'Mormon Land': It’s better to compromise with the church than clash with it, says LGBTQ+ advocate
Mar 18, 2026•Channel
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Video Overview
Video Details
Published3 months ago
Duration36:01
Video IDQk3boixmaJ4
Languageen-US
CategoryNews & Politics
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video
Performance Metrics
Views889
Likes16
Comments2
Engagement Rate2.02%
Likes per 100 views1.80
Comments per 1K views2.25
Video Tags
#salt lake tribune#utah#salt lake city#troy williams#mormon land#mormon podcast#religion podcast#lds#the church of jesus christ of latter-day saints#the lds church#what does the lds church say about being gay#religious trauma#troy williams utah#troy williams slc#slc politics#utah politics#religion and politics
Description
As a young man, Troy Williams wore a missionary name tag for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Great Britain — all the while fighting against the growing realization he was gay.
Afterward, he interned with the Utah Eagle Forum and learned the ways of backroom politicking at the feet of one of the state’s most effective conservative lobbyists, Gayle Ruzicka.
Thus, an advocate was born.
After embracing his sexual orientation, Williams rose to executive director of Equality Utah, the state’s preeminent LGBTQ+ rights group, and suddenly found himself on the opposite side from his onetime mentor.
Though he no longer labored for his former faith, Williams soon was working with it, helping to craft the landmark Utah Compromise, which safeguarded religious liberty while barring housing and workplace discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity.
More breakthroughs followed, including the church’s endorsement of the Respect for Marriage Act, codifying civil same-sex marriage. Now, after more than a decade at Equality Utah’s helm, Williams is stepping down.
On this week’s show, he discusses his incredible personal and political journey.