All views and statements are solely endorsed by Gender Liberation Movement unless otherwise stated.

Please contact Eliel Cruz at eliel@elielcruz.com for all media inquiries.

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Thousands March & Dance In Front of Heritage Foundation Headquarters To Protest Project 2025

Thousands March & Dance In Front of Heritage Foundation Headquarters To Protest Project 2025 

“Thousands March & Dance In Front of Heritage Foundation Headquarters To Protest Project 2025”

September 16, 2024, Washington, D.C. — A group of at least two thousand protestors, predominantly LGBTQ+ people, rallied at Columbus Circle before kicking off a march that went by the Supreme Court and stopped in front of the headquarters of the Heritage Foundation, authors of Project 2025. In front of the Heritage Foundation, advocates took up  space with a joyous dance break  accompanied by a live DJ set by Griffin Maxwell Brooks. The organizers of the first-ever Gender Liberation March, championing medical access to abortion and gender affirming care, believed in bringing the opposite of Project 2025 and all who this fascist, rightwing political road map would harm, right to their doorsteps. 

“It was important for us to have that moment in front of the Heritage Foundation as a way to bring our queer joy right to their offices and show that no matter what they have planned, they will not win, they will not break us or our spirit,” said Eliel Cruz, a co-organizer of the march. “Our communities are resilient and we will always come together and fight back against these attacks to control our bodies and decisions about our healthcare. The right wing apparatus wants to speak about us without knowing or seeing us, and so Gender Liberation March was all about showing up and showing out in our full selves.”

The march was followed by a speaker program that included celebrities like Elliot Page, Julio Torres, and Geena Rocero, as well as a host of activist and community organizers including Gender Liberation Movement leader Raquel Willis, Monica Simpson of SisterSong, Renee Bracey Sherman of WeTestify, Bamby Salcedo of the Trans Latina Coalition, Oluchi Omeoga of the Black LGBTQIA+ Migrant Project,  and others working for gender justice and liberation. The rally’s line up was diverse and  intergenerational, elevating youth leaders and  families of trans youth, Palestinian and anti-Zionist Jewish voices, and elders like Miss Major, a Stonewall veteran and movement icon. The program included performances by Peppermint, Junior Mintt, and the House Miyake-Mugler.

The festival portion of the Gender Liberation March included tents that gave out diverse titles of books that could presumably be banned in various states across the country, a youth area with art building and a drag queen story hour, a memorial area honoring those lost to anti-trans and gender based violence, a get out the vote effort spearheaded by Advocates for Trans Equality, and also the Body Freedom for Every(Body) art exhibit.  

“Yesterday, the Gender Liberation Movement led thousands of people in the streets of Washington, D.C. to defend access to abortion, gender-affirming care, and the lives that we deserve,” said Raquel Willis, a co-organizer and leader of the Gender Liberation Movement + March. “The people are fed up with the far-right shift of the Supreme Court and the Heritage Foundation’s evil Project 2025 agenda  that conservatives are propping up ahead of the 2024 election. Speakers and performers from across various social justice movements made the connection that everyone’s bodily autonomy and self-determination is under attack. 

While this movement centers trans and nonbinary people, women of all experiences, and those who may need abortion or IVF access at some point in their lives, we are fighting for everyone’s right to make decisions about their own bodies and create the lives they deserve.We will not back down. We will claim our power. We will demand that our bodies, our genders, and our choices be respected. And we will continue to fight for a more expansive, empathetic collective future.” 

The Gender Liberation Movement intends to come back to Washington DC for the Supreme Court case hearing on LW. v. Skrmetti, a challenge to Tennessee's ban on medical treatment for trans youth,  which could have serious ramifications for the life-saving healthcare across the country, and implications to protections for trans adults. 

Photos are available for press placement. Organizers are available for interviews.

ABOUT: Gender Liberation Movement: is an emergent and innovative grassroots and volunteer-run national collective that builds direct action, media, and policy interventions centering bodily autonomy, self-determination, the pursuit of fulfillment, and collectivism in the face of gender-based sociopolitical threats.

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Elliot Page, Miss Major, Julio Torres, Geena Rocero, Peppermint, and More To Speak At Gender Liberation March

Elliot Page, Miss Major, Julio Torres, Geena Rocero, Peppermint, and More To Speak At Gender Liberation March  To Advocate For Abortion and Gender-Affirming Care

“Elliot Page, Miss Major, Julio Torres, Geena Rocero, Peppermint, and More To Speak At Gender Liberation March  To Advocate For Abortion and Gender-Affirming Care”

This Saturday, September 14th, LGBTQ celebrities, authors, activists and organizers will rally for abortion access and gender affirming care just blocks away from the Heritage Foundation Headquarters and Supreme Court. Among the featured speakers at the inaugural Gender Liberation March are actor, writer, and producer Elliot Page, Stonewall veteran Miss Major, director and actor Julio Torres, model and author Geena Rocero, actress Peppermint, and activist and author Raquel Willis, representing a powerful lineup of queer and trans voices. 

