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Address inequalities to end AIDS by 2030, UN chief says in new report – UN News

Despite action and progress against HIV in some places and population groups, HIV epidemics continue to expand in others, the report revealed. It was launched just weeks ahead of a major UN General Assembly meeting on AIDS. 

“It is imperative to break out of an increasingly costly and unsustainable cycle of achieving some progress against HIV but ultimately not enough to bring about an end to the pandemic”, the Secretary-General said in the report. 

“Inequalities are the key reason why the 2020 global targets were missed. By ending inequalities, transformative outcomes can be achieved for people living with HIV, communities and countries.” 

New infections triple 

In 2016, the UN General Assembly set the target of having fewer than 500,000 new HIV infections by 2020.  Last year, the figure was 1.7 million, or three times the target.  Similarly, the 690,000 AIDS-related deaths in 2019 far exceed the goal of less than 500,000 deaths a year. 

“Ending AIDS as a public health threat by 2030 is still within reach—many countries are showing that rapid progress against HIV is possible when evidence-informed strategies and human rights-based approaches are adopted”, said Winnie Byanyima, Executive Director of UNAIDS, which is leading the global fight against the disease.  

“But it requires bold political leadership to challenge and address the social injustices and inequalities that continue to make certain groups of people and entire communities highly vulnerable to HIV infection.” 

Address inequalities, prioritize prevention 

The report underscores that addressing social and structural factors that perpetuate inequalities is key.  

For example, gender inequality, anchored by harmful gender norms, restricts women’s use of HIV services, and sexual and reproductive health services. This can impact decision-making, including the ability to refuse unwanted sex or to negotiate safer sex. 

Vulnerable, marginalized and criminalized communities also remain at higher risk of HIV infection because they are not receiving essential information and HIV services, whether for prevention or care.  These groups include gay men and other men who have sex with men, people who use drugs, sex workers, transgender people, prisoners and migrants. 

Get back on track 

The 10 recommendations for putting the world back on the path to ending AIDS cover issues such as addressing inequalities and reaching all people at risk of HIV infection.   

The goal is to keep new infections to under 370,000, and AIDS-related deaths to under 250,000, by 2025. 

They call for closing gaps in HIV testing and treatment, and putting “gender equality and the human rights of women and girls in all their diversity” at the centre of efforts to mitigate risk. 

Other steps call for prioritizing HIV prevention to ensure that 95 per cent of people at risk have prevention options by 2025, and eliminating new infections among children. 

Lessons in preparedness 

The report also outlined how the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed social inequalities and health system weaknesses.  

The Secretary-General said the world should leverage experience from responding to the AIDS crisis to strengthen health systems and improve pandemic preparedness.  

He also appealed for more global solidarity, including to increase annual HIV investments in low and middle-income countries to $29 billion by 2025.

‘Wizards of Waverly Place’: Hayley Kiyoko Calls Character Stevie Gay – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

Selena Gomez and Hayley Kiyoko have both come a long way since their days on Disney Channel’s Wizards of Waverly Place. The two actors both went on to pursue careers in acting and singing after the Disney show. Kiyoko recently reacted to clips of her character Stevie Nichols on Wizards of Waverly Place and her response is priceless. She joked in a TikTok that Stevie was gay.

Hayley Kiyoko and Selena Gomez with their arms around each other on 'Wizards of Waverly Place'

Hayley Kiyoko and Selena Gomez in ‘Wizards of Waverly Place’ | Adam Rose/Disney Channel via Getty Images

Hayley Kiyoko played Stevie Nichols in ‘Wizards of Waverly Place’

Kiyoko appeared in four episodes of Wizards of Waverly Place in 2010, portraying trouble-maker wizard Stevie. She met Gomez’s character Alex Russo while in detention. Early on, Alex was unaware that Stevie was also a wizard. The pair shared a connection over causing mayhem and their dark sense of humor.

Eventually, Alex found out that Stevie was also a wizard. Stevie had a master plan to eliminate the device that took away wizards’ powers that didn’t win the family wizard competition, but Alex wasn’t on board for that. Later on, it was revealed that Stevie lives alone with her dogs.

Post Disney Channel fame, Hayley Kiyoko has had a successful career

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A year after Kiyoko’s Wizards of Waverly Place role, she acted in the Disney Channel Original Movie, Lemonade Mouth. The actor also appeared in one episode of The Vampire Diaries in 2013. She had a recurring role as Gabi on The Fosters the following year.

She released her debut album, Expectations, in March 2018. Kiyoko is known as a proud member of the LGBT+ community and is jokingly referred to as “Lesbian Jesus” online by her fans.

Kiyoko put out her newest single, “Found My Friends,” on April 30. But before that, she joked that her Disney Channel character Stevie was gay in a TikTok.

Hayley Kiyoko joked about her ‘Wizards’ character in a TikTok

For some Wizards of Waverly Place fans, they wanted to see Alex and Stevie end up together as a couple. They had a clear chemistry that was apparent to many, who dubbed the duo “Stalex.” Kiyoko posted a TikTok of herself watching clips of Stevie and Alex on the show on April 21.

“What was I thinking,” she jokingly yelled at the clips. “You ain’t straight.” Kiyoko asserted: ” You gay, Stevie. You didn’t fool ’em.”

She also captioned the TikTok: “For the Stalex stans.”

Her video received plenty of love. It has more than 10 million views. More than three million people “liked” the clip and many responded favorably to the video.

One fan commented: “We all went, ‘Ah yeah, she apart of the team.’”

Another person wrote: “They would have been such a better couple.”

Someone else stated: “No literally I don’t understand how anyone thought y’all were just besties.”

A different fan expressed: “There was nothing straight about this.”

“Trust me we knew,” another TikToker weighed in.

And finally, another fan said: “Disney robbed us of this power couple.”

Kiyoko replied to several of the comments with crying-laughing emojis.

From a Folk Singer Coming Out as Trans to Kehlani Coming Out as Lesbian, This Week in LGBT Entertainment – SouthFloridaGayNews.com

This week read about Ezra Furman coming out as a transgender woman, the Pop/R&B icon confirming she is lesbian via social media, and “Heartstopper” getting a live-action series on Netflix.

Ezra Furman Comes Out as Trans

Ezra Furman, the 34-year-old folk singer has revealed that she is a transgender woman.

