Taylor Swift has donated $113,000 to the Tennessee Equality Project, a nonprofit LGBTQ+ advocacy group that lobbies against discriminatory bills in the singer's adopted home state.
Chris Sanders, the organization's executive director, posted the news on Facebook Monday with a photo of a handwritten note from Swift.
"Taylor Swift has been a longtime ally to the LGBTQ community," Sanders wrote in the post. "She sees our struggle in Tennessee and continues to add her voice with so many good people, including religious leaders, who are speaking out for love in the face of fear."
Swift's note to him reads: "I'm writing you to say that I'm so inspired by the work you do, specifically in organizing the recent petition of Tennessee faith leaders standing up against the 'State of Hate' in our state legislature. Please convey my heartfelt thanks to them and accept this donation to support the work you and those leaders are doing. I'm so grateful that they're giving all people a place to worship."
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In a very Swiftian touch, she wrote the letter on custom stationery with a letterhead that reads: "Taylor Swift / Born In 1989 / Loves Cats." (We had to zoom in to see that, and it was completely worth it.)
The sum is speculated to be $113,000 because 13 is Swift's lucky number.
Swift has spoken up about LGBTQ+ rights before. In the 2018 midterm elections, she endorsed Democrat Phil Bredesen (who ended up losing to Republican Marsha Blackburn) for the U.S. Senate, citing his support for LGBTQ+ rights as one of the reasons.
Last June, Swift, wearing a sequined rainbow dress, gave a heartfelt speech at one of her concerts in honor of Pride Month.
After being heavily criticized for not taking a stand during the 2016 election, Swift has experienced a political evolution. In October 2018, she surprised many when she made her first political endorsement with the post about Bredesen. "In the past I’ve been reluctant to publicly voice my political opinions, but due to several events in my life and in the world in the past two years, I feel very differently about that now," Swift wrote at the time. "I always have and always will cast my vote based on which candidate will protect and fight for the human rights I believe we all deserve in this country."
Swift's post went viral, which led to a spike in voter registrations around the country, including in Tennessee.
In a recent piece in Elle, "30 Things I Learned Before Turning 30," Swift, who will turn 30 on December 13, made it very clear how she feels about Donald Trump, without saying his name.
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"I took a lot of time educating myself on the political system and the branches of government that are signing off on bills that affect our day-to-day life," she wrote in Elle. "I saw so many issues that put our most vulnerable citizens at risk, and felt like I had to speak up to try and help make a change. Only as someone approaching 30 did I feel informed enough to speak about it to my 114 million followers. Invoking racism and provoking fear through thinly veiled messaging is not what I want from our leaders, and I realized that it actually is my responsibility to use my influence against that disgusting rhetoric."
She added: "I'm going to do more to help. We have a big race coming up next year." We're eagerly waiting to see who she endorses in the 2020 presidential election.
Who do you think Taylor Swift will endorse in 2020?
— Ashley Alese Edwards (@AshleyAlese) March 6, 2019
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