The Gender Liberation March seeks to unite the fights for abortion access and gender-affirming care under the shared principles of bodily autonomy and self-determination. The march and rally will highlight the dire state of legislative attacks against healthcare and  public education  including over 600 anti-LGBTQ bills introduced, with 45 already passed across 16 states. These attacks are coupled with a wave of restrictions on reproductive rights, leading to abortion bans in 41 states, 14 of which impose near-total bans with only narrow exceptions.

Crucially, this march and rally will also bring attention to a Supreme Court case, U.S v Skrmetti, on medical treatment for transgender youth, which is scheduled to be heard this winter. This case could have severe ramifications not just for trans youth, but for trans adults’ access to to life-saving care and protections in housing, employment, education, and more.

The rally will feature voices from diverse communities, including abortion storytellers, trans youth and their parents, immigrants, climate change activists, abolitionists, social justice organizers,  people of faith, and everyday people who receive or are in need of access to abortion and gender-affirming care. The current line-up includes the following organizers, activists, and storytellers: 

SPEAKERS: 

ELLIOT PAGE –  actor, writer & producer 

GEENA ROCERO – model & author

JULIO TORRES – director & actor

MISS MAJOR – stonewall veteran & activist

RAQUEL WILLIS – author and activist

RENEE BRACEY SHERMAN  – founder and co-executive director of We Testify 

NENE - HARRIET’S WILDEST DREAMS 

REV. JACQUII LEWIS – Middle Church

PIDGEON PAGONIS – intersex activist

NICK THIXTON SCOTT – We Testify Abortion Storyteller

HANZ DISMER – We Testify Abortion Storyteller

KAYDEN COLEMAN – We Testify Abortion Storyteller

ASH ORR – We Testify Abortion Storyteller

MONICA SIMPSON – Executive Director of SisterSong

LIZETTE + DANIEL – Parent + trans youth

STEPHEN CHUKUMBA – Parent of trans youth  

SOL JIMENEZ – Familia TQLM 

BAMBY SALCEDO – Executive Director or Trans Latina Coalition

HENNESSY GARCIA  – Climate Change Activist @ Seeding Sovereignty 

MADDY CLIFFORD – Media Strategist at Debt Collective 

MATT BERNSTEIN – Content  Creator

TONI-MICHELLE WILLIAMS – Executive Director of SnapCo

PERFORMANCES BY: 

PEPPERMINT 

JUNIOR MINTT 

HOUSE OF MIYAKE-MUGLER 

GRIFFIN MAXWELL BROOKS

GLM ORGANIZERS: 

ELIEL CRUZ

RAQUEL WILLIS

FRAN TIRADO

SARAH SOPHIE FLICKER

DEVIN-NORELLE 

ABOUT: Gender Liberation Movement: is an emergent and innovative grassroots and volunteer-run national collective that builds direct action, media, and policy interventions centering bodily autonomy, self-determination, the pursuit of fulfillment, and collectivism in the face of gender-based sociopolitical threats.

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Gender Liberation March Confronting Heritage Foundation, Supreme Court

GENDER LIBERATION MARCH To Confront Heritage Foundation, Supreme Court By Demanding  Access To Abortion, Gender Affirming Care

GENDER LIBERATION MARCH To Confront Heritage Foundation, Supreme Court

By Demanding  Access To Abortion, Gender Affirming Care

National leaders from reproductive justice and LGBTQIA+ movements to host the Gender Liberation March on September 14, 2024, at Columbus Circle in Washington, D.C.  The march will include protests outside of the Heritage Foundation headquarters and the Supreme Court. Gender Liberation March targets Heritage’s anti-freedom agenda, Project 2025, and brings attention to the upcoming SCOTUS case, U.S v Skrmetti, on medical treatment for transgender youth, which is scheduled to be heard this winter. Gender Liberation March will be led by a collective of gender justice based organizations and their organizers, such as activists part of the Brooklyn Liberation March and Women’s March, in a historic demonstration of feminist and trans solidarity.

