Amid Threats to LGBTQ Rights, a Trans Health Advocate is Seeking Out Community

President-elect Donald Trump will be sworn in for his second term Jan. 20. Anti-trans rhetoric was a key component of his campaign platform, coupled with promises to defund institutions that provide trans health care. Trans community health advocate Volta Tran says she’s focused on “not giving in to panic.”

29-year-old writer and community health advocate Volta Tran in downtown Providence, Dec. 10, 2024.
29-year-old writer and community health advocate Volta Tran in downtown Providence, Dec. 10, 2024.
Paul C. Kelly Campos/The Public’s Radio
Share
29-year-old writer and community health advocate Volta Tran in downtown Providence, Dec. 10, 2024.
29-year-old writer and community health advocate Volta Tran in downtown Providence, Dec. 10, 2024.
Paul C. Kelly Campos/The Public’s Radio
Amid Threats to LGBTQ Rights, a Trans Health Advocate is Seeking Out Community
Copy

In the wee hours of Nov. 6, Volta Tran was up watching the election returns. By 2 or 3 a.m., it became clear to her that Trump was coming out ahead.

“It felt like a repeat of 2016, of course,” she said. “I felt, not numb to it, but I felt … I felt familiarity.”

Tran is a 29-year-old trans woman, a writer and a community health advocate. The election didn’t go the way she hoped. After that night, she said she thought she would feel more scared or panicked.

“I definitely feel the urgency,” Tran said. “However, I can’t say that even since November I’ve been surprised by anything.”

Trump has promised to defund institutions that provide gender-affirming care, to punish teachers for acknowledging transgender children, and to ask Congress to pass a bill that affirms there are “only two genders.” But even before Trump was reelected, Rhode Island had seen five failed attempts to pass anti-trans legislation at the state level.

This interview was conducted by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Spotted lanternflies, Japanese barberry, Oriental bittersweet – When plants and animals like these invade our environment, they can disrupt other organisms that are native to the region. But can we stop these species? And should we?
The Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River recently called out the U.S. government for its aggressive immigration policies
Proposal would have shaved up to $80 off monthly gas and electric bills
Field hockey won the Division II championship. Soccer won 16 games and reached the Division IV final. Tennis reached the Division II semifinals
With state spending up sharply since the pandemic and a major deficit on the horizon, new figures reveal the biggest drivers of Rhode Island’s budget and the revenue sources keeping it afloat