ThinkProgress Logo

LGBT

NEWS FLASH

Anti-Gay Legislators Try To Prevent Same-Sex Military Marriages — Again | Rep. Tim Huelskamp (R-KS) has introduced a new bill (HR 3828) that would prevent military chaplains from performing same-sex marriages on military bases — even in states where such marriages would be valid. The bill attempts to affirm the rights of military chaplains not to perform such marriages (even though Pentagon policy already specifies as such), but then intentionally denies them the right to perform them at all. Huelskamp and others previously tried to derail the Defense Reauthorization Act with a similar provision.

NEWS FLASH

EBay Official: Company Won’t Move Jobs To Utah If It Doesn’t Pass LGBT Employment Protections | eBay General Counsel Brandon Pace warned Utah lawmakers on Thursday that the company may reconsider relocating 3,000 workers to the state if it does not extend employment protections the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. The state is currently considering such a measure, sponsored by state Sen. Ben McAdams (D). At a discussion with business leaders about the proposed legislation, McAdams added that 70 percent of Utah residents support statewide housing and employment protections for gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender individuals.

Alyssa

Cynthia Nixon’s Comments Prove We Still Don’t Know How To Talk About Sexual Identity

The LGBT blogosphere has been wrestling with comments made by actress Cynthia Nixon (immortally Sex in the City‘s ”Miranda”) to the New York Times that she chose to be a lesbian:

I gave a speech recently, an empowerment speech to a gay audience, and it included the line ‘I’ve been straight and I’ve been gay, and gay is better.’ And they tried to get me to change it, because they said it implies that homosexuality can be a choice. And for me, it is a choice. I understand that for many people it’s not, but for me it’s a choice, and you don’t get to define my gayness for me. A certain section of our community is very concerned that it not be seen as a choice, because if it’s a choice, then we could opt out. I say it doesn’t matter if we flew here or we swam here, it matters that we are here and we are one group and let us stop trying to make a litmus test for who is considered gay and who is not.

She doubled down in an interview with the Daily Beast, but in a way that helped clarify where she’s really coming:

I don’t pull out the “bisexual” word because nobody likes the bisexuals. Everybody likes to dump on the bisexuals… but I do completely feel that when I was in relationships with men, I was in love and in lust with those men. And then I met Christine and I fell in love and lust with her. I am completely the same person and I was not walking around in some kind of fog. I just responded to the people in front of me the way I truly felt.

The negative reaction from gay blogs seems understandable, but perhaps unwarranted. Undoubtedly, as the gay community argues in courts across the country that homosexuality is immutable and ex-gay therapy is harmful and ineffective, having a prominent celebrity and activist say she “chose” to be gay is a little off-message. But I think it’s pretty clear that’s not what she meant, and so the real problem is that even within the gay community, we still have a very shallow understanding of sexual identity.

The bottom line is that there is a big difference between sexual orientation and sexual identity, even if it usually goes unnoticed. In other words, the language a person uses to describe how they identify does not have to perfectly align with what their natural attractions actually are. The Williams Institute estimates that about 3.5 percent of the population identify as LGBT, but as many as 11 percent of Americans report having same-sex attractions. I think Nixon’s comments make it pretty clear that she did not choose her attractions to women — nor her attractions to men — she merely chose to identify primarily as a lesbian.

Of course, the other factor is persistent biphobia (and inherent at its root, sexism) in both the straight and gay communities. Cathy Renna has highlighted that women’s sexuality is much more fluid than men’s, which makes E.J. Graff’s observation that most of the comments against Nixon have come from gay men fairly unsurprising. The impulse is still to fit people into neat little boxes, and some — again, often men — refuse to believe bisexuality even exists. By the way, science says it does. As Tyler Lewis has pointed out here before, this problem extends into the media, allowing for very few authentic portrayals of bi men. Nixon’s comment that “nobody likes the bisexuals” speaks for itself.

If the LGBT movement is fighting for the right of all people to own their identities free from discrimination, we should be better role models for celebrating that ethic.

NEWS FLASH

Tennessee Anti-Transgender ‘Bathroom Bill’ Dies Without Senate Version | The “Bathroom Harassment Act” introduced by Tennessee state Rep. Richard Floyd (R) has died for this legislative session. The bill would have fined transgender individuals $50 for using the restroom that matches their gender identity. Because Sen. Bo Watson (R) withdrew his version of the bill and the bill filing deadline has now passed, Floyd’s bill cannot advance in both chambers. A ThinkProgress inquiry into whether Floyd would continue his pursuit of the bill or continue to advocate violence against transgender people was denied.

NEWS FLASH

Minnesotans Split On Marriage Inequality Amendment | Voters in Minnesota are divided about a proposed constitutional amendment to outlaw same-sex marriage, a new Public Policy Opinion survey finds. Forty-eight percent of voters say they support defining marriage as between one man and one woman, while 44 percent are opposed. “It’s very much a generational issue- voters under 65 oppose the amendment but seniors support it 58/32 and that’s making the difference right now. 23% of Democrats intend to vote for it, more than the 19% of Republicans who are opposed.” Seventy-one percent of respondents say they “support either gay marriage or civil unions.”

