President Obama Declares Support for Gay Marriage

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Obama backs gay marriage
By: Jennifer Epstein
May 9, 2012 11:03 AM EDT

For President Barack Obama and his top political advisers, the decision to back gay marriage came down to a choice between two unpalatable alternatives: support it and brave the backlash in battleground states where the issue could be a liability – or keep silent and be accused by allies of gutlessness and putting politics over his principle.

In the end, people close to the president say, it was a no-brainer: The core of their argument against Mitt Romney is that he is an untrustworthy politician with no real core of conviction. Obama’s advisers – who are acutely conscious of the media’s criticism despite their professed contempt for the news cycle – simply couldn’t afford to have the president appear like a coward on the front and editorial pages of The New York Times and The Washington Post, according to senior Democrats.

And so the president took the final step in his “evolving” views of a major gay rights issue on Wednesday.

(See also: 11 Obama quotes on gay marriage)

“I’ve just concluded that for me personally it is important for me to go ahead and affirm that I think same-sex couples should be able to get married,” Obama said in a White House interview with ABC News' Robin Roberts.

Obama’s endorsement of gay marriage, the first ever from a sitting president, came amid growing pressure for the president to clarify his previously muddled opinion, as two senior members of his administration announced personal support for gay marriage and a day after voters in North Carolina approved a state constitutional amendment defining marriage as a union between a man and a woman.

The switch was also hotly anticipated – and much sought – among many LGBT and progressive voters who were frustrated that the president would not speak out in favor of gay marriage despite the rest of his record on gay rights issues.

Obama acknowledged that he was waiting to take that last step Wednesday.

“I’ve stood on the side of broader equality for the LGBT community. I hesitated on gay marriage in part because I thought civil unions would be sufficient,” Obama said Wednesday. “I was sensitive to the fact that for a lot of people, the word ‘marriage’ evokes very powerful traditions, religious beliefs.”

Obama’s pivot came close on the heels of Vice President Joe Biden’s acknowledgement Sunday on “Meet the Press” that he is “absolutely comfortable” with men marrying men and women marrying women, and Education Secretary Arne Duncan’s confirmation in an interview Monday on MSNBC that he also supports gay marriage.

Roberts said during a special report on ABC on Wednesday afternoon that Obama said he’d planned to announce his changed views on gay marriage before the election in November, though perhaps not this soon. But, Roberts indicated, the president wasn’t upset that Biden and Duncan had spoken out.

Obama said Wednesday he is confident that support for gay marriage will continue to expand over time. When he visits college campuses, it’s clear that students “are much more comfortable with it” than older generations.

The same is true for his daughters. “You know, Malia and Sasha, they have friends whose parents are same-sex couples,” Obama said. “There have been times where Michelle and I have been sitting around the dinner table and we’re talking about their friends and their parents and Malia and Sasha, it wouldn’t dawn on them that somehow their friends’ parents would be treated differently. It doesn’t make sense to them, and frankly, that’s the kind of thing that prompts a change in perspective.”

First lady Michelle Obama’s views on gay marriage were also influential in the decision making, he said.

“This is something that, you know, we’ve talked about over the years and she, you know, she feels the same way, she feels the same way that I do,” the president said. “In the end, the values that I care most deeply about and she cares most deeply about is how we treat other people.”

Though supporting gay marriage could put them at odds with other Christians, Obama said that when he and his wife think about their faith, “the thing at root that we think about is, not only Christ sacrificing himself on our behalf, but it’s also the Golden Rule, you know, treat others the way you would want to be treated. And I think that’s what we try to impart to our kids and that’s what motivates me as president and I figure the most consistent I can be in being true to those precepts, the better I’ll be as a dad and a husband and hopefully the better I’ll be as president.”

Obama said in late 2010 that his views on gay marriage were “evolving” and, since then, administration officials have pointed back to those comments, stressing that Obama is a supporter of gay rights who has overseen the end of “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” and whose Justice Department has stopped defending the Defense of Marriage Act.

A Gallup poll released Tuesday showed that 50 percent of Americans said they support the legalization of gay marriage, while 65 percent of Democrats and 57 percent of independents said the same. But support for gay marriage doesn’t reach across party lines — among Republicans surveyed, 27 percent said they support legalizing gay marriage.

