A pride flag. Photo by Fellipe Ditadi | Unsplash+

Ohio and Washington tied fourth in the nation for having the most anti-LGBTQ+ incidents last year, with 50, according to a new report from GLAAD, a LGBTQ+ advocacy organization. 

GLAAD’s Anti-LGBTQ Extremism Reporting Tracker (ALERT) documented 1,042 anti-LGBTQ incidents in 2025 nationwide from Jan. 1, 2025 to Dec. 31. About half of the incidents targeted transgender and gender non-conforming people and about a quarter of the incidents happened in June.

“We must join together in a united call against the violence and harassment that too many LGBTQ Americans face,” GLAAD President & CEO Sarah Kate Ellis said in a statement. “Instead of growing divides that lead to this violence, politicians should recognize that all Americans deserve freedom, fairness, and safety.”

ALERT tracked these incidents through self-reports, media, social media posts and data sharing from partner organizations and law enforcement. 

California had the most incidents with 198, followed by New Hampshire with 72, and Texas with 66. 

Breaking down Ohio’s incidents 

Several incidents in Ohio involved the Dayton Street Preachers hosting anti-LGBTQ+ protests at universities, events, street corners, concerts, Pride events, or outside the Great American Ballpark in Cincinnati. 

Many of the incidents involved White Lives Matter and Continental Resistance placing anti-LGBTQ+ stickers in cities last summer. 

In September, a man threatened on social media to kill a transgender councilwoman in St. Marys in western Ohio. The FBI investigated the threat and arrested the man. 

In another incident, a man set fires to many Pride flags hanging in front of Cincinnati homes in July. 

In April, a man checked out 100 books on LGBTQ+, Jewish, and Black history from a library in Beachwood and set them all on fire

Ohio had 19 incidents involving propaganda distribution, 11 involved a protest, five were vandalism or property damage, three were arsons, two were a bomb or shooting threat, and two were verbal or written threat. 

Cincinnati had seven incidents, and Columbus and Dayton both had five incidents.

Ohio anti-LGBTQ bills

The ACLU is currently tracking 366 anti-LGBTQ bills in the United States. Republican lawmakers in Ohio have introduced bills targeting the LGBTQ+ community. 

Ohio House Bill 190 would prohibit school employees from calling a student a name that is not listed on their birth certificate and would ban them from using pronouns that do not align with their biological sex. 

Ohio Republican state Reps. Johnathan Newman and Josh Williams introduced the bill, which has only had one committee hearing. 

Ohio House Bill 172 would not allow minors age 14 and older to receive mental health services without parental consent. Currently, mental health professionals are permitted to provide outpatient mental health services to minors 14 and older on a temporary basis without parental consent. 

Newman introduced this bill as well, which has has had three committee hearings so far — meaning it could be up for a committee vote soon. 

Ohio House Bill 249 would ban drag performers from performing anywhere that isn’t considered a designated adult entertainment facility. Ohio states Reps. Angie King, R-Celina, and Williams introduced this bill, which has had two hearings so far.

Ohio Equal Rights has started collecting signatures to get two amendments on the November ballot — including one that would get rid of the ban on same-sex marriage in the Ohio Constitution. 

Ohio’s constitution includes a ban on same-sex marriage after 61.7% of Ohio voters approved an amendment in 2004 that says marriage is only between one man and one woman. The United States Supreme Court legalized gay marriage in 2015 through the Obergefell case originating out of Ohio. 

This story originally appeared at ohiocapitaljournal.com.

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