Governors O’Malley And Gregoire Criticize Christie For Advocating A Popular Vote On Marriage Equality

Democratic Governors Martin O’Malley (MD) and Chris Gregoire (WA), who are both pursuing marriage equality bills in their state legislatures this session, appeared on MSNBC this morning to join the growing outcry against Gov. Chris Christie’s (R-NJ) suggestion that voters should decide if gay and people can marry:

– O’MALLEY: “I think the best resolution of these sorts of things… best that it happened legislatively. Sometimes, we have to go to court to get that done as a country. Other times, it’s a combination of several steps — courts, the people deciding, but ultimately, Americans resolve these issues by extending rights more fully and more equally to all individuals.

– GREGOIRE: : “I don’t want [lawmakers] to say instead of taking the tough vote, send it to the voters. They were elected to make these decisions, it’s time for them to do so.”

Watch it:

Opponents of marriage equality have pledged to put the issue on the ballot if it passes in the Washington legislature.

Justice

Undocumented Students Confront Rubio During Speech At Hispanic Conference

MIAMI, Florida — Two undocumented students confronted Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) during his speech here this morning at the Hispanic Leadership Network conference over his lack of support for the DREAM Act. Holding signs that read “Rubio: Latino Or Tea-Partino?” (Latin or Tea Partier?), the students were quickly escorted out of the Doral Golf Resort & Spa ballroom, where Rubio was speaking ahead of GOP presidential candidates, by security.

To his credit, Rubio said the two young men were “very brave” for raising “this legitimate issue” and urged them to stay to hear the rest of his speech. Instead, they were met by Doral City Police officers outside the ballroom, who pulled the students — one gave his name as Joe, preferring not to use a last name — away from reporters. Watch it:

NEWS FLASH

Alabama School Under Scrutiny After Official Tells A Student To Remove A Gay Rights Sweatshirt | The Southern Poverty Law Center has warned an Alabama school district against infringing on a student’s freedom of speech. Elizabeth Garrett, an openly gay sophomore at Brookwood High School, said a school administrator told her to take off her sweatshirt that read, “Warning, This Individual Infected With ‘The Gay,’ Proceed With Caution,” because the official said it was disruptive. At a different point, the same official instructed Elizabeth that same-sex couples would not be allowed at the school’s prom. The Southern Poverty Law Center is threatening to file a federal lawsuit against the district if officials did not stop censoring speech supporting gay, lesbian, and transgender individuals and to do away with its ban on same-sex couples at prom by February 1. “No student should be singled out for unfair treatment or be denied their basic rights at school,” said Same Wolfe, an SPLC attorney.

Tennessee State Senator Falsely Claims HIV Came From The Gay Community, Cites Advice Column From 1988 As Evidence

Tennessee state Rep. Stacey Campfield

Tennessee state Sen. Stacey Campfield (R), the man who sponsored Tennessee’s “don’t say gay” bill and once compared homosexuality to bestiality, now has a theory about the spread of HIV/AIDS. On Thursday, Campfield told the Huffington Post’s Michelangelo Signorile that it’s virtually impossible to spread HIV/AIDS through heterosexual sex and that AIDS came from the gay community:

Most people realize that AIDS came from the homosexual community — it was one guy screwing a monkey, if I recall correctly, and then having sex with men. It was an airline pilot, if I recall.”

“My understanding is that it is virtually — not completely, but virtually — impossible to contract AIDS through heterosexual sex…very rarely [transmitted].”

Campfield went on to add that the lifespan for gays and lesbians is “very short. Google it yourself.” Campfield justified his comments by citing an advice column from 1988 and a Christian apologetics website.

But the facts don’t back up Campfield’s vicious lies. Most women who have been infected with HIV were infected through heterosexual sex, many from their husbands or boyfriends. In 2007, women made up more than 60 percent of adults living with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa, and the Global Council on Health reports that the male-to-female transmission of HIV is twice as likely as the female-to-male transmission. Not to mention the fact that his claim that gays and lesbians have shorter lifespans has already been thoroughly debunked.

Campfield has a history of degrading the LGBT community. But his lies downplay the HIV risk that women face by trying to incorrectly make it only a gay issue.

Update

Campfield defended his outrageous comments, saying he was simply speaking “on the fly,” and that while he’s not an AIDS historian, “I’ve read and seen what other people have read and seen and those facts are out there.”