On Tuesday, 61 percent of voters North Carolina — a state that Obama won in 2008 and that’s considered key to many of his paths to a second term — approved a ballot measure strengthening the state’s ban on gay marriage with a constitutional amendment doing the same. The Obama campaign said in a statement that “President Obama has long believed that gay and lesbian couples deserve the same rights and legal protections as straight couples and is disappointed in the passage of this amendment.”

Facing a barrage of questions during his daily briefing on Monday, White House press secretary Jay Carney said that “the president is the right person to describe his own personal views” – something Obama finally did on Wednesday afternoon.

Richard Socarides, who advised President Bill Clinton on LGBT issues, said that because of Obama’s comments, Wednesday would “go down in the history of the gay rights movement with Stonewall as a real turning point.” Socarides said he had been hearing for at least six months that Obama had made up his mind to support gay marriage but had been waiting for the right time to speak out on his views. “After Biden’s comments on Sunday, it was clear he had to say something.”

Obama said it in the right way, said Evan Wolfson, president of Freedom to Marry. “The president could not have made the case better and will undoubtedly help persuade Americans who have been wrestling with this question,” he said. “The more people who speak out for the freedom to marry and how they got there, the better it is. And when the president of the United States is one of those people, it will move the country even further along.”

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney backs a federal Constitutional amendment banning gay marriage and was opposed to the Massachusetts state court decision legalizing gay marriage that came down while he was governor.

“My view is that marriage itself is a relationship between a man and a woman, and that’s my own preference,” Romney said at a brief press conference in Oklahoma City after Obama’s remarks were released. “I know other people have differing views – this is a very tender and sensitive topic, as are many social issues. But I have the same view that I’ve had since running for office.”

RNC chairman Reince Priebus said in a statement that “[w]hile President Obama has played politics on this issue, the Republican Party and our presumptive nominee Mitt Romney have been clear. We support maintaining marriage between one man and one woman and would oppose any attempts to change that.”

Wednesday afternoon, Obama campaign spokesman Ben LaBolt fired back, immediately thrusting the Obama decision into the campaign.

“We’ve amended Constitution to expand rights. Romney, RNC on record saying they want to enshrine discrimination into it,” LaBolt tweeted.

Glenn Thrush contributed to this report.

 © 2012 POLITICO LLC

Comments

It is politics

I am sorry to say that while Obama's "views on this subject are evolving" that he seems to be playing a nasty game of politics with the LGBT community. He has stated in the past that it does not agree with his religiuos upbring and now that his views are evolving, in an election year, now he say's that in his personal opinion, not his official one as president, that he is OK with it. All while not bothering to mention North Carolina's vote to have thier state constition define marriage as between a man and woman.
I really hate it when the press allows these things to be misrepresented.

James

Oh, yeah, it's politics

I think the idea that he was beginning to lose his grip on a previously solid voting block (the LGBT community) had a lot to do with this. I have been pushing the idea on some LGBT forums I'm a member of that if Obama didn't get off the pot that we all should leave the presidential ballot blank in November. And I was getting some agreement from others. Vote on everything else, just don't vote at all on president. I'm pretty sure most of us wouldn't vote for Romney, and not voting for Obama if he can't come out and support us could send a pretty strong message that we are fed up with the status quo. Not saying this had anything significant impact, but each little piece makes up the larger picture.

If you are unwilling to lead, get the hell outta the way!


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

Not voting

When you don't vote FOR a particular person/office, it is a vote FOR the opposing person/party. Whether you agree with Obama coming out in favor or same-GENDER marriage (let's please get the SEX out of this issue as it plays right to the opponents hands) or don't like his NOT supporting it openly, if you don't vote for him, you do not offset any votes for Romney who you KNOW will do everything he can to destroy same-gender marriage.
Instead of thinking about voting for, against or not at all with someone not actively supporting your cause, try thinking of it as voting AGAINST the guy you can be absolutely sure will oppose all you believe in. The RNC is trying to get LGBT members to think just the way you are in order to scare off voters FOR Obama so there'll be less votes AGAINST Romney.
For clarity: Romney wins the election by 75,000 votes. 150,000 LGBT members chose not to vote for president at all. Had they voted for Obama AGAINST Romney, who would have won? US!!! By 75,000 votes. We'd have defeated the definite loss of all of our rights nationwide.
He'd be pushing for a US Amendment to ban same-gender marriage. You can bank on that.

