Why are we here?

As an organization we exist because of the way Trans Rights are under attack, and how much hatred is being directed towards our community. Here are some of the examples

Argentina

President Milei decreed limits on trans rights, including a ban on gender-affirming care for minors. In July, ruling-party lawmakers introduced a bill that, if passed, would dismantle the 2012 Gender Identity Law.

Chile

The Chamber of Deputies approved a congressional investigative commission’s report recommending the elimination of gender-affirming care for minors and sanctions on providers, echoing the UK Cass Review.

Georgia

Replaced “gender equality” with “equality between women and men” across laws, erasing gender identity protections.

Peru

Congress passed a “Bathroom Law” mandating restrooms by biological sex. A new bill seeks to criminalize gender-affirming care and social transition for minors.

Slovakia

The Slovak National Council passed the government’s proposed constitutional amendment recognizing only “man and woman,” banning same-sex adoption, and tightening sex education.

Spain

A far-right party filed a motion in Congress to repeal the 2023 Trans Law and launched repeal initiatives in at least five regional parliaments, aiming to erode protections through subnational channels.

United Kingdom

The Supreme Court ruled the Equality Act defines sex strictly as biological, weakening trans women’s access to single-sex spaces.

United States

Sweeping federal rollback under President Trump: executive orders erased gender identity from public policies, banned trans military service, and cut DEI. By September, 122 state bills restricting trans people’s rights had passed. Puerto Rico and Guam also enacted bans.

These facts are from Outright International’s tracking of attacks on Trans, Intersex and Nonbinary People’s human rights in 2025.