“I want to fight”: LGBTQ Texans ready for legislative session as GOP lawmakers target them in dozens of bills

“The community has a target squarely on our back,” says Anna Nguyen, a trans woman who is president of the Austin chapter of PFLAG. She stands at Waterloo Park near the state Capitol in Austin on Dec. 14.

Credit:
Evan L’Roy/The Texas Tribune

Gains and setbacks

Ricardo Martinez, CEO of Equality Texas, in his office in Austin on Dec. 15. Heading into the 2023 legislative session, he said he feels “energized and frankly really angry” about the continued fight to defend LGBTQ Texans’ humanity.

Credit:
Evan L’Roy/The Texas Tribune

Fights on several fronts

Marco Roberts, chair of the Texas Conservative Liberty Forum, at his home in Houston on Dec. 15. In 2018, he successfully led the effort to strike the condemnation of homosexuality as “a chosen behavior” from the Texas GOP’s platform, but language calling it “an abnormal lifestyle choice” returned last year.

Credit:
Joseph Bui for The Texas Tribune

Changing landscape

“I’m so happy being me”

Naomi Green, a member of the Texas Pride Impact Funds board of directors, at her home in Garland on July 29. She stressed that legislative attacks against LGBTQ people are coming on top of systemic challenges, such as poverty and homelessness, that many — particularly people of color and youth — are already facing.

Credit:
Shelby Tauber for The Texas Tribune