If anyone knows how to harm and disappoint the LGBTQ community during Pride Month, it’s Republicans in power. As Daily Kos recently covered, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis recently signed an anti-trans bill into law to stop trans girls from participating in girls’ sports teams, following the lead of a handful of other GOP-controlled states. On Wednesday, DeSantis made a stunning number of budget cuts to programs meant to serve the LGBTQ community in the state, including one that offers counseling support to survivors of the Pulse massacre of 2016, a shooting that left 49 people dead.
Those funds totaled a cool $900,000, and would have gone toward mental health and housing services for the LGBTQ community in central Florida. Let’s look at what community members, including Florida Democrats and those in the advocacy space, are saying about the governor’s disappointing series of decisions just a mere few days into Pride Month.
“Timing matters,” Democratic state Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, who is openly gay, pointed out, as reported by local outlet WWSB. “What message are LGBT people meant to receive from Gov. DeSantis other than that this is an insult to them? The Orlando community right now is bracing for the five-year remembrance, and for Gov. DeSantis to veto funding for Pulse survivors and families is just cruel.”
Rep. Anna Eskamani, a Democrat whose district includes the Pulse site in Orlando, described DeSantis as “a homophobe and a transphobe who doesn’t actually care about Floridians who are different from him,” as reported by Click Orlando. Eskamani was among the officials who requested the denied funds.
“He looked me in the eyes and told me that he would always support those of us who had been impacted by the shooting,” Brandon Wolf, who survived the Pulse massacre, told The Washington Post in reference to meeting with DeSantis in 2019.
How did the specifics of this enormous budget cut break down? $150,000 was directed to an LGBTQ resource center in Orlando, called the Orlando United Assistance Center at the LGBT+ Center Orlando. Part of that $150,000 would have gone toward mental health services for survivors of the Pulse massacre as well as impacted family members.
The Zebra Coalition, a youth housing project, would have received $750,000 in funding. Given what we know about disproportionate rates of LGBTQ people (including youth) experiencing homelessness, it’s positively shameful not to give every dollar possible to such a cause.
“Now we are going to have to go back to square one and figure out how we are going to fundraise,” Zebra Coalition Executive Director Heather Wilkie told Click Orlando, adding that they’re not “giving up on the dream” but are, understandably, “disappointed.”
People on Twitter have been calling out DeSantis for his actions during Pride Month.
It’s been said before, but the refrain still stands: The cruelty is the point.
We must act now to urge our senators to vote “yes” to the Equality Act.
Sign and send the petition: The Senate must pass the Equality Act and stop the discrimination against LGBTQ people.
Those funds totaled a cool $900,000, and would have gone toward mental health and housing services for the LGBTQ community in central Florida. Let’s look at what community members, including Florida Democrats and those in the advocacy space, are saying about the governor’s disappointing series of decisions just a mere few days into Pride Month.
“Timing matters,” Democratic state Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, who is openly gay, pointed out, as reported by local outlet WWSB. “What message are LGBT people meant to receive from Gov. DeSantis other than that this is an insult to them? The Orlando community right now is bracing for the five-year remembrance, and for Gov. DeSantis to veto funding for Pulse survivors and families is just cruel.”
Rep. Anna Eskamani, a Democrat whose district includes the Pulse site in Orlando, described DeSantis as “a homophobe and a transphobe who doesn’t actually care about Floridians who are different from him,” as reported by Click Orlando. Eskamani was among the officials who requested the denied funds.
“He looked me in the eyes and told me that he would always support those of us who had been impacted by the shooting,” Brandon Wolf, who survived the Pulse massacre, told The Washington Post in reference to meeting with DeSantis in 2019.
How did the specifics of this enormous budget cut break down? $150,000 was directed to an LGBTQ resource center in Orlando, called the Orlando United Assistance Center at the LGBT+ Center Orlando. Part of that $150,000 would have gone toward mental health services for survivors of the Pulse massacre as well as impacted family members.
The Zebra Coalition, a youth housing project, would have received $750,000 in funding. Given what we know about disproportionate rates of LGBTQ people (including youth) experiencing homelessness, it’s positively shameful not to give every dollar possible to such a cause.
“Now we are going to have to go back to square one and figure out how we are going to fundraise,” Zebra Coalition Executive Director Heather Wilkie told Click Orlando, adding that they’re not “giving up on the dream” but are, understandably, “disappointed.”
People on Twitter have been calling out DeSantis for his actions during Pride Month.
Five years ago this month, a gunman killed 49 people and wounded 53 others at the Pulse nightclub, which served LGBTQ people in Orlando, Florida. Today, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis disgraced their memory by signing an anti-trans bill on the first day of LGBTQ Pride Month. https://t.co/B9gZ4R3HWL
— Keith Boykin (@keithboykin) June 1, 2021
Ron DeSantis champions a "balanced budget" with over ten billion dollars in reserves, yet vetoes funding for the survivors of the Pulse Nightclub Shooting, days before the 5 year remembrance of the shooting, and during #Pride2021. This decision is absolutely repugnant.
— Aaron Parnas (@AaronParnas) June 2, 2021
Day One of #Pride: Governor signs legislation attacking innocent children. Day Two: vetoes mental health counseling for Pulse survivors. It’s targeted. The cruelty is the point. We will never stop fighting for the rights and safety of our children and LGBTQ community. https://t.co/19y3UhKPV9
— Rep. Val Demings (@RepValDemings) June 2, 2021
As we mark #Pride month I am sharing this photo of me greeting Gov DeSantis at #HD47's Pulse Memorial -- it's the same day he issued a proclamation recognizing the Pulse tragedy that did NOT mention LGBTQ+ ppl; thx to our collective advocacy he issued a new proclamation that did. pic.twitter.com/qgoGIp97Sk
— Rep. Anna V. Eskamani ? (@AnnaForFlorida) June 2, 2021
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis just vetoed mental health care funding for the survivors of the Pulse Night Club massacre, this, the second day of #Pride month.
— Travis Akers (@travisakers) June 2, 2021
Governor DeSantis cruelly kicked off Pride month by policing trans students. We need federal protections for our trans siblings now more than ever. We need to pass the Equality Act. https://t.co/DaORaXh9KO
— Randi Weingarten (@rweingarten) June 2, 2021
It’s been said before, but the refrain still stands: The cruelty is the point.
We must act now to urge our senators to vote “yes” to the Equality Act.
Sign and send the petition: The Senate must pass the Equality Act and stop the discrimination against LGBTQ people.