By Rachel Savage and Tom Haynes
LONDON, March 25 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) — Rachel Levine made history this year as the first openly transgender person confirmed in a top government job by the US Senate, with senators voting 52-48 to approve her appointment as assistant health secretary in Joe Biden's administration.
A professor of pediatrics and psychiatry at Penn State College of Medicine, Levine led Pennsylvania's response to the coronavirus pandemic as the state's top health official. As LGBTQ+ rights become more accepted, gay and trans politicians have gained greater prominence in recent years around the world — with Pauline Ngarmpring becoming Thailand's first trans candidate for prime minister last year.
Here are some other trans people who serve in high-level politics and governments globally.
1. Tamara Adrian, alternate deputy in Venezuela's National Assembly
Tamara Adrian speaks with supporters at the National Electoral Council (CNE) in Caracas, Venezuela, Dec. 9, 2015.
Tamara Adrian speaks with supporters at the National Electoral Council (CNE) in Caracas, Venezuela, Dec. 9, 2015.
Adrian, 67, a member of the small Popular Will party, became in 2015 the second trans woman to be elected to a national legislature in the Western Hemisphere.
A year before her election, she filed an appeal for recognition of her gender identity to the Supreme Court, but despite garnering more than 4,000 signatures, the case did not receive a response from the court.
As a result, Adrian was forced to campaign under the name on her birth certificate.
2. Petra De Sutter, Belgium's deputy prime minister
Belgian Vice-Prime Minister Petra De Sutter attends a media conference after a meeting of the National Security Committee regarding the COVID-19 situation and new relevant rules in Brussels, Feb 12, 2021.
Belgian Vice-Prime Minister Petra De Sutter attends a media conference after a meeting of the National Security Committee regarding the COVID-19 situation and new relevant rules in Brussels, Feb 12, 2021.
De Sutter, 57, an activist for progressive legislation regarding trans issues and medically assisted reproduction, was named in 2020 as one of seven deputy prime ministers in Belgium's new coalition government.
Elected as a member of the European Parliament (MEP) in 2019, De Sutter has chaired the European Parliament Intergroup on LGBTQ+ rights and co-chaired the MEPs Against Cancer Group.
De Sutter is also minister for public service and public enterprises, and LGBTQ+ rights groups welcomed her appointment as an important step forward for trans politicians in Europe.
3. Audrey Tang, Taiwan's digital minister
Taiwan's Digital Minister Audrey Tang speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in Taipei, Taiwan, Dec. 10, 2020.
Taiwan's Digital Minister Audrey Tang speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in Taipei, Taiwan, Dec. 10, 2020.
Tang, 39, became digital minister in 2016 and is the youngest person to hold a ministerial post in Taiwan.
Tang has said affirming her gender identity informed her politics by giving her a greater understanding of what it is to be vulnerable.
As a minister, she has pledged to give preferential access to government contracts to social enterprises.
4. Diane Marie Rodriguez Zambrano, alternate member of Ecuador's National Assembly
Tienda Queer Pichincha, una tienda LGBTI contra la violencia, la exclusión y la pobreza.
— DIANE RODRIGUEZ (@DianeRodriguezZ) March 19, 2021
Lea el reportaje 👉🏼 https://t.co/xDuk98NLJMpic.twitter.com/kTuZDzvy5B
Zambrano, 39, was the second-ever LGBTQ+ person to run for office in Ecuador. In 1998, protection from discrimination for gay men and lesbians was written into the constitution, but not extended to trans people.
Zambrano, who was also an activist for more than two decades, has said she still receives death threats for her work.
In the National Assembly, she helped set a legal precedent for how trans people are represented in the media, winning a discrimination case against the makers of a program that mocked trans people as "perverts."
"I've kept on fighting for LGBT rights because even if I don't get to benefit from those rights, other generations can live without discrimination or violence," she wrote on human rights website Frontline Defenders in 2015.
(Reporting by Rachel Savage @rachelmsavage and Tom Haynes; editing by Helen Popper. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org)