This year has witnessed a record surge in anti-trans bills—over 600 introduced, with 45 passed in 16 states, accompanied by widespread attacks on reproductive justice. 41 states have enforced abortion bans, 14 of which are total bans with only limited exceptions. The Gender Liberation Movement will be marching to remind the far-right Supreme Court Justices of what’s at stake for our community and trans people nationwide. The extremist rhetoric promoted by conservative legislators is harming lives across the country, and regardless of the outcome of this November's Presidential election, these attacks on our community will persist.

The march and rally will platform abortion storytellers, trans youth and their parents, immigrants, climate change activists, abolitionists, social justice organizers,  people of faith, and everyday people who receive or are in need of access to abortion and gender-affirming care. The mobilization will illuminate how Project 2025 will attack everyone's bodily autonomy and self-determination.

The Heritage Foundation promotes extremist anti-LGBTQ, anti-bodily autonomy and anti-gender policies and rhetoric heavily funded by dark money donations. Its 900-page policy manifesto Project 2025 is a federal policy agenda that serves as a blueprint for former President Donald Trump and his running mate JD Vance if they were to win the 2024  presidential election and take the White House. In its multifarious initiative, Project 2025 seeks to interject extremist ideology to prevent people’s right to determine their own livelihood. It aims to limit access to our collective freedom, with explicit calls gutting abortion access, mass deportations of immigrants, barring trans rights, and reshaping the structure of our government. 

Additionally, the SCOTUS case this winter has the potential to ban access to life-saving medical care for hundreds of thousands of trans youth. In March of last year, Tennessee’s  Republican Governor, Bill Lee, signed Senate Bill 1 into law, which went into effect in July. SB 1 bans hormone therapy for trans youth, with government officials who support the ban claiming that trans healthcare is not only harmful and unnecessary but that trans people at large are not protected under the Constitution. The Supreme Court has agreed to a hearing on behalf of Tennessee plaintiffs represented by the ACLU, ACLU of TN, Lambda Legal, and Akin Gump. This case could have severe ramifications for trans adults' access to life-saving care as well as protections to housing, employment, education, and more.


We are marching to the Heritage Foundation and SCOTUS to make OUR message clear. In a nation that brands itself as the “land of the free,” our defense of our freedoms is non-negotiable. These are our bodies, our genders, our choices, and our futures. We demand Gender Liberation for all.  



Organizers are available for interviews. 


ABOUT: Gender Liberation Movement: is an emergent and innovative grassroots and volunteer-run national collective that builds direct action, media, and policy interventions centering bodily autonomy, self-determination, the pursuit of fulfillment, and collectivism in the face of gender-based sociopolitical threats.

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On the DNC & Palestine

“Statement from Gender Liberation Movement on the 2024 Democratic National Convention and Palestinian Liberation”

This week as thousands gather for the Democratic National Convention in Chicago to nominate Kamala Harris as an official presidential nominee, Gender Liberation Movement expresses solidarity with the Uncommitted Movement and organizers’ efforts to demand dignity for Palestinian lives.

There is no gender liberation without Palestinian liberation. Period. The ongoing genocide in Gaza – being carried out by Israel and aided by the United States – has taken nearly 40,000 lives, including those of over 15,000 children. In a recent Lancet article, public health experts have suggested a death toll over 180,000, which accounts to victims  left under rubble and failed by degraded healthcare infrastructures.

As we mourn the Palestinian lives lost and demand safety and security for those still in the eye of this storm, let’s consider the role of gender in this genocide. Since October 7, there has been a 300 percent increase in miscarriages while nearly 50,000 pregnant people lack essential prenatal and post-natal care like access to anesthesia during childbirth. Additionally, there have been devastating shortages of food, clean water, and medical supplies. And Israel’s relentless bombing has completely destroyed two out of three homes.

At the same time, governments and organizations have continued to use pinkwashing, a strategy to weaponize the LGBTQIA+ struggle to deflect and justify human rights abuses and war crimes. They have made it a part of their mission to erase queer and trans Palestinians.  In this regard, we urge LGBTQIA+ leaders and organizations to demand an end to this and all other genocides plaguing the queer diaspora. 

Gender Liberation Movement demands that no one gets left behind, including our Palestinian siblings. We all deserve bodily autonomy and self-determination. Our collective joins the demands for a permanent ceasefire, an immediate embargo of U.S. arms to Israel, and an end to the decades-long occupation and apartheid. 

Let us say clearly: NOBODY IS FREE UNTIL EVERYONE IS FREE. 

We urge you to sign the Uncommitted National Movement’s petition demanding that Vce President Kamala Harris and Democratic leadership agree to #NotAnotherBomb at bit.ly/nabpetition.