NEWS FLASH

Federal Judge Finds Same-Sex Long-Term Care Ban Unconstitutional | U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken says she will likely overturn an aspect of the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act that excludes California state employees who are in same-sex domestic partnerships from receiving federal tax benefits related to long-term health coverage as the law appears to be “motivated by antigay animus”. In a written statement, Wilken charges that Federal officials “have failed to show a plausible, legitimate rationale for excluding registered domestic partners from (the law’s) list of eligible family members (for the tax benefits), and the court can think of none.” Although Judge Wilken has indicated she is inclined to overturn the law, the ruling determined that the potential lawsuit can only proceed on behalf of spouses and registered domestic partners. President Obama has agreed the law is unconstitutional, and said he would no longer defend the law in court — a job that has now been assigned to lawyers hired by House Republican leaders. — Fatima Najiy

Maryland’s First Lady: Opponents Of Marriage Equality Are ‘Cowards’

Maryland First Lady Katie O’Malley lashed out against opponents of same-sex marriage while speaking on Thursday at the 24th annual Conference on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Equality. “[T]here were some cowards that prevented it from passing,” O’Malley said, referring to last year’s unsuccessful effort to pass a bill allowing gays and lesbians to marry.

Katie’s husband Martin has taken a much more active role in pushing a marriage bill through the legislature this session, after being criticized by LGBT equality groups for not personally investing in the measure last year. O’Malley’s support for same-sex marriage was largely contained “to private conversations with lawmakers. He made no mention of the legislation in his agenda-setting State of the State speech.”

This year, O’Malley is pushing full-steam ahead and has introduce a bill that includes additional conscience protections for religious organizations to attract more moderate lawmakers. O’Malley also met with New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg yesterday to discuss that state’s successful effort in enacting a same-sex marriage bill.

Update

O’Malley has apologized for her remarks: “I deeply respect that there are strongly held and differing views on marriage equality in Maryland but hope that our state’s elected officials will come together to fairly address this important issue for our families and children.”

  • Comment Icon

NEWS FLASH

Washington Senate Committee Advances Marriage Equality Bill | The Washington state Senate Government Operations, Tribal Relations & Elections Committee has voted 4-3 to advance the proposed marriage equality bill. A date has not yet been scheduled for the full Senate vote, but both chambers have enough votes to pass the measure into law, and Gov. Christine Gregoire (D) is committed to signing it. Equality opponents have promised a referendum on the bill.

Mitt Romney’s Foundation Funded Ex-Gay Therapy Group

Mitt Romney 2012 tax returns reveal that the former Massachusetts governor donated more than $4 million to the Mormon Church, which is actively opposing marriage equality around the country, and gave “at least $35,000” to anti-gay groups like the Massachusetts Family Institute (MFI) and the Becket Fund through his charitable foundation. As Rachel Maddow and Wayne Benson of Truth Wins Out reported last night, these organizations — particularly MFI — work to undermine equal rights for gays and lesbians, scare parents about the indoctrination of children into homosexuality, and even promote discredited and harmful ex-gay therapy:

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Romney’s patronage of anti-gay causes is a sharp contrast from the 1993 Massachusetts senate candidate who promised to do a better job of fighting for LGBT rights than the late Sen. Ted Kennedy, the Olympics CEO who extended employment protections to gay and lesbian workers, and the governor who initially reached out to the community. The spending also undermines his more recent claims that he doesn’t “discriminate” against gay people and supports their rights.

  • Comment Icon

The Morning Pride: January 27, 2012

Welcome to The Morning Pride, ThinkProgress LGBT’s 8:45 AM round-up of the latest in LGBT policy, politics, and some culture too! Here’s what we’re reading this morning, but let us know what you’re checking out as well. Follow us all day on Twitter at @TPEquality.

- The California Secretary of State has given a conservative group the green light to start collecting signatures to repeal the FAIR Education Act, which requires all school curriculum to be LGBT-inclusive.

- Openly gay Republican presidential candidate Fred Karger has released 10 years of his tax returns standing in front of the George Romney Institute.

- Over 71 percent of college first-year students support marriage equality.

- The Santa Fe City Council has unanimously voted to oppose the proposed New Mexico Defense of Marriage Act constitutional amendment.

- Focus on the Family tries to play down a study that shows cohabitation is actually better for couples than marriage.

- The National Organization for Marriage has the hubris to still believe it can spend $2 million to overhaul the New York legislature in an unprecedented way to overturn marriage equality.

- Fox News continues to trivialize anti-gay bullying by defending a student who wrote a school newspaper article calling for gay people to be executed.

- Sen. Al Franken (D-MN) is HRC’s latest American for Marriage Equality.

- A new film documents the work of Ugandan gay activist David Kato, who was murdered a year ago yesterday. Watch a trailer for “Call Me Kuchu”:

- The Madison, Wisconsin LGBT community made this fantastic “It Gets Better” video using Lady Gaga’s song, “Hair”:

- Remember to follow #cc12 throughout the weekend for all kinds of wisdom from Creating Change, the National Conference on LGBT Equality.

  • Comment Icon

Switch to Mobile
ThinkProgress Signup Overlay Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress

Sign Up