fbpx

Accessibility Bar

    • visibility_offDisable flashes

    • titleMark headings

    • settingsBackground Color

    • zoom_outZoom out

    • zoom_inZoom in

    • remove_circle_outlineDecrease font

    • add_circle_outlineIncrease font

    • spellcheckReadable font

    • brightness_highBright contrast

    • brightness_lowDark contrast

    • format_underlinedUnderline links

    • font_downloadMark links

    • Reset all optionscached

    • Accessibility Light
Skip to content
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin
  • Threads
Connect

Connect

Inspire. Empower. Change.

  • Home
  • Us
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Connect Brand Sponsors
    • Connect Community Foundation
    • Contact
    • Giveaways
    • Media & Press Resources
    • Podcasts
    • Prism Job Network
    • Privacy Policy
    • Subscribe to e-Newsletter
  • Read
    • Arts
    • Business
    • Community
    • Entertainment
    • Health
    • Life
    • News
      • News By Location
        • Middle Tenn
          • Murfreesboro
          • Nashville
        • East Tenn
        • West Tenn
    • People
  • Events
    • Calendar of Events
      • Submit an Event
    • Event Photos
    • Connect Community Health Fair
    • Bark in the Boro
    • HoliGAY Market
  • Business Directory
  • Community Resources
  • Virtual Issues
  • Shop
  • TPC Visitors Guide
  • Home
  • Community
  • People
  • Transgender
  • Rachel Levine on Facing Transphobia: ‘I am Really Able to Channel that Emotion Into My Work’
  • Transgender

Rachel Levine on Facing Transphobia: ‘I am Really Able to Channel that Emotion Into My Work’

“I’m really heartened by the knowledge that I won’t be the last and I’m sure there’ll be many more openly trans people who are nominated and then confirmed to these positions,” she said.
Editor Connect 4 years ago 3 min read

(PHOTO BY CAROLINE BREHMAN-POOL/GETTY IMAGES)

Levine, the first transgender person to ever be confirmed by the U.S. Senate to a Cabinet-level position, said she harnesses the transphobia she has experienced and uses it to help people.

By Barbara Rodriguez

Originally published by The 19th

Dr. Rachel Levine, the first transgender person to ever be confirmed by the U.S. Senate to a Cabinet-level position, said she channels the transphobia that she’s experienced into helping people.

In a conversation as part of The 19th Represents Virtual Summit, Levine, the assistant secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, said she tries to ignore discriminatory remarks as much as possible, instead focusing on responding to the pandemic and other public health issues.

“I am really able to channel that emotion into my work, and to sublimate those emotions, and it serves to motivate me more in terms of my work in public health, and my work in terms of health equity for our community,” she told The 19th’s Orion Rummler.

During Senate hearings before her historic confirmation earlier this year, U.S. Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky used transphobic language to question Levine about gender-affirming medical care for youth. At The 19th’s summit, Levine was asked if she expected to be singled out in this way during confirmation hearings and how often these experiences happen to her.

Levine said when she served as Pennsylvania’s physician general and then the state’s secretary of health, there was a lot of interest from the media about her being an out trans woman, but “it wasn’t as discriminatory.” But during the pandemic, when public health authorities have faced enormous pushback from the public on ways to mitigate COVID-19, she felt that the microscope on her was even more intense.  

“State and local public health officials, as well as federal public health officials, took a lot of scrutiny and pushback,” she said. “Mine was doubled by being an openly transgender woman and it was blatantly transphobic.”

Levine said when she was nominated to be assistant secretary, she did expect “to see a lot of pushback,” but she had been able to compartmentalize.

“I was able to do that and really stay focused on my mission and my vision in terms of public health,” she said.

Levine said part of her work under the Biden administration has been to ensure internal policy changes around health equity. She noted that through her work with others within the agency, the Office of Civil Rights has reinterpreted a section of the Affordable Care Act to clarify that someone can’t discriminate on the basis of sex, including sexual orientation and gender identity. She’s working to implement that interpretation across the agency.

