montana, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.

Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz has initiated a USD$7 million campaign that accuses his Democratic opponent, Colin Allred, of endorsing 鈥渂oys playing in girls’ sports.鈥

“The hate has shifted to the trans community 鈥 they see that as an opportunity,” says Walz

鈥淭his is really an argument that is based on an impulse someone might feel. It鈥檚 hard to argue with someone鈥檚 feelings.鈥 Montana MP Leigh Finke told the New York Times.

In an interview for the podcast , Vice Presidential Nominee Tim Walz told the hosts 鈥淲e see it now; the hate has shifted to the trans community. [Republicans] see that as an opportunity. If you鈥檙e watching any sporting events right now, you see that Donald Trump鈥檚 closing arguments are to demonise a group of people for being who they are.鈥澛

University of Houston political science professor Brandon Rottinghaus told , “Republicans are worried. How worried they are is sort of unknown, but the fact that they’re shifting to the kind of mobilisation phase of the campaign so early means that they want to make sure that they hit their numbers”

“Turnout is really critical, and these kinds of ads are perfectly designed to inflame and turn out base voters.”

Talking to , Jami Taylor, a professor of policy at the University of Toledo, noted that that Trump鈥檚 recent ad mocking they/them pronouns had been especially effective among conservative voters. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 attack popular things; you attack unpopular things. Right now, trans people are relatively unpopular鈥.

Trans issues not a priority for most voters

Despite the of these ads, recent polling suggests that most voters 鈥 including a significant number of Republicans 鈥 do not consider trans issues a priority.听

has shown that voters ranked transgender issues as their lowest concern compared to other pressing topics, such as the economy, climate change, and national security.听

鈥淭he election is overshadowed by corruption, authoritarianism, climate change, school shootings, the Middle East. The idea of trans rights just becomes small potatoes,鈥 said Gwen Smith, writer and founder of the Transgender Day of Remembrance, told the . 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to say that for myself, because it鈥檚 a very important issue to me. But in the greater scheme of things for the average voter, even Republican voters, it鈥檚 just not resonating.鈥

Chris Erchull, senior staff attorney with GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders, concurred. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe that it鈥檚 been borne out in elections that making transgender people the centre of a platform is a successful political move.鈥

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think most people are actually interested in attacking the rights of transgender people. They鈥檙e much more concerned about other political issues.鈥

Rottinghaus takes a . “These issues are ephemeral. The kind of political outrage that comes from them is likely to fade in the next few years, where it’s likely to be replaced by something else in the next cycle.”聽聽

However, as election analyst Jessica Taylor pointed out on , 鈥淚f it moves a small sect of voters, that could still be key.鈥

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