Latin America's trans politicians gain ground in a dangerous region
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[March 09, 2022]
By Carolina Pulice
SAO PAULO (Reuters) - When Erika Hilton
decided to run for political office in South America's biggest city in
2020, she had no idea she would receive more votes than any other female
candidate to win a city council seat in Brazil that year.
Since then, buzz surrounding the transgender 29-year-old has only grown.
Hilton has seen an outpouring support from artists and leftist
politicians, appearing on magazine covers in Brazil. In October she was
recognized as one of the Most Influential People of African Descent, a
United Nations-backed award recognizing achievement by Africans and
their diaspora.
Hilton told Reuters she now aims to run for federal office in Brazil's
October elections for the left-wing Socialism and Liberty Party. If
elected, she would be the first transgender member of Congress in
Brazil, the deadliest country for trans people in the world, according
to Transgender Europe (TGEU) https://transrespect.org/en/map/trans-murder-monitoring/?submap=tmm_2021,
a network of non-profits advocating for trans rights globally.
Murders and suicides among transgender Brazilians have climbed in recent
years, while far-right President Jair Bolsonaro has attacked what he
calls "gender ideology" among those pushing for more protections for
transgender people.
"Brasilia needs to be shaken up with an agenda of human rights, of
LGBTQIA (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, asexual)
issues, for these bodies and these voices," Hilton said in an interview.
From her city council seat, Hilton has proposed tax benefits for
companies who hire more trans employees. She has also pushed to widen
the reach of the city's Trans Citizenship Program, which aims to help
vulnerable trans people.
Although Hilton is a trailblazer in Brazil, she is not alone in Latin
America, where a new generation of trans politicians is working to
combat violence and prejudice against trans people.
In Chile, transgender lawmaker Emilia Schneider, 25, won a seat in the
federal legislature in November after years of activism.
Schneider said the leftist tide bringing socialist Chilean
President-elect Gabriel Boric to office has also inspired the drafting
of a new constitution with a greater focus on human rights and defense
of the trans population.
"I am very hopeful and confident that this government and the new
constitution will signify a new horizon of rights and recognition for
the people of Chile and for sexual diversity," she said in an interview.
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Chilean Emilia Schneider, a transgender woman, student and political
activist, attends a gathering during the public launch of the
campaign for the 2020 plebiscite, in Santiago, Chile, February 26,
2020. REUTERS/Pablo Sanhueza/File Photo
"We have conquered institutional
spaces, in Congress, in the (president-elect's) cabinet, and that is
a profound transformation, it is going to change the culture of
society," said Schneider. She noted that Boric's appointed cabinet
includes openly gay Education Minister Mario Antonio Avila and
lesbian Sports Minister Alexandra Benado.
Across Latin America, political progress towards
boosting trans rights has been mixed.
At least 189 transgender people were killed last year in the region,
more than any other, according to TGEU, which warned that the true
number may be higher due to under-reporting.
In Mexico, the world's second deadliest country for transgender
people, Maria Clemente Garcia Moreno, a 36-year-old federal lawmaker
with ruling party Morena, said she struggles to explain the
challenges facing trans people in Mexico's Congress, even to those
who understand and respect her own trans identity.
"This responsibility to translate the needs of the trans population
to be able to entrench it in the political framework to protect our
rights – it's complex," she said.
In Venezuela, the fight for trans rights often takes a back seat to
wider political, social and economic issues, said Tamara Adrian, a
transgender lawyer, researcher and federal lawmaker elected in 2015.
Students, for example, are often forced to hide their transitioned
identities, she said.
Otherwise, "they have to drop out of school or not appear or show
themselves as a trans person in places like universities,” she said.
To Hilton, who also leads committee investigating trans crimes in
Sao Paulo, physical violence is just the tip of the iceberg, adding
trans rights must be part of social policy.
"What is stolen from us is exactly the right to be recognized as
human beings. And when we are recognized, we must have all human
rights," she said.
(Reporting by Carolina Pulice; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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