Furman posted a long heartfelt post on Instagram, describing it to be something she wanted to do for two-plus years.

Furman wrote, “I have often described myself as non-binary, which maybe is still true … But I’ve come to terms with the fact that I am a woman, and yes for me it’s complex, but it’s complex to be any sort of woman. I am very proud to be a trans woman and to have come to know it and be able to say it. This has not been an easy journey.”

Furman also took this chance to not only describe her feelings and her hesitation of coming out as a transgender woman, but she also described her feeling as a transgender mom as well.

Out reported that she explained there were “zero examples” of trans mothers raising their children for Furman to consult or emulate.

Kehlani Comes Out!

Kehlani

Kehlani. Photo via Facebook.

Famous Pop/R&B icon Kehlani, has just come out to the public, confirming that she is lesbian.

She casually pointed out their sexuality in an Instagram live video, but confirmed it via Tik Tok.

Kehlani has amassed lots of success as a queer artist such as Grammy nominations and appearances on Billboard’s Top 200 list, according to The Advocate.

Kehlani, who goes by she/they pronouns, gives insight as to how people’s experiences differ when they come out.

“I don’t walk down the street and people look at me and go, ‘Oh, I bet she’s queer.’ Or ‘I bet that she’s into women’ or anything like that … I was able to make being 100 percent myself because of the way they present and the biases and the phobias of the American public and the world … I’ve been lucky, super lucky,” she told The Advocate.

Kehlani’s seen lots of success as a queer woman. She is one of the few people in the LGBT community to have reached such a mainstream audience and redefine the industry.

As an artist she is a 24/7 factory of ideas and collaborations, she’s worked with the industry’s biggest names as Advocate states, such as Lesbian Jesus herself (Hayley Kiyoko), Musiq Soulchild, Jhené Aiko, Cardi B, Ty Dolla $ign, Justin Bieber, Zayn Malik, and James Blake.

The singer has a 2-year-old daughter with guitarist Javaughn Young-White which, according to Pride, they plan on raising in a progressive loving environment.

‘Heartstopper’ Live-Action Series to Appear on Netflix

Show

“Heartstopper.” Credit: Alice Oseman.

Fans of “Heartstopper,” get ready for a live-action adaptation of the beloved graphic novel.

The cast has been revealed for the main characters, Out reported that newcomer Joe Locke will join Kit Connor (“His Dark Materials”) in the roles of Charlie Spring and Nick Nelson. The series will appear on Netflix, even getting praises from Alexi Wheeler, director of Kids & Family Content at Netflix.

Even though stories like these are starting to become more abundant, we still don’t see as much of them as we want to.

According to Gay Times, “The whole thing is just so poignant and beautifully crafted. To tell a love story between two boys who meet at school involves such vision and creative focus, Alice [the author] has absolutely delivered this here,” Wheeler said.

The series is set to be directed by Euros Lyn, best known for her work in “Sherlock” and “Doctor Who.”

The official release date has not been set, but recent speculation suggests that it will come out at the beginning of 2022.

World Chechnya offers protection to gay men at risk of honour killings its own police encouraged – PinkNews

Salek Magamadov and Ismail Isayev have been detained on terrorism charges in Chechnya, but activists say it’s because they are gay. (Russian LGBT Network)

Chechnya has offered state protection to two gay men at risk of honour killings by their families after the state forcefully returned them home.

Salek Magamadov and Ismail Isayev, who has just turned 18, fled to Russia in June, 2020, with the help of the Russian LGBT Network, after they were tortured in Chechnya, the site of deadly so-called gay purges, for running an opposition Telegram channel.

They were relocated by the group to an apartment in the Russian city of Nizhny Novogorod near Moscow, but were forcefully returned to their hometown of Gudermes, Chechnya, in February, 2021, by both Russian and Chechen police.

After being transported back to Chechnya by the authorities, the two men were held in a detention centre, without access to lawyers, and charged with terrorism and aiding an illegal armed group.

According to Russian news site Meduza, the network that has been working to help Magamadov and Isayev said the men’s friends and families had actually been encouraged by Chechen police to perform “honour killings”.

But in a strange turn of events, the gay men have now been offered state protection in Chechnya, to prevent the “honour killings” from happening.

According to the Moscow Times, the Russian LGBT Network successfully petitioned the country’s investigative committee to protect the men, although there has been no clarification on what this protection will look like.

Alexander Nemov, the lawyer who is fighting their case, said: “The state has recognized that Magamadov and Isayev are under threat of danger”.

Last month, their lawyers were finally allowed access to the two men, and they were able to give accounts of what happened, describing the “physical and psychological violence” they suffered at the hands of police, and how they were forced to sign fabricated confessions to the terrorism charges.

Magamadov said: “The police officer took me to another office, grabbed my chest, hit me twice against the wall, I had to answer that I would sign an agreement with the appointed lawyer.

“Then the police officer explained to me: ‘If you try to resist us, then I am ready to kill you, even in the courtroom. I’m not a man if I won’t kill you.’”

Nemov expressed his determination fight for the two men, and said in a statement: “This case is 100 per cent political, there is nothing at all, no evidence.

“And yes, we understand that this is Chechnya and Chechen ‘special’ justice.

“But let’s be honest – Chechen law enforcement officers have never faced such pressure before.”

Chechnya offers protection to gay men at risk of honour killings its own police encouraged – Yahoo News UK

Chechnya has offered state protection to two gay men at risk of honour killings by their families after the state forcefully returned them home.

Salek Magamadov and Ismail Isayev, who has just turned 18, fled to Russia in June, 2020, with the help of the Russian LGBT Network, after they were tortured in Chechnya, the site of deadly so-called gay purges, for running an opposition Telegram channel.

They were relocated by the group to an apartment in the Russian city of Nizhny Novogorod near Moscow, but were forcefully returned to their hometown of Gudermes, Chechnya, in February, 2021, by both Russian and Chechen police.

After being transported back to Chechnya by the authorities, the two men were held in a detention centre, without access to lawyers, and charged with terrorism and aiding an illegal armed group.

According to Russian news site Meduza, the network that has been working to help Magamadov and Isayev said the men’s friends and families had actually been encouraged by Chechen police to perform “honour killings”.

