WASHINGTON (AP) â" The Democratic National Convention is a watershed event for Americaâs gay rights movement, which never before has been embraced so warmly by a major political party.
Thereâs a platform endorsing same-sex marriage, a roster of speakers that includes three gay members of Congress, and a record number of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender delegates hailing from all 50 states â" 486 in all, more than 8 percent of the total.
ââWe've been an underrepresented demographic in politics for a long time,ââ said Jerame Davis of National Stonewall Democrats, a gay-rights affiliate of the party. ââFinally seeing us appropriately represented is just a thrill.ââ
The large role for gays and lesbians is a striking contrast with last weekâs Republican convention, which ratified a platform opposing gay-rights priorities and was attended by perhaps a few dozen openly gay delegates. It also shows how far the Democrats have evolved since Bill Clinton, now a staunch supporter of same-sex marriage, signed a bipartisan bill in 1996 defining marriage as a one-man, one-woman union.
President Barack Obama took office in 2009 as a self-described ââfierce advocateââ for gay rights, yet for much of his first term he drew flak from impatient activists. They were frustrated that he wouldnât endorse same-sex marriage and wanted him to move faster to enable gays and lesbians to serve openly in the military.
The militaryâs ââdonât ask, donât tellââ policy was repealed a year ago, and in May the president completed what he had called a personal ââevolutionââ by endorsing gay marriage. Within days of that announcement, previously reticent gay donors pumped several million dollars into Obamaâs campaign fund, and his backing from the gay-rights groups has been enthusiastic ever since.
The Democratsâ convention in Charlotte, N.C., this week serves as a celebration by those groups and their supporters, many of whom thronged into gay-oriented events on Tuesday. They were looking forward to speeches from three gay Democrats in the House â" Reps. Jared Polis of Colorado, Barney Frank of Massachusetts and Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, who is campaigning to become the first openly gay U.S. senator.
Polis, who introduced himself as a gay father, was one of several speakers during the opening session to evoke the partyâs newly formalized support for same-sex marriage.
ââThe America that I believe in ... is one in which loving familes of all forms are respected and celebrated as the backbone of society,ââ he said, ââDiversity is Americaâs strength.ââ
The convention marks the first time that goals were set for each state delegation in regard to how many LGBT delegates they should include. According to the Stonewall Democrats, 38 delegations met or exceeded their goal, and three statesâ"Alaska, Arkansas and Mississippiâ"have openly gay delegates for the first time.
Davis acknowledged that 8 percent of the delegates might seem like an overrepresentation of gays and lesbians, given that many experts believe their share of the adult U.S. population is less than half that figure. But Davis argued that the delegate share accurately reflected gaysâ importance to the Democratic Party in terms of financial support and voter loyalty.
Robert Loevy, a political science professor at Colorado College, agreed that the large LGBT contingent made political sense even it prompted a backlash from social conservatives.
ââThe Democrats were never going to get those votes anyway,ââ Loevy said. ââHaving gays and lesbians be such a strong presence in the party brings in some campaign workers and brings in the money... And most important, it wins the support of young people.ââ
The Republican Party, by contrast, did not try to tally the number of gay delegates at its convention in Tampa, Fla. R. Clarke Cooper of Log Cabin Republicans, which represents gay GOP voters, estimated that there were ââa few dozenââ gay and lesbian delegates, and said he was glad that his party ââdoesnât do identity politics.ââ
ââI'd hate to think I'd been selected for something because of my orientation,ââ said Cooper, suggesting that the Democratic Party and the Obama administration risked being viewed as pandering to gays as part of a ââdivide-and-conquerââ strategy catering to special-interest groups.
Looking ahead to future elections, Cooper says heâs optimistic that the Republican Party will move away from anti-gay stands and become more attractive to gay voters. He noted that billionaire industrialist David Koch, a major donor to GOP campaigns this year, recently told Politico he favors legalization of same-sex marriageContinued...
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