Obama and The Gays

If you’re a Democrat, it isn’t really a contest. We all know the record of the Clintons on gay equality. In the words of Melissa Etheridge, they "threw us under the bus" when it was politically expedient for them (after they’d bled the gay community financially dry). Here are a few YouTubes of Obama’s public, proud and often risky defenses of gay and lesbian equality – in front of non-gay audiences and not prompted by questions. The Ebenezer sermon, when he called on black congregants in MLK’s church not to condemn or ostracize their "gay brothers and sisters" (after the 9 minute mark). The AU speech (around the 9 minute mark again). His stump speech, "Countdown To Change." Obama was the only Democratic candidate to mention gay and lesbian equality in his announcement address. In South Carolina, he spoke of the importance of gay outreach to religious voters.

I’ve had two core principles in my own work in defense of gay equality: supporting the simple equality of gays and straights under the law; opposing the toxins of identity politics and a balkanized gay identity. The way Obama transcends his own multiple identities, the way he both embraces his difference and yet seeks a common political discourse: this is the model that makes the most sense to me. Neither denying difference nor being defined by it is a path all minorities would be better off pursuing. And Obama’s call for self-empowerment rather than self-defeating victimology is particularly apposite for gays and lesbians.