But in a strange turn of events, the gay men have now been offered state protection in Chechnya, to prevent the “honour killings” from happening.

According to the Moscow Times, the Russian LGBT Network successfully petitioned the country’s investigative committee to protect the men, although there has been no clarification on what this protection will look like.

Alexander Nemov, the lawyer who is fighting their case, said: “The state has recognized that Magamadov and Isayev are under threat of danger”.

Last month, their lawyers were finally allowed access to the two men, and they were able to give accounts of what happened, describing the “physical and psychological violence” they suffered at the hands of police, and how they were forced to sign fabricated confessions to the terrorism charges.

Magamadov said: “The police officer took me to another office, grabbed my chest, hit me twice against the wall, I had to answer that I would sign an agreement with the appointed lawyer.

“Then the police officer explained to me: ‘If you try to resist us, then I am ready to kill you, even in the courtroom. I’m not a man if I won’t kill you.’”

Nemov expressed his determination fight for the two men, and said in a statement: “This case is 100 per cent political, there is nothing at all, no evidence.

“And yes, we understand that this is Chechnya and Chechen ‘special’ justice.

“But let’s be honest – Chechen law enforcement officers have never faced such pressure before.”

Chechnya offers protection to gay men at risk of honour killings its own police encouraged – Yahoo Eurosport UK

Chechnya has offered state protection to two gay men at risk of honour killings by their families after the state forcefully returned them home.

Salek Magamadov and Ismail Isayev, who has just turned 18, fled to Russia in June, 2020, with the help of the Russian LGBT Network, after they were tortured in Chechnya, the site of deadly so-called gay purges, for running an opposition Telegram channel.

They were relocated by the group to an apartment in the Russian city of Nizhny Novogorod near Moscow, but were forcefully returned to their hometown of Gudermes, Chechnya, in February, 2021, by both Russian and Chechen police.

After being transported back to Chechnya by the authorities, the two men were held in a detention centre, without access to lawyers, and charged with terrorism and aiding an illegal armed group.

According to Russian news site Meduza, the network that has been working to help Magamadov and Isayev said the men’s friends and families had actually been encouraged by Chechen police to perform “honour killings”.

But in a strange turn of events, the gay men have now been offered state protection in Chechnya, to prevent the “honour killings” from happening.

According to the Moscow Times, the Russian LGBT Network successfully petitioned the country’s investigative committee to protect the men, although there has been no clarification on what this protection will look like.

Alexander Nemov, the lawyer who is fighting their case, said: “The state has recognized that Magamadov and Isayev are under threat of danger”.

Last month, their lawyers were finally allowed access to the two men, and they were able to give accounts of what happened, describing the “physical and psychological violence” they suffered at the hands of police, and how they were forced to sign fabricated confessions to the terrorism charges.

Magamadov said: “The police officer took me to another office, grabbed my chest, hit me twice against the wall, I had to answer that I would sign an agreement with the appointed lawyer.

“Then the police officer explained to me: ‘If you try to resist us, then I am ready to kill you, even in the courtroom. I’m not a man if I won’t kill you.’”

Nemov expressed his determination fight for the two men, and said in a statement: “This case is 100 per cent political, there is nothing at all, no evidence.

“And yes, we understand that this is Chechnya and Chechen ‘special’ justice.

“But let’s be honest – Chechen law enforcement officers have never faced such pressure before.”

UPDATED: Prospect Withdraws Change of Ownership and Hospital Conversions Applications – GoLocalProv

Friday, April 30, 2021

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Prospect Medical Holdings — owner of ChaterCARE hospitals Roger Williams and Fatima — has flipped the proverbial table.

The company notified Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha and the Department of Health Friday morning of its formal withdrawal of the organization’s hospital conversions act and change in effective control applications. “The withdrawals conclude the regulatory review process,” said the company in a press release.

Prospect operates under the CharterCARE brand in Rhode Island and is a for-profit — it pays the City of Providence $2.8 million and North Providence $875,000 in taxes. They are among the largest taxpayers in both of those respective cities.

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The impact is that the company will continue to be owned in part by the private equity group Leonard Green, an investment firm that has been under scrutiny by everyone from members of Congress to the Wall Street Journal.

With no change of ownership application pending, Prospect can move forward potentially with closures of certain operations at the hospital by applying only to RIDOH and excluding Neronha’s office.

In response to the announcement, the United Nurses and Allied Professionals President Lynn Blais, RN, released a statement, “Prospect CharterCARE’s business model is neither sensible, nor sustainable. They are, first and foremost, about making rich men wealthier at the expense of patient care and frontline health workers. Our members have lived, sweated and breathed the reality of their greed for far too long.”

Blais went on to say, “This application lacked legitimacy from its introduction, and shame on the members of the Health Services Council who voted to support it in the face of a damning report from their own consultant. Long after Sam Lee and David Topper have lost interest, Fatima Hospital will continue to be a trusted place where our community receives world-class care. We’re in this for the long haul and we’ve seen it all. These two wannabe robber barons can’t shake us.”
 

The Wall Street Journal reported last June, “Four members of Congress have accused Leonard Green & Partners of extracting millions of dollars from a hospital operator, adding to a recent chorus of criticism of private-equity practices in the medical sector. The Democratic representatives demanded the private-equity firm return the fees and dividends it earned from its ownership of Prospect Medical Holdings Inc., a Los Angeles-based hospital and medical group operator the buyout firm bought a decade ago. Reps. Katie Porter (D., Calif.), Lloyd Doggett (D., Texas), Mary Gay Scanlon (D., Pa) and Rosa DeLauro (D., Conn.) made the demands in a June 4 letter to the Los Angeles-based investor that was viewed by The Wall Street Journal.”

Prospect on Thursday announced that if Neronha was going to use his regulatory powers to try to stipulate that Prospect place between $120 and $150 million in a de facto escrow account as a condition of approving the change of ownership application the company would move to close their Rhode Island operations.

This move by Prospect now could see the company move forward with operational reductions and layoffs according to sources.

