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You are at:Home » As Trump cuts, LGBTQ+ advocates turn to Canada
As Trump cuts, LGBTQ+ advocates turn to Canada
Lifestyle

As Trump cuts, LGBTQ+ advocates turn to Canada

25 April 20265 Mins Read

The former U.S. diplomat for LGBTQ+ rights urged Canada to boost its support for gender and sexual minorities abroad, as American cuts to foreign aid loomed large at a development and human rights conference this week in Ottawa.

At the same event, a South African government minister urged Canada to to hold the line against the efforts of the government of President Donald Trump to erode human rights globally.

Jessica Stern, appointed by former U.S. president Joe Biden as the U.S. special envoy on the human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and intersex people, spoke to The Canadian Press on the sidelines of the Ottawa Civic Space Summit.

She said there is a funding and advocacy gap left by Trump unravelling that work for LGBTQ+ people abroad.

“There is so much to be gained from Canada stepping into this vacuum and showing what it stands for,” said Stern. “There aren’t enough countries in the world that champion LGBTQI issues. The consequence is that Canada plays an outsized role.”

Stern’s call was not unique.

Steve Letsike, South Africa’s junior minister for women, youth and disabled people, said her country is trying to uphold human rights on the continent in the face of a co-ordinated global movement to erode those rights. She said Canada can help.

“We are seeing the anti-rights agenda, the anti-gender and also the anti-democratic (forces) rising. They are well organized and they are well resourced. They are learning the tactics and the strategies,” she said.

“It’s quite important that for those of us who are progressive, wanting to see a just world and a better world, (that) we strengthen the bolts, we tighten them clearly, to ensure that we don’t reverse the gains of democracy everywhere.”

Stern’s term ended in January 2025 when Trump took over and her work is being dismantled.

Her last task was completing assessments of LGBTQ+ rights in 193 countries as part of the U.S. State Department’s annual human rights report. When those reports came out months later, each chapter on gender and sexual minorities was missing.

Stern said she believes Washington also has erased internal government records on LGBTQ+ issues and she fears the Trump administration might share the names of activists with hostile governments — or even fund anti-gay conversion therapy.

“We’re seeing increased threats against LGBTQI people around the world, but we’re seeing decreased political leadership to defend them,” she said.

For years, evangelical groups have worked to co-ordinate a transnational movement to erode LGBTQ+ rights globally, outlaw certain sexual acts and restrict medical services for transgender people.

That movement has shifted in recent years to legal restrictions on speech and identity — such as a Uganda law that makes it illegal to identify as LGBTQ+ and makes certain sexual acts punishable by death.

The Trump administration dismantled the $40 billion U.S. Agency for International Development, the world’s largest aid organization, cutting millions of people with HIV off from access to lifesaving drugs. Administration officials also have voiced support for European far-right political parties that seek to restrict LGBTQ+ rights.

The Dignity Network, a coalition of Canadian groups that advocate for gender and sexual minorities abroad, has called on Ottawa to double its annual foreign aid envelope for LGBTQ+ people to $20 million.

“It would hardly be noticeable in terms of Canada’s bottom line, but it would position Canada as the leading government in the world,” said Stern, adding that Ottawa also could step up its advocacy against repressive laws.

“Canada can demonstrate leadership in this moment. It can be a beacon of hope, speaking out in multilateral spaces,” she said.

“The benefits will be enormous. Canada’s reputation will increase. LGBTQI people will thrive. Their families will be happy. Human rights standards will be upheld.”

The Liberal government under Prime Minister Mark Carney has cited human rights and the protection of civilians as one of the three pillars of its foreign policy. Carney has spoken in support of LGBTQ+ rights and stressed the importance of foreign aid, despite cutting back funding for global health programs such as HIV eradication.

The government has shifted the focus of its foreign aid policy from grants to collaborating with private capital, including by delivering aid through corporate projects that create jobs in developing countries.

During a panel discussion at the Civic Space Summit on Wednesday, both Stern and Letsike argued upholding LGBTQ+ rights helps to build more productive economies.

“Countering discrimination and violence is good business. Employees thrive when they know that they can show up for work safely,” Stern said.

She added that activists have a duty to convince voters that foreign aid and the defence of human rights prevent the global instability that undermines economies.

“In every country, we have to do a better job of explaining what’s at stake in foreign policy, so that your everyday citizen understands the relationship between the price of gasoline, the cost of eggs and the decisions our governments are making around the world,” she said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 24, 2026.

By Dylan Robertson | Copyright 2026, The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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