Hugs,
Erica

Too bad

As the saying goes: "If you aren't part of the solution you are part of the problem". I got kicked off one website because I wasn't willing to wait "until after the election". Which election, what year, what decade? Nobody specifies that minor detail. People keep voting for these guys in exchange for nebulous promises that are never redeemed due to "political expediency". Well, you know what? I'm more than willing to take them down for not doing what they promise. When I grew up, a man (or woman) didn't make promises they knew they wouldn't keep. If you don't keep your word, then you're a liar, and I don't knowingly vote for liars. In any party!

Understand, I can support a party's congressional candidates even if I won't vote for their presidential candidate. IF Romney were to be elected he still has to get his agenda through Congress. So I'm not going into a full-blown panic like some. But if Obama and Pelosi want to play politics with people's rights like they did the first two years of his administration, then why shouldn't we? Maybe four years from now the Demos will have learned a lesson.

I've waited a long time (40+ years), I've been patient. I'm old and I'm tired. I'm mad too! I want it now!


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

I have to say I agree more

I have to say I agree more with Karen's view with all respects. I wouldn't vote for Romney with a ten-foot pole, but neither would I vote for Obama. Why? Because they're politicians who play politics. As someone who worked for the state government, I lost my job because of politicians playing one-upmanship with the state budget for their own political gain meaning a budget hasn't been passed and some offices have had to let people go because of it.

No more. I honestly wish that we would get out of this two-party system and have legitimate third and fourth parties for people to really have a choice. But that's me. Am I happy Obama came out in support? Yes in a way, though I will believe it when I see it more than hear it honestly.

Samirah M. Johnstone

If you don't

If you don't vote for Obama, you are voting for Romney. You are also voting for Paul Ryan and huge tax cuts for the rich and more "fees" and less money for the middle class and everyone else. you're voting for more "deregulation" of financial markets (remember what that got us?). You're voting for "austerity" economics (ask the Brits here how that's working for them and Ireland and Europe.) You are voting for another war. You are voting for the Koch brothers. You are voting for Rupert Murdoch and his minions. You're voting for hatred and intolerance.

Obama isn't perfect, but I never was looking for a messiah (that's a wingnut mime). He hasn't done all I had hoped; he has done things I abhor. But he has tried! And in the face of a four year Republican't temper tantrum that is something.

BTW

Republicans have only had control of the House for two years. During that time Obama let Pelosi play "politics as usual" to get his health plan passed. As a result anything the Republicans could use to trade for concessions in the health care plan was used, including full and equal rights for the LGBTQ community. And this was with both houses of Congress under Democratic control. Impressed much? I'm not.

Spare me all the sob stories about how people like me not voting are going to destroy the free world. Sounds like the Right Wing nut jobs "New World Order". Wah! Too bad. The status quo has accomplished NOTHING! Lets lob a hand grenade in the middle of it.


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

There's one point I'd like to

There's one point I'd like to make. Obama has expanded military strikes beyond what even Bush did. I read somewhere (I'll see if I can find the link) that one of the people on the Nobel committee were actually now upset they had given him the Nobel Peace prize because he was more militaristic than the last three Republican presidents.

That being said, I am a Ron Paul supporter because I support him pulling American troops back to America, I support his libertarian views and unlike Romney and Obama, he says what he means. Yes *gasp* an honest politician. He doesn't make campaign promises he isn't willing to keep. You can like him or hate him, that doesn't matter. I truly believe in my heart he's the best candidate, but that's my position.

And I disagree that because I'm TS/IS, I HAVE to vote for Obama or else I'm destroying my rights. If that was the case, I'd rather move somewhere else because that isn't what this country was like even in the past. FDR and Wendell Wilkie had several battles during their campaigns against each other, the differences between them were stark, but when FDR won, Wilkie got back to doing what was best for the country. FDR even said that Wilkie was one of those great Americans who could put aside their beliefs in order to help the country, he was a statesman. Neither Obama or Romney are statesmen, that's just a plain fact.