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CoStar : No Growth In First Quarter For Composite Price Indices – Marketscreener.com

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Apr 30, 2021

Price Trends Diverge Across Property Types and Regions; Hospitality Posts Large Loss

CCRSI RELEASE – April 2021
(With data through March 2021)

This month’s CoStar Commercial Repeat Sale Indices (CCRSI) provides the market’s first look at commercial real estate pricing trends through March 2021. Based on 1,386 sale pairs in March 2021, and more than 241,024 repeat sales since 1996, the CCRSI offers the broadest measure of commercial real estate repeat sales activity.

CCRSI National Results Highlights

  • COMPOSITE PRICE INDICES FLAT OR DOWN IN THE FIRST QUARTER. The value-weighted U.S. Composite Index, which reflects the larger asset sales common in core markets, fell 1.2% in the first quarter of 2021. The value-weighted U.S. Composite Index has declined from its December 2020 peak, but remains 5.9% above its March 2020 pre-pandemic level. Meanwhile, the equal-weighted U.S. Composite Index, which reflects the more numerous but lower-priced property sales typical of secondary and tertiary markets, was unchanged in the first quarter of 2021. The equal-weighted U.S. Composite Index remains 4.8% above its March 2020 prepandemic level.

  • PRICING CHANGES VARY ACROSS PROPERTY TYPES AND REGIONS. While the equal-weighted U.S. Composite Index was unchanged in the first quarter of 2021, pricing performance was mixed across the property type and geographical spectrum. The Retail, Multifamily, Industrial and Land indices, which have all been positive since the end of the second quarter of 2020 or earlier, all posted strong gains over the three-month period ending March 31, 2021. The Office Index, meanwhile, declined by 0.7% over the first quarter of 2021, with the largest decline found in Hospitality, down a sharp 4.9% in that period. The divergences were stark across regions as well. The Midwest and South indices both posted 1% or larger gains over the first quarter of 2021, while the West declined somewhat and the Northeast declined sharply.

  • YEAR-TO-DATE TRANSACTION VOLUME DOWN FROM SAME PERIOD IN 2020. Repeat-sale transaction volume of $25.4 billion in the period from January through March 2021 marked a 20% decrease from the volume that was logged in the same period in 2020. Investor activity remains below levels seen entering the pandemic, although it has recovered strongly from the lowest levels of activity seen in the second quarter of 2020. In the first quarter of 2021, the distressed sale percentage of total observed transaction volume remained at 1.9%, which is extremely low by historical standards.

Quarterly CCRSI Property Type Results

  • PROPERTY SECTOR PERFORMANCE WAS MIXED IN THE FIRST QUARTER. The hospitality sector was the fly in the ointment in the first quarter of 2021, declining by a sharp 4.9% to negatively impact the Composite Index, as travel has been slow to return to normal. Hospitality, down 10% in the first quarter of 2021 compared to a year ago, has been an outlier compared to the other five major property types, which were all above their March 2020 levels. Office was the only other sector to exhibit weakness in the first quarter of 2021, declining by 0.7%.

  • MULTIFAMILY INDEX POSTED STRONG QUARTERLY GAIN. The U.S. Multifamily Index expanded 2.2% in the first quarter of 2021, an increase of 10.2% compared to the first quarter of 2020, the largest year-over-year gain for any major property type. However, the Prime Multifamily Metros Index was down 0.6% in the first quarter of 2021, the second consecutive quarterly loss, in spite of consecutive gains in the overall Multifamily Index. Downtown product, particularly in gateway cities, has remained more out of favor with investors throughout the pandemic and economic recovery compared to suburban areas.

  • PRICING IN THE INDUSTRIAL SECTOR REMAINED STURDIEST OF ALL PROPERTY TYPES. The accelerated adoption of e-commerce during the pandemic helped fuel the stronger performance of industrial pricing. The U.S. Industrial Index rose 1.9% in the first quarter of 2021, the 13th-consecutive quarterly gain for the property type. The Prime Industrial Metros Index advanced at a somewhat more rapid rate of 2.3% in the first quarter of 2021, and has outperformed the broader Industrial Index since the start of the pandemic.

  • RETAIL CONTINUED ITS RESURGENCE. The U.S. Retail Index rose 2.3% in the first quarter of 2021, now up by 4.5% from a year prior. The Prime Retail Index COSTAR COMMERCIAL REPEAT-SALE INDICES APRIL 2021 Release (With Data through MARCH 2021) outperformed slightly, up 2.7% in the first quarter of 2021 to begin closing the gap to more suburban areas. Retail pricing benefitted from a quickening COVID-19 vaccination pace in the quarter, with slower-to-reopen dense cities finally returning to some semblance of normal.

  • OFFICE PRICES DECLINED IN THE FIRST QUARTER. The U.S. Office Index declined by 0.7% in the first quarter of 2021, the first quarterly decline since December 2018. The weakness was concentrated in large metros, as the Prime Office Metros Index declined by a sharper 1.2% in the first quarter of 2021. Gains have been limited since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has created some uncertainty around long-term office usage.

  • HOSPITALITY SECTOR PLUMMETED ON CONTINUED LIMITED TRAVEL. The U.S. Hospitality Index suffered a steep 4.9% decline in the first quarter of 2021, the worst such quarterly change since the fourth quarter of 2009. The hospitality sector’s short lease periods mean occupancy losses quickly translate into revenue losses, which has in turn dampened investment volume and pricing. While vaccinations are encouraging for the sector, questions remain over how long it will take to return to normal travel patterns.

  • U.S. LAND INDEX POSTED LARGE GAIN. The U.S. Land Index posted the sharpest gain of any property type, increasing by 3.3% in the first quarter of 2021. Continued investor interest in development sites, particularly for industrial and multifamily projects has supported the land prices.

Quarterly CCRSI Regional Results

  • MIDWEST REGION POSTED GAIN, BUT SOME PROPERTY TYPES DECLINE. The Midwest Composite index increased by 1.4% in the first quarter of 2021, now up by 4.5% from the same period a year ago. Previously the laggard among regions, the Midwest Composite Index has now increased by more than the Northeast Composite Index over the past year. First quarter gains were led by 2% increases in both the Midwest Industrial and Multifamily indices, while the Midwest Office and Retail indices declined by 2.4% and 1.6%, respectively.

