Wisconsin needs a candidate for governor who will defend LGBTQ people
Gov. Tony Evers "provided a crucial firewall against the worst abuses of the current right-wing agenda against LGBTQ people." The next governor needs to stand up against the GOP's anti-LGBTQ attacks.
The Recombobulation Area is a 19-time Milwaukee Press Club award-winning opinion column and online publication founded by longtime Milwaukee journalist Dan Shafer. The Recombobulation Area is now part of Civic Media.

With Tony Evers’ announcement last month that he will not be seeking a third term in office, the field for governor is wide open. As a queer and trans person, this is both an exciting and terrifying prospect.
I’m excited because Evers’ decision makes much-needed space for fresh perspective and new leadership in Wisconsin government. We’ve already seen too many cases of longtime office-holders clinging to power and position well past their expiration dates. I’m not just talking about age, either. While consistency can be helpful, it can also stagnate or simply become out of touch with the people they’re tasked with representing.
It’s also important for existing leaders to support new blood — and actually make room for it, too. I deeply appreciate that Evers has done so in this case, after years of dedicated service. Even good leaders need to step back eventually to create room for different people to try different things.
We have the opportunity and imperative now to nominate and elect someone who will fight for all Wisconsinites: urban and suburban and rural, longtime resident and recent immigrant, queer and trans and straight and cisgender. Having elected leaders with spines and firm moral compasses is something that’s only grown more important in the face of the Trump Administration’s increasingly brazen authoritarian attacks.
Speaking of that, the reason I’m terrified is that the vacuum left in Evers’ wake leaves a lot of room for things to go wrong in a way that could directly hurt people, particularly those who are members of already vulnerable and/or targeted communities. While there’s more I wish he’d been able to do throughout his time as governor, Evers was at least always a reliable bulwark against the worst excesses of the right-wing’s anti-LGBTQ crusade.
We shouldn’t stand for a candidate for office — from any party — who is willing to throw any person or community under the bus. The minute we decide that a particular minority group is OK to scapegoat or demonize or even just ignore is the minute we lose. Because if we can be convinced, as the author Omar El Akkad notes, to “just for a moment, cease to believe that this particular group of people are human,” then there is no violence, no degradation, that can’t be excused away.
I already know how the current Republican Party feels about queer and trans people. They’ve decided to hitch their wagons to outright bigotry and fear-mongering, trying to convince everyone that we’re somehow a threat to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. From bathroom bans to attacks on gay marriage, the GOP seems to want nothing more than the total eradication of LGBTQ people.
Which makes it all the more infuriating when Democrats parrot the very same lies and misdirections about trans people in an effort to, they hope, score political points. Major figures in the party right now are either toeing the transphobic line or all-in on it, from Pete Buttigieg to Rahm Emanuel to Gavin Newsom. It’s wrong-headed and dangerous.
There was a narrative after Trump won the last election that trans people were somehow to blame for the Democrats losing, too — as though 1% of the population holds such power. Trans people didn’t turn our existence and our basic rights into a wedge issue, though. That’s entirely the work of a small group of people intent on erasing us from existence, and it’s pretty heartbreaking to see so many other people caught up in the manufactured mania.
You may not personally care about (or think you know) trans or queer people, but the attacks on our basic rights are harbingers of the kinds of attacks on the human rights of all people that are being rolled out nationwide. It all comes down to bodily autonomy, free speech, free thought, and the ability to dream up and then work towards a better world. If our right to self-determination is being stripped away, it can be taken from anyone, for any reason, at any time.
Gov. Evers provided a crucial firewall against the worst abuses of the current right-wing agenda against LGBTQ people; rights that radiate out to impact everyone. He blocked attempts to ban trans youth from accessing medically necessary gender-affirming care, bar trans and gender non-conforming kids from joining sports teams that align with their identities, and has been outspoken in his support for the LGBTQ community generally.
Anything less than that from any future candidate for governor (or any elected office) would represent a threat not just to LGBTQ people, but to all Wisconsinites. Anyone pushing for or excusing the call to, “just for a moment, cease to believe that this particular group of people are human” in order to win an election or a debate or a vote does not have our best interests in mind. If we’re to trust that our next governor will actually stand up to the continued onslaught of anti-democratic, anti-human rights politics, they need to speak and act on behalf of all of us, forcefully and frequently. No exceptions.
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Emily Mills is a longtime freelance writer/reporter based in Madison. They previously served as Editor of Our Lives, Wisconsin's only LGBTQ+ media outlet, and as an opinion columnist in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. You can currently find Emily's work at tonemadison.com and at their own newsletter, Grist From the Mills.
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I really wish Bill Penzey could be drafted. He’s certainly got name recognition and I resonate with him politics
Ben Wikler is a politician I respect. Does anyone know his stance on LGBTQ+ issues?