Samirah M. Johnstone

Shannon, Let me start by

KristineRead's picture

Shannon,

Let me start by saying, I agree with you in one sense, we should all be voting based on who is the best candidate overall for the country, not on any one specific issue.

If you were to look at the specific issue of LGBT rights, then President Obama has a record that indicates he is the strongest of the candidates IMHO, even if there are areas we would like him to be better about.

There are plenty of people in this community that when taken as a whole, will support Romney or Ron Paul instead. That is a personal choice that everyone has to make.

For me that choice is President Obama. I'm not a Hawk, but I'm not a dove either. My problem with GWBs military use was Iraq, I never had a problem with Afghanistan. That is where we were attacked from. Iraq was different. Unforutnately, once we went in, you can't just pull out. And so we could not just leave.

My bigger problem with Ron Paul is that I believe that there are things that should be handled at the federal level, which he does not. Health Care, Social Security, amongst them. That is simply my opinion, and is why I won't be a Ron Paul supporter.

Romney is running on and pushing the policies I believe that have led to the economic crash we find ourseles in. I don't believe thet completely unfettered capatilisim is healthy. Again my opinion, others here I'm sure will disagree.

But we can at least agree that everyone should be voting on the overall candidate, and hopefully what's best for the country.

hugs,

Kristy.

I can understand and respect

I can understand and respect your statements, as I said mine are my own beliefs. While Obama says he is personally supportive, I know plenty of Democrats who aren't and would block him trying to institute his plans. Whether we like the President or not, it isn't him who does anything really except as a figurehead. Congress is where we have to change things.

I will agree with you wholeheartedly about Romney. I can't stand the guy, I think he is no better than Rick Santorum who is a danger to LGBT people in my estimation. What I am hoping is that if Ron Paul can continue adding his delegates (as he did with Maine and other states), then maybe, just maybe the Republicans will realize people don't want the same exact politics. Will it still be Romney vs. Obama? Yes, at this point I don't think anyone is denying that.

But I won't vote for Romney, even if I have in the past worked for the Republican party and even if I vote a straight Republican ticket otherwise here in Virginia. I'll write-in Ron Paul if I have to for President. But here's a funny thing that some people don't realize as much because of how GWB has been demonized...

GWB was considered quite moderate in Texas as governor, he actually had the most bipartisanship in the state as far as it goes (even winning the total support of Bob Bullock the Lt. Governor who was a major Democrat who endorsed Bush over the Democrat candidate in Bush's re-election as Governor). What changed when he was President? The whole culture. That's what we should be fighting. The who lobbyist crap that cares only for their bottom dollar and not the lives of American citizens.

I just wish we could disband all these political parties completely and make people stand for election on their own with no party machinery to be beholden to. That would be something I'd love. Sorry, I'll get off my soapbox now.

Samirah M. Johnstone

Meanwhile in the UK...

Today was the State Opening of Parliament and the Queen's Speech, outlining what Dave Cameron and chums plan to do in the next parliamentary session:

Despite having the support of David Cameron, legislation to allow gay marriage will not be brought forward in the next parliamentary session. Ben Summerskill, Chief Executive of the gay rights group Stonewall, said they would "fight on to push both coalition parties to deliver on their promise to implement this measure by 2015." The Home Office said it was committed to introducing same sex marriage, but a consultation on the issue was still ongoing and it was never intended to be included in this Queen's Speech.
Source: BBC News

As for Obama's statement, according to an article elsewhere on BBC News, a recent US opinion poll cited 50% in favour of same-sex marriage and 48% against. Same-sex marriage has been passed in New York, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Iowa, Vermont, Washington DC, Connecticut, Maryland and Washington; while thirty-one US states have banned same-sex marriage through law or constitutional amendment.


As the right side of the brain controls the left side of the body, then only left-handers are in their right mind!

Legal Issues.