  • SOUTH REGION SHOWED MODEST BUT BROAD-BASED GROWTH. The South Office, Multifamily and Retail indices all increased by 1-2% in the first quarter of 2021, with only the South Industrial Index declining by a slight 0.6%. Much like in the Midwest, the South Industrial Index has lagged the National Industrial Index, likely due to less population density, and therefore less immediate reliance on eCOSTAR COMMERCIAL REPEAT-SALE INDICES APRIL 2021 Release (With Data through MARCH 2021) commerce due to social-distancing measures. Likely for the same reason, the South Composite Index posted the strongest gains of any region in March 2021 compared to March 2020.

  • WEST REGIONAL INDEX DOWN 0.8% IN FIRST QUARTER OF 2021. Losses in the West region were concentrated in the office sector, as the West Office Index declined by a stark 1.9% in the first quarter of 2021. Other property types fared better over the same period, with a sharp 2.3% gain in the West Industrial Index while multifamily and retail posted more modest gains.

  • NORTHEAST REGION LAGGED IN FIRST QUARTER. The Northeast Composite Index declined by 2.3% in the first quarter of 2021, the worst performance of any region and worst single quarter for the region since the start of the recession. The region’s underperformance was due to 2% declines in both the Northeast Industrial and Northeast Office indices. The Northeast Retail Index, in contrast, was up a sharp 1.8% in the first quarter of 2021, the best quarterly performance for the regional property index since the fourth quarter of 2018. The Northeast Multifamily Index rose as well over the same period, but by only 0.5%, the weakest multifamily gain of any region. While multifamily has done the best of any property type with a 10% gain from a year ago, the Northeast Multifamily Index has only posted a modest 3% increase.

About the CoStar Commercial Repeat-Sale Indices

The CoStar Commercial Repeat-Sale Indices (CCRSI) is the most comprehensive and accurate measure of commercial real estate prices in the United States. In addition to the U.S. Composite Index (presented in both equal-weighted and value-weighted versions), U.S. Investment-Grade Index, and U.S. General Commercial Index, which we report monthly, we report quarterly on 30 sub-indices in the CoStar index family. The subindices include breakdowns by property sector (office, industrial, retail, multifamily, hospitality, and land), by region of the country (Northeast, South, Midwest, and West), by transaction size and quality (general commercial, investment-grade), and by market size (composite index of the prime market areas in the country).

The CoStar indices are constructed using a repeat sales methodology, widely considered the most accurate measure of price changes for real estate. This methodology measures the movement in the prices of commercial properties by collecting data on actual transaction prices. When a property is sold more than once, a sales pair is created. The prices from the first and second sales are then used to calculate price movement for the property. The aggregated price changes from all of the sales pairs are used to create a price index.

CONTACT:

Gay Beach, Senior Director of Marketing Communications, CoStar Group (gbeach@costargroup.com).

For more information about the CCRSI Indices, including the full accompanying data set and research methodology, legal notices and disclaimer, please visit https://costargroup.com/costar-news/ccrsi.

ABOUT COSTAR GROUP, INC.

CoStar Group, Inc. (NASDAQ: CSGP) is the leading provider of commercial real estate information, analytics and online marketplaces. Founded in 1987, CoStar conducts expansive, ongoing research to produce and maintain the largest and most comprehensive database of commercial real estate information. Our suite of online services enables clients to analyze, interpret and gain unmatched insight on commercial property values, market conditions and current availabilities. STR provides premium data benchmarking, analytics and marketplace insights for the global hospitality sector. Ten-X provides a leading platform for conducting commercial real estate online auctions and negotiated bids. LoopNet is the most heavily trafficked commercial real estate marketplace online. Realla is the UK’s most comprehensive commercial property digital marketplace. Apartments.com, ApartmentFinder.com, ForRent.com, ForRentUniversity.com and Apartamentos.com form the premier online apartment resource for renters seeking great apartment homes and provide property managers and owners a proven platform for marketing their properties. Homesnap is an industry-leading online and mobile software platform that provides user-friendly applications to optimize residential real estate agent workflow and reinforce the agent-client relationship. CoStar Group’s websites attract tens of millions of unique monthly visitors. Headquartered in Washington, DC, CoStar maintains offices throughout the U.S. and in Europe, Canada and Asia with a staff of over 4,600 worldwide, including the industry’s largest professional research organization. For more information, visit www.costargroup.com.

This news release includes ‘forward-looking statements’ including, without limitation, statements regarding CoStar’s expectations, beliefs, intentions or strategies regarding the future. These statements are based upon current beliefs and are subject to many risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from these statements. The following factors, among others, could cause or contribute to such differences: the risk that the trends represented or implied by the indices will not continue or produce the results suggested by such trends, including trends related to commercial real estate fundamentals, price growth, liquidity measures, and absorption; and the risk that transaction volume, investor demand, market supply, and commercial real estate pricing levels, absorption and growth will not continue at the levels or with the trends indicated in this release. More information about potential factors that could cause results to differ materially from those anticipated in the forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, those stated in CoStar’s filings from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including in CoStar’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020, which is filed with the SEC, including in the ‘Risk Factors’ section of that filings, as well as CoStar’s other filings with the SEC available at the SEC’s website (www.sec.gov). All forward-looking statements are based on information available to CoStar on the date hereof, and CoStar assumes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

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CoStar Group Inc. published this content on 30 April 2021 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 30 April 2021 15:07:06 UTC.

East Coast LGBT Nightclubs Are Ready To Dance Again – So When? – Instinct Magazine

With summer looming and vacation plans being made, LGBT vacation destinations like Rehoboth Beach DE, Asbury Park NJ, and Fire Island on Long Island, NY are all eagerly anticipating one thing; when can we once again, hit the dance floors. While some of these destinations have received still somewhat mixed answers as recently as yesterday (New York City Mayor de Blasio confirmed that he would like to open New York City completely by July 1st, while Governor Cuomo is optimistically hoping for an earlier date), states like Delaware and New Jersey-and their LGBT businesses-remain in limbo.

Businesses like Paradise in Asbury Park, N.J. are prepping their signature pool deck for pool parties and (fingers crossed) their legendary Tea Dances, Diego’s Bar & Nightclub in Rehoboth Beach, DE continues work on “The Beach” area, and The Pines is prepping their legendary entertainment lineup. While work at these venues hums along towards the official Memorial Day seasonal kick-off, the availability of a timeline to reopen their officially businesses completely is still not being provided. 

