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Chloë Grace Moretz comes out as a “gay woman” in a heartfelt post.
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Chloë Grace Moretz comes out as a “gay woman” in a heartfelt post.

Chloë Grace Moretz has come out as a “gay woman”.

Moretz shared the news about her sexuality in a passionate Instagram post on November 2, urging people to vote in the 2024 presidential election with women’s reproductive rights and LGBTQ issues in mind.

“There is so much at stake in this election. I believe that the government has no right over my body as a woman and that decisions about my body should ONLY be mine and my doctor,” Moretz wrote.

“I believe in the need for legal protections that protect the LGBTQ+ community as a gay woman. We need protection in this country and access to the care we need and deserve,” she added.

She ended her post by asking fans to come up with a “plan” to ensure they get to the polls on November 5th.

TODAY.com reached out to Moretz for comment but did not receive a response at the time of publication.

Moretz, who previously dated Brooklyn Beckham, has been in a relationship with model Kate Harrison for more than five years. The two women often share photos of themselves together on Instagram, including in June 2023, when Harrison posted a selfie photo of them posing together at a gay women’s march in New York City.

Moretz portrayed a gay teenager sent against her will to a conversion therapy camp in the 2018 coming-of-age drama “The Miseducation of Cameron Post.”

While promoting the film, which is set in 1993, Moretz told Deadline that she has been an “activist” for the LGBT community since childhood and has two brothers who are gay.

Also while promoting the film, Moretz was irritated when a reporter from The Independent told her that her name was being name-checked in an article about straight actors portraying gay characters.

“Oh really?” Moretz asked before laughing nervously. “Well, I think what’s important is not to assume anyone’s sexuality. I mean, across the board… don’t assume.”

“I think it depends on the line in the movie,” she continued. “(Moretz’s character) says, ‘I don’t see myself as a homosexual, I see myself as nothing.’ These are all social constraints that we are labeled as.

“We are all human and we try to be with the people we fall in love with and be the best person we can be. But don’t assume people’s sexuality. And don’t project your own problems onto her. Why. “Don’t we let people be who they want to be?”

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