Legal Issues.are at the core of this discussion. We were founded on a Decision that our System of Governance is based on Legal issues and not Religious pretests and hatreds. The people were allowed to worship as they see fit with out the government interfering or promoting any religion. All decisions concerning the areas of Government were based on the foundation of Constitutional Law.

In recent years a group of rebels have been trying to steal our country in its entirety by ignoring the Secular aspects of our union of states, and ignoring the fact that law is not based on there say so, but the weighted decision of written Law not mob opinion.

Marriage in the US is of the arena of States Rights and it is the state and local governments who set the legal boundaries and requirements. The local Authorities issue the permit to get married and it is up to the individual to decide if there marriage will be in a city hall or at a church. But the contract of marriage is a legal contract between the couple being married and the state Not the church.
We have the right to be married it is the law which needs to be drafted and the state to recognize it as a legally binding contract. The church has nothing to do with this. The Church is protected by the fact they can not be demanded to perform a gay marriage and within there walls they may not accept it as a religious action but in public they must treat this form of marriage as any other.

With those with open eyes the world reads like a book

celtgirl_0.gif

...all I get are

Andrea Lena's picture

...all I get are promises...promises...This is where those promises, promises end...

Coffee Mug - Far Side Damned if You Do Dont_2.jpg

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

Thank you, Andrea

One of the few sensible things I've seen all day!!! Ain't it the truth?!


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

The bottom line is ...

... who cares why he did it? At this point, do any of you think the President can just "take it back?" Tell everyone he didn't mean it?

Whatever his reasons might be, Obama drew a line in the cliche-filled sand and stood alongside the people the far right love to hate. There is no turning back from this for him. He's chosen a side.To advocate turning away from him now because you think he acted too slowly or made his choice for the wrong reasons — for "politics " — is to help elect people who hate anyone who fits their definition of "not us." They don't 'play' politics. They treat politics as a deadly serious business, lie loudly and often to whoever will listen just to stay in power, and have as their main goal either to preserve the status quo (at the very least), or turn back the clock if they can throw physics out along with evolution and invent time travel!

You know which side of that line you should be standing on. As Captain Mal Reynolds once said, "why are we still talking about this?" *grin*

Randa

Of course

He can. "After further evaluation I have come to the conclusion that full marriage equality would be a mistake at this time. I still believe it will come eventuality but right now it would disturb the precarious equilibrium we have established in the country." Lines in the sand are easily erased. As for treating politics as a deadly serious business, you think the Democrats don't do exactly the same thing? It's just that Obama is too green to actually play politics at this level.

I'm sure you've heard the joke how to tell if a politician is lying? He has his mouth open. Like Obama did today.


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

Obama's LGBT achievements

Frank's picture

FEDERAL LEGISLATION SIGNED INTO LAW

  1. Signed the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, which expanded existing United States federal hate crime law to include crimes motivated by a victim’s actual or perceived gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability -- the first positive federal LGBT legislation in the nation's history
  2. Repealed Don't Ask/Don't Tell
  3. Signed the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Extension Act