Paradise Manager Joseph “JoJo” Crisci spoke with News 12 NJ recently and spoke strongly about wanting to provide the community and patrons with all of the amenities that Paradise (owned by legendary producer, songwriter & DJ Shep Pettibone) has available, including the multiple dance floors on the property.

Crisci also raised an extremely valid point on bringing people back to the nightclub and at the same time, helping their comfortability factor go back up in an environment we have not been in in over a year. “At this point you have to rip the Band-Aid off and get this thing started. Because how is life going to go back to normal? How are you going to feel normal going to a nightclub if you don’t start getting acclimated again?” Crisci said.

New York City nightlife notable Frankie Sharp, who (along with Alan Picus and Bob Fluet) is behind the soon -to-be-unveiled The Q in New York City, shared eloquent and honest words on why a return to dance floors everywhere is crucial; now more than ever;

“To be unhinged is a human desire that sometimes gets a bad rap as guilty pleasure, but to me it’s a magnificent chance to find the balance for yourself spiritually and soulfully. A dance floor is simply that idea harnessed. A dancefloor to me is the ultimate place of worship and the celebration of life. We all have gone through such trauma this last year, but we have also done so collectively. Lets all put that trauma on the dancefloor and leave it there for good…”


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Polish town scraps controversial move to declare itself ‘LGBT-free’ – Euronews

A Polish town has gone back on a controversial move to declare itself “LGBT-free”.

Councillors in the eastern municipality of Kraśnik voted to repeal the 2019 decision on Thursday, becoming the sixth place to do so.

Kraśnik was one of dozens of towns and regions since May 2019 to say they are free of “LGBT ideology”, which the ruling Law and Justice Party (PiS) say undermines Poland’s religious family values.

Kraśnik’s centre-right mayor Wojciech Wilk had supported the withdrawal, stating the declaration had “a negative impact” elsewhere in the region.

Nine city councillors supported his proposal, while six were against and four abstained.

It was the fourth occasion that Kraśnik had attempted to rescind its “LGBT-free” status after three unsuccessful attempts.

The resolution was originally declared by Kraśnik and around 100 other municipalities in May 2019 after support from the conservative PiS.

But the decision soon led to the withdrawal of international funding and a wave of negative attention online.

Helena Dalli, the European commissioner for equality, suspended funding to six Polish cities that adopted the resolution.

Last September, Norway’s foreign minister Ine Eriksen Soreide also indicated that “municipalities which have adopted anti-LGBT resolutions will not receive financial support from Norwegian funds as long as these resolutions are valid”.

Meanwhile, the French town of Nogent-sur-Oise suspended twinning ties with Kraśnik in February 2020 over the gesture.

Writing on Facebook, Wilk said the resolution had “financial consequences” on Kraśnik.

“Last year … we prepared a project that would enable us to obtain 39 million zloty (€8.5 million) for the social and economic development of the city.”

“The grant would come from the Norwegian Mechanism. [But] the Norwegian government’s anti-discrimination policy made it difficult to secure the grant.”

Kraśnik also gained widespread attention when France’s Minister for Europe said he was prevented from visiting the city’s ‘LGBT-free’ zones during a recent visit.

Clément Beaune told French media in March that he was dissuaded by “political pressure” from Polish officials. Poland’s Foreign Ministry denied the allegations.

Kraśnik’s mayor said the withdrawal of the city’s “LGBT-free” status brought an end to “a period of serious crisis”.

“A negative image has been perpetuated in numerous Polish and foreign media reports,” Wilk said.

“The rights of minorities are guaranteed by the Polish Constitution and there should be no doubt that the Kraśnik local government respects the law in Poland.”

“I am glad that the councillors have decided to repeal the resolution,” he added, “it was a difficult time for our local government and our city.”

PiS councillors in Kraśnik, however, have suggested that the vote to repeal could cause “a secondary worldview conflict”.

“Today’s vote … shows that some councillors on the right have no moral backbone,” said the vice-chairman of the council, Roman Bijak.

“What triumphs is not common sense but the political result,” he wrote on Facebook.

Last month, the European Parliament passed a resolution declaring all 27 member states an LGBT “freedom zone” although, like the Polish resolutions declaring the opposite, the declaration has no legal force.

COVID-19 Information – Chesterfield Observer

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For information on Chesterfield County’s response to COVID-19, visit: chesterfield.gov/coronavirus where you can find details about vaccine information, news and updates, community resources and more.

  • Chesterfield County’s Mobile Integrated Healthcare Unit, offered by the Department of Fire and EMS, is traveling to eligible, homebound residents to administer COVID-19 vaccines. If you or a loved one are homebound and unable to travel to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, email bedboundvax@chesterfield.gov or call 804-387-0366.
  • For questions about the COVID-19 vaccine or to register for the vaccine, visit virginia.gov or contact the statewide call center 877-VAX-IN-VA (877-829-4682). Open seven days a week, from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., it is staffed by 750 live operators who can answer questions about the COVID-19 vaccine and assist with pre-registration. The call center has English- and Spanish-speaking agents, as well as a call-back service in more than 100 other languages. TTY service (dial 7-1-1) is available to assist those who are deaf or hard of hearing.
  • Chesterfield County Public Library staff can help county residents with the vaccination registration process over the phone, or, if in-person assistance from CCPL staff is needed, a resident may visit any CCPL location. call CCPL at 804-751-2275 for assistance.
  • A COVID-19 Vaccination Dashboard, specific to Chesterfield County and the Chesterfield Health District that includes an estimated timeline to reach the county’s community vaccination goal of 75%, can be viewed at gov/5316/chesterfield-COVID-19-vaccination-dashbo
  • For information about COVID-19 testing, visit virginia.gov/coronavirus/covid-19-testing/

If you or someone you know is experiencing anxiety or stress related to COVID-19, call or text VA COPES, a free and confidential COVID-19 response warmline: 877-349-6428, Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-9 p.m.; Saturday-Sunday, 5-9 p.m.; Spanish speakers are available. Chesterfield County Mental Health Support Services also has a list of resources available for children and adults. Visit chesterfield.gov/878/mental-health-support-services

To view current information regarding the COVID-19 vaccine in:

Theologian Slams Methodist Church for Creating ‘Two Religions’ Over LGBT Issues – Faithwire

Prominent Southern Baptist theologian Albert Mohler is rebuking the United Methodist Church over its division on LGBT issues, arguing the increasingly progressive denomination is creating “two religions.”

