This is a list of political offices, whether elected or appointed, which have been held by a lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender person, with details of the first such holder of each office. It should only list people who came out as LGBT before or during their terms in office; it should not list people who came out only after retiring from politics, or people who were outed by reference sources only after their death. It should also exclude openly gay holders of inherited offices (including non-ceremonial monarchs who exercise political power).
The year in brackets refers to the year which the officeholder was elected as an openly LGBT person. If they came out during term of office it is referred to after the year in brackets.
It is ordered by country, by dates of election or appointment. are also to be listed.
Heads of state
Heads of government
International bodies
Arranged by country
Head of subnational governments
The following is a list of LGBT persons who headed the governments of a first-tier administrative division within a sovereign state (such as provinces, lands, states, regions or oblasts).
Currently in office
Americas
- Congressperson (Deputy) â Manuel Canelas â 2015 [First openly gay male]
- Assemblyperson (La Paz) â ParÃÂs Galán â 2015 [First openly transgender male]
Canada
- Municipal council â Adela Hernández â 2012 [First transgender person elected to office]
United States
- Director of Macro Counseling in Social Policies â Andrés Scagliola â 2010 [First openly gay member of the government; Came out: 2011]
- House of Representatives (Substitute Deputy) â MartÃÂn Couto â 2014 [First openly gay congressperson; Came out: 2017]
- Member of Parliament â Michelle Suárez Bértora â 2014 [First transgender legislator]
Europe
Armenia
- Prime Minister â Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir â 2009âÂÂ2013 [First openly gay person in the world to be elected head of government]
- Minister of Social Affairs and Social Security â Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir â 1987âÂÂ1994, 2007âÂÂ2009
- Minister for the Environment and Natural Resources â Guðmundur Ingi Guðbrandsson â 2017 [First openly gay male to serve as a minister]
- Senator â David Norris (Dublin University) â 1987
- Senator â Katherine Zappone (Taoiseach's nominee) â 2011
- Teachta Dála (member of parliament) â Dominic Hannigan (Meath East) â openly gay when elected in 2011
- Teachta Dála (member of parliament) â John Lyons (Dublin North-West) â openly gay when elected in 2011
- Teachta Dála (member of parliament) â Jerry Buttimer (Cork South-Central) â Elected as TD in 2011; came out in 2012
- Minister for Transport, Tourism and Sport â Leo Varadkar â 2011, came out 2015
- Mayor (Fingal County Council) â Cian O'Callaghan â 2012
- Leader of the Seanad ÃÂireann â Jerry Buttimer â 2016
- Minister for Children and Youth Affairs â Katherine Zappone â 2016 [The first minister to have been openly gay at the time of first appointment to cabinet]
- Taoiseach (Prime Minister) â Leo Varadkar â 2017
- Leader of largest party in Dáil ÃÂireann â Leo Varadkar, Fine Gael â 2017
- Member of the European Parliament â Maria Walsh, 2019
- Minister for Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth â Roderic O'Gorman â 2020
- Government Chief Whip â Jack Chambers, 2020, came out 2024
- Minister of State at the Department of Transport, and at the Department of the Environment, Climate and Communications â Jack Chambers â 2022
- Minister for Finance - Jack Chambers, 2024
- Chief Minister â Allan Bell â 2011 [Came out: 2015]
- Prime Minister â Ana Brnabiàâ 2017
- Government minister (Minister of Public Administration and Local Self-Government) â Ana Brnabiàâ 2016âÂÂ2017
- Assistant Minister for International Cooperation in the Ministry of Human and Minority Rights and Social Dialogue â Boris MiliÃÂeviàâ 2020
Autonomous regional parliament members
Africa
Asia
- Legislative Council Member â Raymond Chan Chi-chuen â 2012 [First openly gay man]
- District Council Member â Jimmy Sham, Kenneth Cheung, and Alice Wei â 2019 [First openly gay and lesbian councillors]
- Ward councillor (Setagaya, Tokyo) â Aya Kamikawa â 2003 [First transgender woman]
- Prefectural assembly member (Osaka) â Kanako Otsuji â 2005 [First openly lesbian woman]
- Ward councillor (Tokyo) â Taiga Ishikawa (Toshima) and Wataru Ishizaka (Nakano) â 2011 [First elected gay men]
- Member of the House of Councillors (Upper House) â Kanako Otsuji â 2013 [First openly lesbian woman]
- City councillor (Iruma, Saitama) â Tomoya Hosoda â 2017 [First transgender man]
- Member of the Diet (Lower House) â Kanako Otsuji â 2017 [First openly lesbian woman]
- City councillor (Kameoka, Kyoto) â Maria Akasaka â 2019 [First transgender female]
- Prefectural assembly member (Hokkaido) â Ayako Fuchigami â 2019 [First transgender woman]
- Member of the House of Councillors (Upper House) â Taiga Ishikawa â 2019 [First openly gay man]
Oceania
See also
Notes
References