As Congressional Champions Reintroduce Equality Act, Civil Rights Groups Call for its Urgent Passage
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, as leaders in the U.S. House and Senate are set to reintroduce the Equality Act — historic federal legislation that would ensure comprehensive nondiscrimination protections for LGBTQ+ people everywhere — a coalition of civil rights organizations urgently calls for the legislation’s swift passage. The bill’s reintroduction comes amidst a dangerous rise in anti-LGBTQ+ legislative and executive actions, including the erosion of nondiscrimination protections and weaponization of federal authorities against marginalized communities. The coalition includes: Advocates for Transgender Equality, Ƶ, Equality Federation, Family Equality, GLAD, GLSEN, the Human Rights Campaign, NBJC, National Center for Lesbian Rights, National LGBTQ Task Force Action Fund, National Women’s Law Center and PFLAG.
The groups issued the following statement:
“Every LGBTQ+ person deserves the freedom to be themselves and to thrive. That’s why we’re calling on Congress/federal lawmakers to ensure equality for everyone, no matter who we love or our gender identity. Anti-equality politicians have worked to crater the health, education, housing, financial, workplace safety and public accommodations laws that protect all of us. These harmful efforts have meant that in 2025, LGBTQ+ people can be denied a loan, an apartment, or access to public facilities simply because of who they are. And now, the Trump-Vance administration has weaponized the Executive Branch against every marginalized community, taking aim at all of our civil rights and freedoms.
“These attacks challenge the bedrock laws protecting our universal freedoms, but they cannot strip us of our collective power. Our communities, our states and our nation are stronger because each of us across race, place and gender brings our history, our culture, our experience and our know-how to make us strong. That is why passing the Equality Act is so necessary in this moment. The bill is more than a lifeline for those in danger of losing necessary protections; it ensures all people in this country—Black, white or brown, Native or newcomer, queer or straight, transgender or not—can live freely without constant fear of discrimination or retaliation. The Equality Act is a declaration that the United States continues to fight for freedom for all.
“Across areas of life, this bill would safeguard people from discrimination and ensure we all have the chance to chase our American Dream. Congress should pass the Equality Act and send a message to the country that we all deserve to live authentically and have the opportunity to thrive.”
The nonpartisan Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI) found that national support for the Equality Act topped 75 percent, including a majority of Republicans and Independents. The Equality Act has also garnered support from businesses and over 650 organizations, including civil rights, education, health care, and faith-based groups.
The Equality Act was reintroduced today by Congressman Mark Takano and Senators Jeff Merkley, Tammy Baldwin and Cory Booker.
The Equality Act: Consistent and Explicit Protections for LGBTQ+ People
The sharp rise in anti-LGBTQ+ measures has led to a dizzying patchwork of fragmented and discriminatory laws, creating hostile environments and inconsistent protections for LGBTQ+ people. With nearly two-thirds of LGBTQ+ people reporting facing discrimination in their daily lives, the Equality Act would establish consistent federal non-discrimination protections in critical areas such as housing, credit, education, public spaces and services, federally funded programs, and jury service. This legislation is essential to ensure universal safeguards against discrimination.
Without federal protections, LGBTQ+ individuals across the United States face significant vulnerabilities, such as eviction, denial of services, unfair surcharges, or refusal of healthcare and loans, simply due to their identity. The Equality Act seeks to address these inequities by providing consistent anti-discrimination protections nationwide. It ensures that LGBTQ+ individuals can live without fear of harassment or discrimination, while also expanding essential protections for women, people of color, and individuals of all faiths.
The Equality Act also extends crucial protections from discrimination based on sex, race, and religion.
The Equality Act also extends protections to millions on the basis of sex — who aren’t covered by some existing federal anti-discrimination laws — to ensure they don’t have to live in fear of harassment or discrimination. In addition, it modernizes public accommodations law to provide increased protections from discrimination on the basis of race and religion. It would ensure that women cannot be charged more than men by a dry cleaner for cleaning a shirt, or that those who breastfeed are not harassed or excluded from public spaces, or that women aren’t turned away from a pharmacy refusing to fill a birth control prescription. It would ensure that taxis and car-sharing services cannot refuse service to Black people, and that stores can’t refuse entrance to people of color. It would ensure that an accountant agency cannot refuse to work for someone because they disagree with their religion.
Anti-LGBTQ+ Attacks Have Continued to Escalate, Underscoring the Need for the Equality Act
Since inauguration, the Trump Administration has signed a raft of anti-LGBTQ+ executive actions aimed at restricting the rights and freedoms of LGBTQ+ people. These actions include efforts to:
Restrict access to health care for transgender people of all ages
Restrict transgender youth from participating in sports
Censor classrooms and punish inclusive and welcoming schools for their support of LGBTQ+ youth
Rollback nondiscrimination protections in health care settings and others
Restrict access to accurate federal identity documents for transgender and nonbinary people,
and more
These anti-LGBTQ+ executive actions build on a yearslong campaign by state legislatures and anti-equality governors to weaken protections for LGBTQ+ people and assail equality nationwide.
Transgender, non-binary, and gender non-conforming youth in particular have been directly impacted by anti-LGBTQ+ legislation, losing access to life-saving medical care, comprehensive and inclusive education, and activities, spaces, and facilities.
Gender affirming care bans (26 states) — nearly 40 percent of all transgender youth age 13-17 are living in states where they can no longer access life-saving, best practices medical care. In more than a dozen states, restrictions on care have implications for adults as well, especially through bans on public funds going to provide this best practice healthcare and restrictions on which medical professionals are authorized to prescribe such care. More than 30 states introduced gender affirming care bans during the 2023 legislative session, meaning that at its height, half of all transgender youth in the U.S. were at risk of losing access to gender-affirming care.
Anti-Transgender sports bans (26 states) — prohibit trans youth from participating in sports alongside their friends. These bills affect large swaths of trans youth as young as middle school (with some states even extending restrictions down to kindergarten).
Bathroom bans (18 states) and 12 states with laws that restrict trans youth from using facilities in school consistent with their gender identity and 4 states with laws restricting trans people from using public bathrooms.
In recent months, the scope of state legislative attacks has continued to widen. Last month, Iowa became the first state to remove existing statewide nondiscrimination protections from a community when Governor Kim Reynolds signed the law eliminating “gender identity” as a protected class in the Iowa Civil Rights Act. In addition, numerous states, including Idaho, North Dakota, and Michigan, have seen anti-equality politicians put forward resolutions calling for the United States Supreme Court to overturn their marriage equality ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges.
The time to act is now. The reintroduction of the Equality Act marks a critical moment for our country to reaffirm its foundational promise: that freedom, dignity, and equal opportunity are guaranteed for all. Amid a wave of escalating attacks and system rollbacks, Congress has the chance–and the responsibility–to rise to this moment and deliver real, lasting protections for LGBTQ+ people and all who face discrimination.