Wyoming congressional candidate Reid Rasner says he never expected his own sexuality to become a political weapon.
The openly gay Republican has filed lawsuits alleging that political opponents spread false and defamatory claims about him during his campaigns.

According to the lawsuits, he was falsely described as a pedophile and subjected to other personal attacks (LGBTQ Nation).
Rasner also says internal campaign polling highlighted the fact that he had “married his gay husband in New York” and suggested that the information hurt his standing with Republican primary voters.
The allegations have attracted attention because Rasner has spent much of his political career supporting conservative positions on LGBTQ+ issues.
He has publicly opposed gender-affirming care for transgender minors and has aligned himself with several Republican culture-war initiatives.
Those positions, however, did not prevent him from becoming the target of anti-gay rhetoric from within his own political party, according to his account.
Rasner argues that the attacks crossed the line from political disagreement into defamatory personal smears.
The lawsuits remain civil claims, and the allegations have not been proven in court.
The episode has sparked discussion across LGBTQ+ media because it reflects a familiar political dynamic often summarized by the phrase “leopards ate my face.”
The expression describes situations in which people are harmed by movements or policies they previously supported or believed would affect only others.
Supporters of Rasner argue that nobody deserves to be targeted because of their sexual orientation regardless of political affiliation.
Critics, meanwhile, see the controversy as highlighting the risks of participating in political movements that have frequently opposed LGBTQ+ rights.
Whatever perspective readers bring to the story, it demonstrates that prejudice can sometimes reach beyond the groups it was originally directed toward.
As the legal proceedings continue, Rasner’s allegations have become another example of the complicated relationship between identity and modern American politics.








