Last night, Democratic candidate Christine Hallquist made history by cinching the nomination for governor in Vermont, making her the country’s first openly transgender gubernatorial candidate for a major party.
According to the New York Times, Hallquist beat out three other candidates in her race. Prior to her political career, Hallquist was the CEO of Vermont Electric Cooperative, a position during which she transitioned in 2015. Parts of her stump speech drew from her experiences as presenting as a woman for the first time, sharing the sexism she faced in the boardroom and on the street after she transitioned.
“I remember the first time after transitioning, a stranger walking by told me to smile—I’m like, ‘Who the heck are you to tell me to smile?’” Hallquist said. “What my transition has taught me is just how far we have to go.”
Hallquist will now run against Republican incumbent Phil Scott, who was found by Vermont public media organizations to be favorable with nearly half of Democrats in the progressive state. She reportedly voted for Scott in 2016 but is tying her own candidacy to the nationwide backlash following that year’s presidential election.
“Tonight, we made history,” Hallquist said at her election night party. “I am so proud to be the face of the Democrats tonight.”
Across Twitter, Hallquist’s supporters and allies of the transgender community have cheered on her gubernatorial nomination.
Congratulations to Christine Hallquist, the first transgender woman to be nominated by a major political party as a candidate for the governor’s office. An historic day. https://t.co/P2X2v2ZGDA
— George Takei (@GeorgeTakei) August 15, 2018
Congrats to #ChristineHallquist who is the winner of the Vermont Democratic primary for governor! Making her the first transgender person nominated for governor by a major party! #ImWithHer #GoChristine pic.twitter.com/pbYqfGLjXs
— Karamo (@Karamo) August 15, 2018
https://twitter.com/TheRickyDavila/status/1029551585440026624
https://twitter.com/CKintheUSA/status/1029580889653694464
https://twitter.com/pfpicardi/status/1029554791888969728
Many took Hallquist’s nomination as a sign of progress for the country, amid the Trump administration attempting to remove protections and freedoms for transgender students and service members, and several states across the country legislating the use of restrooms by transgender people.
We live in an era of striking contradiction. On the same day that the President of the United States called a black woman a dog, Christine Hallquist just became our nation’s first transgender woman to win a major party’s gubernatorial primary. A rollercoaster day for progress.
— Eugene Gu, MD (@eugenegu) August 15, 2018
While conservative states try to figure out what bathrooms transgenders should use, Vermont just nominated a trans woman to be its Democratic candidate for governor.
— Nate Lerner (@NathanLerner) August 15, 2018
Couldn’t be prouder of my home state. https://t.co/EgTZrrt87f
https://twitter.com/cmclymer/status/1029547447700340736
Some reminded those celebrating that Hallquist is the first openly transgender gubernatorial candidate for a major party. Other transgender folks may have been nominated before but weren’t out at the time and have yet to publicly come out.
https://twitter.com/dannynett/status/1029538773409968128
https://twitter.com/KarlFrisch/status/1029559908197224448
https://twitter.com/cmclymer/status/1029579442694365184
READ MORE:
- The dirty, complex, empowering history of the word ‘queer’
- Asexuality is real—and it has nothing to do with celibacy
- I’m a lesbian and a transgender woman—and those two aren’t mutually exclusive
On Twitter, Hallquist thanked her supporters and other Democratic 2018 candidates who she’ll be running alongside come November.
https://twitter.com/christineforvt/status/1029585281559814144
https://twitter.com/christineforvt/status/1029587863875317760
https://twitter.com/christineforvt/status/1029552506290851840