On the Wednesday episode of his daily podcast, “The Briefing,” he called out Hope United Methodist Church in Bloomington, Illinois, for allowing Isaac Simmons — a gay man who often preaches in drag — to serve in a ministerial position.

“This is open revolt,” said Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky. “And, of course, you’re going to see a division between those who are appalled by it, deeply troubled by it, deeply concerned by it and opposed to it on the one hand, and those who celebrate it and say that it’s arrived far too late on the other hand.”

Mohler broadened his condemnation to the UMC denomination as a whole, arguing that, by allowing the Illinois church to approve Simmons as a pastor, the church has “embraced doctrinal annihilation,” adding that the growing schism among Protestants on issues of sexuality is — rather than establishing two differing interpretations — creating “two different religions.”

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“Those two different religions,” he said, “cannot simply continue to exist in one church or in one denomination. Once conservatives are out of the picture in the United Methodist Church, this is only the start of where things will go in the future.”

As for Simmons, he recently preached a message on Mark 15, which recounts Jesus’ appearance before Pilate and His crucifixion.

Simmons, though, used the passage as a jumping off point to encourage those who watched the virtual sermon to understand Jesus’ death “through a lens of queerness, through a lens of drag, even.” He said “people will tremble sensing the mystery of queer holiness.”

“There is holiness in queerness,” Simmons said. “There is holiness in ally’s hip. There is holiness in femininity, masculinity, and fluidity. … Your identity is not a sin. Your identity is not punishable. Your identity deserves to be celebrated and loved and cared for.”

As Faithwire reported earlier this week, UMC churches are becoming increasingly divided over issues pertaining to sexuality.

Mt. Bethel United Methodist Church in Cobb County, Georgia, broke away from the UMC over what the Rev. Dr. Jody Ray, who leads the congregation, described as “progressive theology that is, in fact, no theology at all.”

The UMC, which holds to a theology of itinerant ministry, informed Mt. Bethel that Ray had been reassigned to a position on racial reconciliation in the denomination’s North Georgia Conference. The pastor, though, denied the position, telling Bishop Sue Haupert-Johnson such a role “is not what God is calling me to do.”

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“I want you to remember this day,” he told his family during his Sunday sermon two weeks ago. “Your daddy didn’t bow the knee or kiss the ring of progressive theology, that is, in fact, no theology at all.”

“Be careful of secular theologies and thoughts that often come described as biblical truth,” the pastor told churchgoers. “Know and understand the Scripture in such a way that you can determine through the Holy Spirit what is right.”

Openly gay pilot leaving Navy after homophobic harassment – Metro Weekly

Lt. Adam Adamski, gay, navy, pilot
Lt. Adam Adamski — Photo: KPSB

One of the Navy’s few openly gay pilots is leaving after a homophobic incident that left him feeling “segregated” from the military.

Lt. Adam Adamski told San Diego’s KPBS that he felt supported for the majority of his six-year Navy career, until the 2019 incident.

In November 2019, Adamski attended the West Coast Marine Corps Birthday Ball and was invited to an after-party in one of the hotel rooms at the resort where the ball was held.

“When I walked in the door, I knew something wasn’t right,” he said. The room’s television had been moved to face the door, and Adamski’s dress whites were “draped over and around the TV.”

On the screen, “there was hard-core gay porn playing.”

Adamski said it felt like more than a prank, and other Marines in his squadron seemingly agreed, trying to find those responsible. However, he was preparing for his first deployment and opted to drop the matter.

But Adamski said that, as word spread of what had happened, he started to hear from both closeted and out servicemembers in the squadron, telling him “that they are upset. That the climate, especially for pilots, is not a good climate and they think that I should report it.”

The three Marines responsible for the incident were subsequently identified, with their squadron commander substantiating Adamski’s account and offering to pull their wings.

Adamski declined, telling KPBS it was too harsh a punishment, and that he’d prefer “an in-person apology from all three of them. I want a meeting, in which they are there and I can talk to them.”



But 18 months later, he has yet to receive those apologies, or a note in the Marines’ permanent records. He had to initiate a Navy Inspector General complaint after the three Marines told their commander that they’d apologized to Adamski.

His career and personal life were also impacted, with fewer flight hours logged and an accident that impacted his ability to qualify to fly, and a relationship with a closeted Air Force pilot ended after he witnessed what happened to Adamski.

Adamski has also had multiple meetings with Naval Air Command regarding his decision to speak out about the homophobic incident.

“I lost a lot. I’m not happy. I no longer feel I’m an effective leader, an officer, a pilot,” Adamski said. “I don’t feel part of the military anymore. I feel segregated.”

Lambda Legal attorney and former Marine Sarah Buchert told KPSB that, despite the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell ten years ago, its impact is still felt.

“It’s one thing to have Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell removed,” Buchert said. “It’s another thing to have a culture where people feel safe being who they are and not have to worry about being discriminated against…a lot of this comes from the top down.”

Adamski said he has now accepted an offer to retire from the Navy, with his official leaving date set for later this year.

However, he has vowed to continue seeking some kind of justice for the incident, saying he’s “not someone who will back down easily or ever. I’m not going to do it.”

Read More:

Two-thirds of gay, bisexual Gen Z boys are out to their parents, study finds

New Jersey vice principal threw beer at child after rant about trans woman using women’s bathroom

Alabama governor signs bill to remove anti-gay language from sex education curriculum

LGBTQ organizer Deja Alvarez steps up for Rep. Brian Sims’ Philly House seat – Pennsylvania Capital-Star

Pa. House candidate Deja Alvarez (Philadelphia Gay News photo).

By The Philadelphia Gay News

PHILADELPHIA — LGBTQ community leader Deja Alvarez has announced a run for state representative of the 182nd district. Alvarez is the director of community engagement at World Healthcare Infrastructures and chairperson of the Philadelphia Police LGBT Liaison Committee.

In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, she founded a food program for undocumented immigrant families and other food insecure individuals.

