Kamala Harris Writes Trans TikTok Star: ‘You Continue to Break Barriers and Inspire Young People’

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Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP; Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images

Vice President Kamala Harris wrote a glowing letter to transgender TikTok star Dylan Mulvaney, according to an Instagram post by Mulvaney over the weekend.

Mulvaney shared the letter, dated March 13, 2023, in which Harris personally thanked him for his advocacy.

In the letter addressed to “Ms. Mulvaney,” Harris gushed:

Thank you for courageously sharing your story and your journey. I appreciate your continued advocacy for transgender equality, including during your visit to the White House last year.

Through your work as an activist and advocate for the LGBTQI+ community, you continue to break barriers and inspire young people across our Nation and around the world.

While we have made incredible progress from advancing marriage equality to enacting historic protections for transgender people the fight is far from over. Our Administration stands with the LGBTOI+ community in the ongoing struggle for true equity and equality and against hate and discrimination in all forms.

I am grateful for your dedication and courage, and I hope you continue to use your platform to spread positivity and create change. I look forward to seeing all that you will accomplish in the future.

 

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A post shared by Dylan Mulvaney (@dylanmulvaney)

The letter was apparently to congratulate Mulvaney, 26, on the one-year anniversary of his “Days of Girlhood” series, where he posts on TikTok about his transition to living as a woman. He recently underwent facial feminization surgery, according to reports.

Mulvaney, who previously identified as gay, has been lionized by Hollywood celebrities and the left.

Mulvaney interviewed President Joe Biden on day 221 of his “transition.” Biden told Mulvaney that restrictions on “gender-affirming health care” for children were “wrong.”

The president also told Mulvaney, according to British outlet The Times, “I don’t think any state or anybody should have the right to do that. As a moral question or as a legal question, I just think it’s wrong.”

“People fear what they don’t know,” he told the TikTok star.

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