POLICIES CHANGED

  1. Reversed US refusal to sign the UN Declaration on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity
  2. Extended benefits to same-sex partners of federal employees in 2009 and, further, in 2010
  3. Lifted the HIV Entry Ban
  4. Issued diplomatic passports, and provided other benefits, to the partners of same-sex foreign service employees
  5. Committed to ensuring that federal housing programs are open to all, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity
  6. Conceived a National Resource Center for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Elders -- the nation's first ever -- funded by a three-year HHS grant to SAG
  7. Banned job discrimination based on gender identity throughout the Federal government (the nation's largest employer)
  8. Eliminated the discriminatory Census Bureau policy that kept our relationships from being counted, encouraging couples who consider themselves married to file that way, even if their state of residence does not yet permit legal marriage
  9. Instructed HHS to require any hospital receiving Medicare or Medicaid funds (virtually all hospitals) to allow LGBT visitation rights
  10. Required all grant applicants seeking HUD funding to comply with state and local anti-discrimination laws that protect LGBT individuals
  11. Adopted transgender recommendations on the issuance of gender-appropriate passports that will ease barriers to safe travel and that will provide government-issued ID that avoids involuntary "outing" in situations requiring ID, like hiring, where a gender-appropriate driver's license or birth certificate is not available
  12. Extended domestic violence protections to LGBT victims
  13. Extended the Family and Medical Leave Act to cover employees taking unpaid leave to care for the children of same-sex partners
  14. Issued guidance to assist tenants denied housing on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity and banned LGBT discrimination in all HUD-assisting housing and HUD-assisted loans 
  15. Issued a National HIV/AIDS Strategy praised as "long-overdue" by the Task Force, Lambda and others
  16. Issued guidance to 15,000 local departments of education and 5,000 colleges to support educators in combating bullying
  17. Cut back authority to discharge under Don't Ask/Don't Tell from hundreds of generals to just 6 civilian appointees, effectively ending discharges while working toward a permanent end to the policy.
  18. Led the fight that reversed a 2010 UN vote removing sexual orientation from the list of things people should not be killed for 
  19. Launched the first-ever national study of discrimination against members of the LGBT community in the rental and sale of housing
  20. Determined that Section 3 of DOMA is unconstitutional
  21. Determined that LGBT discrimination should be subject to a standard of "heightened scrutiny"
  22. Stopped defending DOMA, leading to "dramatic changes across the country and the federal government in the way that lawyers and judges see legal challenges brought by LGBT people - and, slowly but surely, in the way that LGBT people are able to live their lives" 
  23. Filed an unprecedented brief detailing the history of discrimination faced by gay, lesbian and bisexual people in America, including by the federal government itself -- the single most persuasive legal argument ever advanced by the United States government in support of equality for lesbian, gay and bisexual people
  24. Vacated a court order that would have deported a gay American's Venezuelan partner 
  25. Begun recognizing joint bankruptcy petitions filed by same-sex married couples
  26. Endorsed the Respect for Marriage Act
  27. Reduced the deportation threat faced by binational LGBT couples
  28. Authorized military chaplains to perform same-sex weddings on or off military bases
  29. Upped the nation's commitment to fighting HIV/AIDS at home and abroad
  30. Launched a muscular, game-changing campaign for global LGBT equality, highlighted by the Secretary of State in a half-hour address to the United Nations
  31. Extended the gender-based employment discrimination protections of the 1964 Civil Rights Act to transgender employees
  32. Added an LGBT representative to the diversity program at each of the nations 120 federal prisons


