Since he was elected last year, Donald Trump has proven to be a remarkably anti-LGBTQ president. In policy and practice, the man who once waved a rainbow flag that read “LGBT for Trump” at a campaign rally has shown that he is not the ally only the most delusional members of the LGBTQ community expected him to be.

From tweeting out military enlistment policies to his jokes about his vice president’s homicidal tendencies, here’s some of Trump’s worst moments on LGBTQ issues in the past year.

He banned trans people from the world’s largest employer.

What began as a tweet became official policy on August 25, as Trump banned transgender people from the largest and best funded public institution in American society: the United States military.

There is somewhere between roughly 10,000 and 15,000 trans people serving in the military, an estimate that does not account for trans people who can’t or don’t come out. Barring them from military service may keep them from being tools of American imperialism, but it also blocks them out of the largest employer in the world.

A judge has stopped the ban, but if it moves forward, the policy is especially dangerous for a community already facing elevated levels of unemployment. Speaking of which...

His attorney general argued in favor of LGBTQ discrimination in court.

Many of the worst of Trump’s offenses against the LGBTQ people have come not directly from him, but from his appointees. One of the poster children for this is Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who argued in a 23-page document in late July that federal law isn’t a means to protect gay and bisexual people in America from employment discrimination.

The unsolicited amicus brief was a flagrant attempt to intervene in a Circuit Court case regarding whether or not gay and bisexual people qualify for Title VII protection under civil rights legislation. Without recognition for these rights, people can be fired for their sexual orientation with no grounds for legal recourse. It’s the kind of policy that forces sexual minorities into unemployment or into the closet.

Sessions is just one member of the cabinet who has made it clear that protecting LGBTQ people is not this administration’s top priority. His Department of Justice worked alongside other department for an attack on trans youth.

His education secretary left trans kids without appropriate bathrooms at school.

Sessions tag-teamed with Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos to revoke Obama-era guidelines for trans students in February as part of an effort to make the trans bathroom debate a states’ rights issue. That helped the Supreme Court decide to pass on hearing Gavin Grimm’s case, leaving trans kids like Gavin vulnerable to case-by-case decisions on their rights to use the correct bathroom.

Trans youth are already a population at higher risks for feeling unwelcome at school. Gavin’s case is a missed opportunity at a milestone for trans activists, and it doesn’t seem like the judicial branch will become more considerate to LGBTQ people any time soon.

He appointed Antonin Scalia 2.0 to the Supreme Court.

The newest addition to the Supreme Court has had his personal opinions on LGBTQ questioned thoroughly in the press, but it’s his reverence for the late Justice Antonin Scalia that makes Justice Neil Gorsuch an especially terrifying prospect for LGBTQ people.

Gorsuch’s reverence for Scalia is about much more than the late justice’s haircut: His position as a Constitutional originalist means that like Scalia, he could be a powerful foe to LGBTQ rights cases that might be presented before the court. That’s because Gorsuch is such an avid supporter of what many on the right call “religious liberty” — a term that is often used as a veil for the right to discriminate against LGBTQ people under the guise of moral outrage.