If you are a warrior for gender liberation, join the Gender Liberation Movement. We believe in a world where everyone has the power to defy and transcend the gendered expectations that harm and limit us all. We will host the first-ever Gender Liberation March in Washington, D.C., on Saturday, September 14, 2024. Sign-up today.

BACKGROUND:

Founded in the spring of 2023, GLM was birthed by organizers from the successful Brooklyn Liberation Marches of 2020 and 2021 and the Women’s Marches that began in the wake of the 2016 elections. Our core organizers found an ineffective divide between feminist and reproductive justice organizing (primarily centering abortion access) in the aftermath of the Dobbs decision, which overturned Roe v. Wade, and queer and trans organizing (primarily defending the community against the years-long ramp-up restrictions for trans students playing sports, access to gender-affirming care, and LGBTQ+ curricula and book bans).

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On Imane Khelif

“Statement from Gender Liberation Movement on Imane Khelif and the Olympics”

Yesterday, Imane Khelif, a boxer from Algeria, won her first fight at the 2024 Paris Olympics. She defeated Angela Carini of Italy after Carini quit the match, refused to shake her opponent’s hand, and fell to the floor in tears. The striking images of this scene have since gone viral, stoking a toxic discourse on Khelif’s athletic prowess and gender identity.

Khelif has always competed as a woman, including at the Tokyo Olympics, and has never identified as intersex or transgender. She and another boxer, Lin Yu-ting of Taiwan, previously faced scrutiny after failing to meet gender eligibility tests at last year's Women’s World Boxing Championships in New Delhi. The test results were said to be due to Khelif and Yu-ting carrying male chromosomes, which has been used to question their identities. 

Throughout the modern history of sports, there have been brutal attacks on women on the margins who don’t fit the complex and expansive boxes of gender and sex. Women and intersex, queer,  transgender, and nonbinary folks, especially of color and  African descent, have been especially targeted by smear campaigns like the one right-wing leaders are currently stoking.

Unsurprisingly, global right-wing figures, including  Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, United States presidential candidate Donald Trump, X owner Elon Musk, and author J.K.Rowling, have weighed in to pile on 25-year-old Khelif. As usual, they are using her experience as fodder for their disingenuous crusade to police women’s bodies.

The discourse on Khelif’s experience invokes the discrimination that other women athletes of color, like South African sprinter Caster Semenya and tennis icon Serena Williams, have endured throughout their careers. But it also shows us that the conservative attacks on trans athletes in the U.S. are not isolated. 

We have also seen high-profile Black women across industries misgendered and dehumanized. From former First Lady Michelle Obama to singer Ciara to basketballer Britney Griner, the global public has been ravenous in its attempts to diminish their identities and influence.

The attacks on Algerian boxer Imane Khelif remind us of the global agenda to limit bodily autonomy, self-determination, and gender liberation. It shows us that there must be an intentional and strong alliance between cis and trans women, intersex and nonbinary folks, athletes of color, and all those who believe in equal access and opportunity.  All athletes deserve to pursue their passion without the risk of discrimination. 

If you are a warrior for gender liberation, join the Gender Liberation Movement. We believe in a world where everyone has the power to defy and transcend the gendered expectations that harm and limit us all. We will host the first-ever Gender Liberation March in Washington, D.C., on Saturday, September 14, 2024. Sign-up today.

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GLM IS HERE

“Gender Liberation March” Announced for September 14th In Washington DC, 

Championing Abortion & Gender Affirming Care

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 22, 2024 – Organizers of the Brooklyn Liberation March, Women’s March, and Trans Prom announced a Gender Liberation March scheduled for September 14th in Washington D.C., championing access to abortion, gender-affirming care, and for a representative democracy that fights for our collective future.

With the upcoming SCOTUS case on gender-affirming care, the continued total bans on abortion, and the looming threat of Project 2025, we are building toward a mass mobilization before the 2024 elections that centers bodily autonomy, self-determination, collectivism, and the pursuit of fulfillment. Early organizational partners for the march and rally include We Testify, Familia: TQLM, Trans Latina Coalition, Solutions Not Punishment Collaborative, Gen Z for Change, and media partners include @ Feminist & @ LGBT accounts. 

“With continued threats on civil rights, bodily autonomy, and self-determination, it is beyond time for all warriors for abortion access, gender-affirming care, reproductive justice, and LGBTQ+ rights to join forces. As a collective, and through this mass mobilization, we say no more. We believe in a version of this country and world where we can all make decisions for our bodies, our health, and our futures,” Activist and author Raquel Willis says. “The dawn of a new political era is on the horizon, and we are marching toward it. Let it be one we can be proud of and that gets us closer to a collective vision of liberation.”