RESPECT & INCLUSION

  1. Endorsed the Baldwin-Lieberman bill, The Domestic Partnership Benefits and Obligations Act of 2009, to provide FULL partnership benefits to federal employees
  2. Released the first Presidential PRIDE proclamations since 2000
  3. Hosted the first LGBT Pride Month Celebration in White House history
  4. Awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Harvey Milk and Billie Jean King, joining past recipients such as Rosa Parks
  5. Appointed the first ever transgender DNC member
  6. Testified in favor of ENDA, the first time any official of any administration has testified in the Senate on ENDA
  7. Hired more openly LGBT officials (like these) in its first two years -- more than 150, including more than 20 "Senate-confirmables" -- than any previous administration hired in four years or eight
  8. Sworn in Ambassador David Huebner
  9. Changed the culture of government everywhere from – among others – HUD and HHS to the Export-Import Bank, the State Department, and the Department of Education
  10. Appointed Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, instead of conservatives who would have tilted the Court even further to the right and virtually doomed our rights for a generation.  To wit (quoting McCain): "I've said a thousand times on this campaign trail, I've said as often as I can, that I want to find clones of Alito and Roberts.  I worked as hard as anybody to get them confirmed. I look you in the eye and tell you I've said a thousand times that I wanted Alito and Roberts.  I have told anybody who will listen. I flat-out tell you I will have people as close to Roberts and Alito [as possible]."
  11. Named open transgender appointees (the first President ever to do so)
  12. Emphasized LGBT inclusion in everything from the President’s historic NAACP address (“The pain of discrimination is still felt in America.  By African American women paid less for doing the same work as colleagues of a different color and a different gender.  By Latinos made to feel unwelcome in their own country.  By Muslim Americans viewed with suspicion simply because they kneel down to pray to their God.  By our gay brothers and sisters, still taunted, still attacked, still denied their rights.”) . . . to the first paragraph of his Family Day proclamation (“Whether children are raised by two parents, a single parent, grandparents, a same-sex couple, or a guardian, families encourage us to do our best and enable us to accomplish great things”) and his Mothers Day proclamation ("Nurturing families come in many forms, and children may be raised by two parents, a single mother, two mothers, a step-mom, a grandmother, or a guardian.  Mother's Day gives us an opportunity to celebrate these extraordinary caretakers") . . . to creating the chance for an adorable 10-year-old at the White House Easter Egg roll to tell ABC World News how cool it is to have two mommies . . . to including the chair of the National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce along with the Secretary of the Treasury and the President of Goldman Sachs in the small audience for the President’s economic address at the New York Stock Exchange . . . to welcoming four gay couples to its first State Dinner
  13. Recommitted, in a televised address, to passing ENDA . . . repealing Don’t Ask/Don’t Tell  . . . repealing the so-called Defense of Marriage Act
  14. Spoken out against discrimination at the National Prayer Breakfast ("We may disagree about gay marriage, but surely we can agree that it is unconscionable to target gays and lesbians for who they are -- whether it's here in the United States or, as Hillary mentioned, more extremely in odious laws that are being proposed most recently in Uganda.")
  15. Dispatched the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to call on the Senate to repeal Don't Ask / Don't Tell
  16. Launched a website to gather public comment on first-ever federal LGBT housing discrimination study
  17. Appointed long-time equality champion Chai Feldblum one of the four Commissioners of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
  18. Produced U.S. Census Bureau PSAs featuring gay, lesbian, and transgender spokespersons
  19. Appointed Retired Colonel Margarethe Cammermeyer, an early public champion of open service in the military, to the Defense Advisory Committee on Women in the Services
  20. Publicly invited the shunned MIssissippi high school prom student to the White House
  21. Successfully fought for UN accreditation of IGLHRC (the International Gay & Lesbian Human Rights Commission) -- against Republican attempts to block it
  22. Convened the first-ever anti-bullying summit to craft a national strategy to reduce bullying in schools
  23. Launched stopbullying.gov
  24. Awarded $13.3 million to the LA Gay & Lesbian Center to create a model program for LGBTQ youth in the foster care system
  25. Tweeted to 5.7 million BarackObama followers and nearly 2 million WhiteHouse followers the President's "It Gets Better" video
  26. Embraced that campaign with heartfelt messages from, as well, the Vice President, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Agriculture (aimed particularly at rural youth), the Secretaries of Education and Health & Human Services, the Secretary of Labor (in English and Spanish), the Director of OPM and LGBT members of the White House staff
  27. Issued a Department of Justice video urging kids to call a Justice Department toll-free number if their school is aware of bullying but taking no action
  28. Held the first ever White House conference on bullying prevention, led by the President and First Lady
  29. Hosted first-ever White House transgender policy meeting
  30. Emphasized the positive value of Gay-straight Student Alliances (GSAs) and advised the nation's school districts of their legal responsibility to allow establishment of GSAs
  31. Appointed the first openly gay man to serve on the federal bench
  32. Nominated the first open lesbian US attorney
  33. Nominated the first openly gay US attorney to serve Texas
  34. Forced the Tehachipi Unified School District to prevent and respond to gender-based harassment 
  35. Acknowledged in federal court the U.S. government's "significant and regrettable role" in discrimination in America against gays and lesbians, arguing that DOMA is unconstitutional. ("This is your U.S. Justice Department, folks, forcefully, stunningly taking on the homophobes in Congress and a huge Obama WIN." -- Rex Wockner) 
  36. Appointed open lesbian activist to West Point advisory board
  37. Used the President's annual United Nations address to say, "no country should deny people their rights because of who they love, which is why we must stand up for the rights of gays and lesbians everywhere."
  38. Presented Janice Langbehn with the Presidential Citizens Award for her role in securing hospital visitation rights
  39. Convened the first-ever White House LGBT Elder Housing summit
  40. Endorsed the Student Non-Discrimination Act and the Safe Schools improvement Act targeting discrimination and bullying based on sexual orientation and gender identity
  41. Endorsed marriage equality

 

Hugs

Frank

Thanks, Frank

It's an impressive list, made more so by the fact that he didn't have to do any of it.