Levine said it’s also important to advocate for LGBTQ+ people, particularly “vulnerable trans youth who are really under siege across the country” because of legislation in statehouses related to participation in youth sports or banning trans kids  from accessing gender-affirming medical care. 

“I think it’s really incumbent upon all of us to push back against those discriminatory laws,” she said. 

Levine was asked during The 19th’s conversation about how she feels about being the first out trans person to be confirmed by the Senate. She called it a “celebration,” noting the importance of making sure she’s not the last.

“I’m really heartened by the knowledge that I won’t be the last and I’m sure there’ll be many more openly trans people who are nominated and then confirmed to these positions,” she said. 

Share This Story:
Tags: equality lgbtq advocate lgbtq community transgender

Continue Reading

Previous: Tiny Houses. Big Futures.
Next: 2021 is Now the Deadliest Year on Record for Transgender People

Related Stories

Rita Hester’s murder inspired Transgender Day of Remembrance, an annual nationwide vigil that honors transgender murder victims. (COURTESY OF BRENDA WYNNE) Boston Police Recommit to Solving Murder of Rita Hester, Whose Death Inspired Transgender Day of Remembrance 7 min read
  • History
  • National
  • News
  • People
  • Transgender

Boston Police Recommit to Solving Murder of Rita Hester, Whose Death Inspired Transgender Day of Remembrance

Editor Connect 1 year ago
Trans author, activist, and community organizer Miss Major Griffin-Gracy smiles in her hotel room in Washington, D.C. in July 2023. (ORION RUMMLER FOR THE 19TH) Stonewall Veteran Miss Major on the Road, Urging Trans People to ‘Stand Up and Fight’ 9 min read
  • Community
  • People
  • Transgender

Stonewall Veteran Miss Major on the Road, Urging Trans People to ‘Stand Up and Fight’

Editor Connect 2 years ago
Copy of mm (44) Regulating Gender: The Ethical Dilemma of Government Influence on Trans Healthcare 3 min read
  • Community
  • Health
  • Transgender

Regulating Gender: The Ethical Dilemma of Government Influence on Trans Healthcare

Editor Connect 2 years ago
(AMERICAN GIRL; THE 19TH) ‘It’s Your Job to Be You’: American Girl Book Promotes Inclusion but Faces Right-Wing Backlash 9 min read
  • Books
  • Entertainment
  • People
  • Transgender
  • Youth

‘It’s Your Job to Be You’: American Girl Book Promotes Inclusion but Faces Right-Wing Backlash

Editor Connect 2 years ago
(LYDIA CHEBBINE FOR THE 19TH; GETTY IMAGES) The Survey Changing Accessibility to Data on Trans People 10 min read
  • National
  • News
  • People
  • Transgender

The Survey Changing Accessibility to Data on Trans People

Editor Connect 2 years ago
Becky Smith holds a transgender flag banner as Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds signs House File 2416, which bans transgender girls from sports that match their gender identity, at The Iowa State Capitol in March 2022. (NICK ROHLMAN/THE GAZETTE/AP) Republican Midterm Races Embracing Anti-Trans Rhetoric 7 min read
  • Health
  • National
  • News
  • Politics
  • Transgender

Republican Midterm Races Embracing Anti-Trans Rhetoric

Editor Connect 3 years ago

Search

Recent Posts

  • REVIEW: ‘MJ’ is a Thrilling Tribute to a Legend
  • Nashville Pride Unveils 2025 Festival Lineup: Kim Petras, 4 Non Blondes, Big Freedia & More
  • Tennessee Pride Chamber Announces 12th Annual Pride In Business Awards At Saint Elle 
  • Lips Speak Louder Bring the Noise — and the Heart — on ‘Consolation Prize’
  • Dining Out For Life® Returns To Nashville May 1

Connect is an inclusive community and media brand committed to providing information and access to resources for the LGBTQ+ community.

Connect is owned and published by S&L Companies, LLC. ©2020-2024 | All rights reserved.

  • News
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin
  • Threads
Copyright Connect© 2020-2024 | All rights reserved.