The Gender Liberation Movement (GLM)  is an emergent and innovative grassroots and volunteer-run national collective that builds direct action, media, and policy interventions centering bodily autonomy, self-determination, the pursuit of fulfillment, and collectivism in the face of gender-based sociopolitical threats. At the Gender Liberation March, we’re building a coalition of organizers and artists as a response to fascist, anti-freedom Project 2025 which presents a future for all free from gender expectations that harm and with a vision that includes housing, healthcare, education, an equitable economy, climate action, and all things needed for every person to live a long and fulfilling life. 

Organizers are available for interviews. 

BACKGROUND:

Founded in the spring of 2023, GLM was birthed by organizers from the successful Brooklyn Liberation Marches of 2020 and 2021 and the Women’s Marches that began in the wake of the 2016 elections. Our core organizers found an ineffective divide between feminist and reproductive justice organizing (primarily centering abortion access) in the aftermath of the Dobbs decision, which overturned Roe v. Wade, and queer and trans organizing (primarily defending the community against the years-long ramp-up restrictions for trans students playing sports, access to gender-affirming care, and LGBTQ+ curricula and book bans).

CORE ORGANIZERS

RAQUEL WILLIS (she/her) is an award-winning author, activist, and media strategist dedicated to Black transgender liberation. She has held groundbreaking posts, including director of communications for Ms. Foundation for Women, executive editor of Out Magazine, and national organizer for Transgender Law Center. She co-founded Transgender Week of Visibility and Action and is currently an executive producer for iHeartMedia's Outspoken, and the president of the Solutions Not Punishments Collaborative's executive board. She has been named to the Root 100 twice, is a Stonewall Community Foundation Visionary honoree, an ADCOLOR honoree, and served as a 2024 NYC Pride Grand Marshall. She is also the author of The Risk It Takes to Bloom: On Life and Liberation.

SARAH-SOPHIE FLICKER (she/her) is a culture organizer, creative director & artist. She has over 25 years of experience working at the intersections of culture and politics with an emphasis on abortion rights and gender justice. She is also an aerialist and mom to three. She is a founder of the Women's March On Washington, The Resistance Revival Chorus, The Citizens Band, The Meteor, Joy To The Polls, and Firebrand. She is a co-author of the Women's March official book, Together We Rise, which was released in January 2018 and was a New York Times bestseller. She is a Pop Culture Collaborative Becoming America Fellow and a Gender Justice Fellow. She was named Glamour's Woman of the Year in 2017.

ELIEL CRUZ (he/they) is an award-winning, history-making organizer and advocacy communications expert. He is a co-organizer for the Brooklyn Liberation March: An Action for Black Trans Lives, which drew an estimated 20,000 people in June 2020 and again in 2021, an action for trans youth that brought out thousands. He was recognized in Out Magazine's #Out100 list for both his work as the former Director of Communication at the New York City Anti-Violence Project (AVP), and for his pivotal activism in pursuing justice for Layleen Polanco, a 27-year-old Afro-Latinx trans woman who died in solitary confinement on Rikers Island in June 2019. He's spoken at universities and conferences nationwide and has written for numerous publications. He is represented by Ayesha Pande Literary.

FRAN TIRADO (she/they) is a writer, podcaster, and filmmaker in Brooklyn. After leading editorial strategy for magazines like Out and HelloMr., and ad agencies like Chandelier Creative, most recently, Fran was at Netflix managing LGBTO+ audience engagement strategy and creating shows like "I Like to Watch." She's also created and hosted four queer podcasts, currently Like a Virgin with Rose Dommu. Fran has been working in queer media for almost thirteen years. As an organizer, Fran's work has won her the Stonewall Vision Award, Brooklyn's 30 Under 30, and MTV's inaugural Logo Legends honor. She's spoken at institutions like Yale, Juilliard, Harvard, Northwestern, and NYU and has worked with brands like Google, HBO, Instagram, and Nike. The New York Times called Fran a "Queer Champion."

DEVIN-NORELLE (ze/zim/zis) is a professional model, award-winning trans advocate, media figure, and opinion writer, with published work in GQ, Teen Vogue, Allure, Them., and Out Magazine, among others. From gracing the NYFW runway for shows like Chromat and the Bella + Canvas Summer campaign to hosting PBS's show Brave Spaces, there's no limit to what ze can achieve. As a former member of NYC Pride's Community Council, ze has helped guide Heritage of Pride towards reducing police presence for future Pride marches and events and currently sits on the board of the Stonewall Community Foundation. Devin-Norelle currently facilitates D&I Gender Expansive training across multiple platforms, educating others about the history of trans individuals in various pre-colonial countries.

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