The 182nd district serves a large section of Center City, including the Gayborhood and Rittenhouse Square, as well as parts of Fairmount, Queen Village, Hawthorne, and Logan Square. The seat is currently held by Rep. Brian Sims, who is running for lieutenant governor. Sims has said he will not seek re-election to the seat.

Alvarez is the second LGBTQ person to announce a run for the seat. If elected, she would be the first transgender person to serve in the state Legislature. Earlier this month, LGBTQ activist Jonathan Lovitz, who is gay, announced he planed to run for the seat.

“I have a lived experience that is very different from most in the capital,” Alvarez told the Philadelphia Gay News. “I think that’s important. I want people that come from every background, every story, every corner of the city, to be able to look at me and say ‘hey, she came from where she came from, she’s part of multiple marginalized communities, and now here she is running for office. And if she can do it, I can do it.’ I think that’s important for me, for other people to be able to see a little bit of themselves in me on some level.”

Philly LGBTQ activist Lovitz announces candidacy for Rep. Brian Sims’ Pa. House seat

Alvarez grew up in Philadelphia and has been a leader in the LGBTQ community for many years. She was the director of the LGBTQ Home for Hope, the first shelter in Pennsylvania to specifically serve LGBTQ people, and she was recognized for that work by the Delaware Valley Legacy Fund’s annual Hero Awards. She has also served on the board of directors at the William Way LGBT Community Center and worked as an assistant prevention navigator at the Philadelphia Department of Public Health, where she helped LGBTQ people access medical services and appointments.

“I feel like in my advocacy and my background in nonprofit public health, I’m used to doing the most with the least,” Alvarez said. “A lot of the work that I’ve done and do is formed out of tough circumstances. That’s the work that I’ve always done.”

Alvarez believes that her background and experience in working with a wide variety of people will serve her well in the often gridlocked legislature in Harrisburg.

“If anybody has paid attention to any of the work I’ve done, I’ve worked in the systems, I’ve worked outside the systems, I’ve worked with different politicians, I’ve worked with people from different backgrounds. And I can unequivocally say that I don’t agree with a lot of them, but what I’m able to do is look past what I think and feel and see if there is commonality, an idea we have in common. And I can concentrate on that and work with that person, regardless of the things we disagree about, to make sure we get that thing we agree about done.”

Alvarez, who previously ran for City Council in 2019, said it took time for her to believe a person like her could run for public office.

“I feel like, for a long time, I believed, like I think many people believed, that you had to be of a certain background, from a certain type of family, from a certain area, and had gone to an Ivy league school in order to be worthy of being an elected official and someone that represents the people. But then I learned, and what I think we are all starting to learn, is that idea is a false notion.”

Alvarez went on to say that many politicians do not have the lived experience of the residents they serve, especially when it comes to issues such as homelessness and poverty.

“They talk about being homeless or hungry or having to survive, but the majority of them have never actually experienced that. So how do they go into office and represent us in that manner? Then a few years ago I realized, ‘wait a minute, why not me? Why not more people like me? People like us who have those kinds of experiences? Who better to fight for that, talk about that and help get legislation passed for those issues then the people who have actually experienced those issues?’”

While Alvarez continues to build her campaign staff, the top two members of her team are women of color: campaign manager Mariel JK Martin and deputy campaign manager Crystal Cheepudom. She and the campaign team recently drove every block of the district, and they plan to launch a listening tour in the coming weeks.

“We want to make sure everyone understands that their voice is heard. This won’t be just my voice in Harrisburg, this won’t even be just my voice in the campaign. This isn’t about my ideas alone. I have ideas from my lived experience and professional work and advocacy, but that doesn’t cover every voice in the 182nd district. So my team and I want to make sure we’re listening to everyone to make sure we’re addressing all of their needs.

“I hope that one of the things we can do with this race and in Harrisburg is let folks know that we’re here to represent everyone, not just one marginalized community. If one of us gets in, then all of us get in. Our collective voices not only get us there, but they are represented when we’re there.”

When asked how it would feel to be the first trans person to serve in the state legislature, Alvarez said she understands the responsibility and that she is a person who thrives under pressure.

“I think the more voices we have in places like Harrisburg, the more change we can make and the more we help move the world along in a direction that is truly equitable for everyone.”

This story first appeared in the Philadelphia Gay News, a publishing partner of the Pennsylvania Capital-Star.

DUP’s only out gay lawmaker is ‘very sorry’ to see Arlene Foster go for some reason – Yahoo Eurosport UK

The DUP’s only out gay lawmaker, Alison Bennington, has said she is “very sorry” to see Arlene Foster resign as party leader.

On Thursday (29 April), Foster resigned as first minister of Northern Ireland and as leader of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) after three quarters of her elected representatives signed a letter of no confidence.

Bennington, a DUP councillor who was elected to her Glengormley Urban Area seat in the north-west of Newtownabbey in May 2019, told the News Letter: “I’m very sorry to see her go. Very sorry.”

Foster has long been a vocal opponent to marriage equality and LGBT+ rights. Asked by the publication what her own views were on same-sex marriage, Bennington responded: “I’ll keep that opinion to myself, thank you.”

Foster even attempted to block the conversion therapy ban which received overwhelming support in the Assembly last week, insisting that churches should be given and exemption, and tabling an amendment to remove a line that said it is “fundamentally wrong to view our LGBTQ community as requiring a fix or cure”.

Anti-LGBT+ politician Edwin Poots tipped as possible DUP leader

Bennington refused to say who she would like to see replace Arlene Foster, adding: “It’s up to those who are up in the hierarchy to consider what way they want to take the party forward… I don’t have all the detail of who said what or who did what, so I won’t comment on that either until I get that information.

“I’ll just wait and see what the outcome is. I’ll have no say in it, so I won’t I’m sure.”

But if an anti-LGBT+ leader is what Bennington is into, then a politician tipped to replace Foster might be right up her street.

Former health minister Edwin Poots is already being named by political pundits as a potential future DUP leader, and he has a long history of opposing LGBT+ rights.

Poots, a “young earth creationist” who doesn’t believe in evolution, previously used used thousands in public funds to try to stop same-sex couples from legally adopting children, fought to stop queer men from donating blood in Northern Ireland, and said when Foster became leader of the DUP that her “most important job” remained “that of a wife, mother and daughter“.