You know, folks, the enemy of your enemy may not exactly be your friend ... but you don't throw him to the wolves just because he didn't turn to fight them when you WANTED him to. Maybe he was fighting them in other ways all along, and you just didn't see.

Besides, as a wise Klingon captain once said, "only a fool fights in a burning house." *grin*

Randa

How

Show me how he didn't do any of it. Can I have some links please? Or at the very least some explanation. You can't make things true by saying them unless you have, at least, a radio show.

uh...

She said he didn't HAVE to, not that he DIDN'T. Big difference of meaning.

Abigail Drew.

Didn't HAVE to???

Andrea Lena's picture

...oh...that's quite different...

304_cold_open.jpg
Never mind....

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

Ohhhh

Sorry. I look at too too many wingnut blogs and it makes me all grrrrr too much, but I want to so peeps can't say I live in a bubble (once and a long, long while they have a point). I need to take a reading comprehension course I guess.

S'k

I think all of us need some remedial work on our reading comprehension sometimes.

It's part of human nature to see only what we "want" to see... even if consciously we'd much rather see something else, sometimes our subconscious makes other decisions for us. If you've been reading too many blogs by people who're negative, then I can see where the whole expecting to see something negative would come from. Even if you'd REALLY rather see something positive, your subconscious has already been programmed to read things negative.

Well, rejoice, for this time, it WAS something positive! ;P

Abigail Drew.

Thanks Frank

KristineRead's picture

Thank you for putting out this list.

Certainly there were politics involved in putting this out today, and it is clear that the VP's comments this weekend, pushed it sooner. But I think his record speaks pretty clearly that tthis is the direction he has been headed for some time. And if anyone really thinks that voting for Romey is going to be a better alternative on this issue... Just sayin...

Think what you like about the President, but no President has done more for this community.

Just remember

The statement today was his personal opinion, and did not commit the Office of the President to push anything forward to make it happen. I've got a lot of personal opinions but I don't act on very many of them. He made a non-binding statement which, while it was very nice to hear, changes nothing.


"Life is not measured by the breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.”
George Carlin

But...

Given thirty-one US states have banned same-sex1 marriage through law or constitutional amendment; and increasing numbers of states are implementing their own laws in various other areas of legislation that are contrary to federal legislation; is it actually possible for any President to successfully implement a nationwide law allowing same-sex marriage? Even if they did, do so in such a way that would prohibit courts being hit by a barrage of appeals?

Realistically, Obama's statement means absolutely nothing other than he'd like to see same-sex marriage at some indeterminate point in the future. Even then, there might have to be a preliminary first stage, for example "Civil Partnerships" (as in the UK), which are legally identical to marriage but by virtue of being an entirely separate legal structure and being called something different, are more acceptable to some with conservative religious beliefs.

The irony over here is that although civil partnerships and marriage are legally identical, because they're encoded in separate legal structures it's a pointless duplication (and has been stated here previously, also causes problems for couples with a TG partner as to keep their relationship legal, they have to annul their marriage and take up a civil partnership). In effect, practically the only difference between the two structures is semantics, but those opposing the obvious simplification of the law try to make it out as much more (usually citing the same arguments with regards to their deity, biological procreation, etc.)


As the right side of the brain controls the left side of the body, then only left-handers are in their right mind!

I understand that Karen, but

KristineRead's picture

I understand that Karen, but what exactly do you think he and Pelosi could have done?

Federal Law cannot make marraige legal in all 50 states. The best he could do would be to repeal DOMA, and the fact is even when they controlled both houses, that would not have gotten thru the Senate, and would not make it legal in all 50 states.

The only thing that could do that quickly would be a Supreme Court ruling that nullify's such laws. And President Obama is much more likely to appoint judges that would do that, then the alternative.

It sucks that this is still an issue, as it is so clearly un-constitutional. But it is overall a major social change, and regardless of the laws on the books, changing societies view on this issue is not easy, but it is happening. And no this doesn't help us today, and that sucks, but its a necessary step.