Clara Sorrenti (born March 25, 1994), better known as Keffals, is a Canadian Twitch streamer, transgender activist, left-wing political commentator and former candidate of the Communist Party of Canada.
She has since ended her affiliation with the Communist Party.
Sorrenti, who transitioned as a teenager, began engaging in transgender activism after Texas Governor Greg Abbott instructed Texas state agencies to treat gender-affirming medical treatments (such as puberty blockers or hormone treatments) for transgender youths as child abuse.
She has commentated on her experiences as a trans woman and has hosted people such as Chelsea Manning on her stream.
In 2022, Sorrenti became the subject of a loosely-organized harassment campaign, primarily from Kiwi Farms, with internet trolls using her deadname while filing false police reports, pizza bombing her residence, and organizing a number of swattings.
When growing up, Sorrenti played video games such as Team Fortress 2 and Garry's Mod using the online handle "Keffals".
By the age of 12, she realized that she was transgender.
2013
In 2013, when she was 18, she traveled to Thailand with her parents to receive gender-affirming surgery.
She attended the University of Western Ontario.
Sorrenti is an advocate for the rights of transgender people.
She has stated that she receives frequent harassment for being a trans person.
Early in her life Sorrenti volunteered with the New Democratic Party.
2016
She entered Canadian politics following the 2016 election of Donald Trump in the United States, running for two races in 2018 and 2019 as a member of the Communist Party of Canada.
2018
She ran in the 2018 Ontario general election and the 2019 Canadian federal election, but lost both races.
During that time, she was the organizer for the Young Communist League's London, Ontario chapter.
Sorrenti began streaming on Twitch playing video games, but switched to politics after a wave of anti-trans legislation was introduced in state legislatures in 2021 and 2022.
She spoke out against Texas Governor Greg Abbott when he instructed Texas state agencies to treat gender-affirming medical treatments, such as puberty blockers or hormone treatments, for transgender youths as child abuse.
Speaking on an Alabama law making it a felony to provide gender-affirming care for those under 18, Sorrenti said, "They literally want these kids to fucking kill themselves."
In April 2022, she raised US$205,000 for the Campaign for Southern Equality to protect transgender youth.
A month later, she called attention to a VOD of a 16-year-old trans Twitch streamer who was taken into foster care after police conducted a wellness check.
She has also criticized Florida's "Don't Say Gay" bill and the conspiracy theory shared by online figures such as Infowars and United States Congressman Paul Gosar that the Uvalde shooter was transgender on stream.
She was profiled by Taylor Lorenz in The Washington Post in June 2022.
Lorenz described Sorrenti as "part of a new class of stars who have abandoned the platform's traditional game-stream format to talk about news and politics" and described her Twitch stream as "one of the few media outlets where viewers can hear the news from a trans person."
In July 2022 her Twitch account was suspended for 28 days (reduced to 14) for "repeated hateful slurs or symbols" that featured on her stream thumbnail.
Sorrenti said that the slurs in question were images of past harassment directed against her and that she had been banned "for openly talking about the abuse [she receives]".
She moved to YouTube to stream during the ban.
2020
Sorrenti joined Twitter in December 2020, and amassed over 100,000 followers on the platform.
Sorrenti is also known for "ratioing" Twitter personalities, and has been in online disputes with former Twitch streamer Destiny, as well other public figures, including Tim Pool, Candace Owens, Lauren Southern, and J. K. Rowling.
She supports her streaming career with fan donations from Patreon and PayPal, using the money to hire an editor and a graphic designer.
In a 2023 Progressive Victory livestream, Sorrenti and fellow streamers Destiny, Emma Vigeland, and Vaush interviewed U.S. Representative Ro Khanna about various topics, including the importance of youth political participation and ways to push progressive political sentiment.
On August 5, 2022, Sorrenti was swatted and arrested after an email was sent to members of the London, Ontario city council claiming to be Sorrenti with an intent to kill her mother and members of the London City Council.
The incident, that she believes to be a hate crime, led to computers and phones being confiscated by police.
She said the London Police Service had used her deadname during the arrest, as well as in the wellness check on her mother.
Sorrenti claimed the police, talking to Sorrenti's mother, misgendered Sorrenti by referring to her as her mother's "son".
According to the London police, any use of Sorrenti's former legal name was based on records of prior interactions with the police and not deliberate disrespect.
CBC News reported that the police department will "review how officers treated [her]".
The swatting came after another earlier attempt had taken place through the Toronto Police Service; according to Sorrenti, the London Police Service was not aware of this previous attempt due to lack of correspondence with the Toronto Police Service.
The London Police Service drafted reforms for its treatment of transgender suspects after the incident.
Following the incident, Sorrenti told Global News that "I'm not backing down. I know that the work I do is incredibly valuable, and... I have [trans] people almost every day saying they came out to their families because of me".
Jagmeet Singh, leader of the New Democratic Party, responded to the situation in a tweet saying "Trans folk, and especially trans activists, deserve the freedom to make themselves heard. Not to be doxed and swatted, arrested at gunpoint and deadnamed repeatedly. No one deserves this."