« Home | DNC Chairman Dean Proud of New Hampshire Civil Uni... » | Conservative Black Pastors Fight To Defeat Bill on... » | Transitioning to New Gender a Big Win for LA Times... » | West Palm Beach To Protect Transgender Residents » | Iowa Legislators Support Bill Protecting Gay Right... » | GBLT Community Making headlines and History in Pue... » | CALL TO ACTION: From Lambda Legal…Sign Up to "Cloc... » | UPDATE: Oregon House OKs Domestic Partnerships » | CALL TO ACTION: Tell Legislators to Pass New Feder... » | CALL TO ACTION: Paper Trail For ALL Florida Electi... »

Gay Lawmakers Have Impact on Gaining Rights

When Connecticut state Rep. Beth Bye's turn came to speak about the need for her legislature to approve gay marriage, she tearfully recalled her devout Catholic father's loving participation in her civil union ceremony, then described the pain of being excluded from actual marriage.

The freshman lawmaker recounted filling out a health care form: Her choices were "married," "divorced," "widowed," "single" or "other."

"Forgive me if I'm not patient," Bye told Connecticut's joint House-Senate Judiciary Committee. "I don't want to be 'other' anymore. I want to be married."

Bye's touching plea helped create a lopsided victory -- the 27-15 committee vote that endorsed opening marriage to gay couples. Gay marriage now goes to the full state House and Senate. (To watch Bye's moving testimonial, go to lmfct.org .)

Connecticut's breakthrough is one in a series of astonishing gay advances in the past three weeks. The headline-grabbing victories shared one thing in common: A gay lawmaker played a key role.

"We have seen in the last month at almost every major win, almost always there is an openly gay legislator behind that story," says Denis Dison of the Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund, which helps elect openly gay or transgender officials, who now number 370.

Here's a quick tick tock:

· April 12: Connecticut's Judiciary Committee overwhelmingly approves same-sex marriage.

· April 19: Oregon Senate votes, 19-7, to ban discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity in housing, employment, public accommodations and public education. The House did as well, 35-25. Oregon's House also passed a domestic partner bill, 34-26, on April 17, which would grant gay couples the state-level rights of marriage. The Senate is expected to follow suit. Gov. Ted Kulongoski, a Democrat, promises to sign both bills.

· April 21: Washington state Gov. Chris Gregoire, a Democrat, signs a domestic partnership bill, giving gay couples important marriage-like rights.

· April 24: Out gay U.S. Reps. Barney Frank, D-Mass., and Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., help reintroduce legislation to ban job discrimination based on sexual orientation and for the first time include gender identity. The bill's prospects are encouraging.

· April 25: Iowa's House votes 59-37 to ban discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity at work and many other places. Hours later, the Senate agrees, 34-16. Democratic Gov. Chet Culver says he'll sign the protections into law. (Iowa and Oregon will bring to 19 the states prohibiting anti-gay job discrimination and to 10 those banning anti-transgender discrimination.)

· April 26: New Hampshire's Senate follows its House by embracing civil unions, 14-10. Gov. John Lynch, a Democrat, says he'll sign it. So New Hampshire, which hosts the first 2008 presidential primary, will be the fourth civil union state. It is the first state to act without being prodded by a lawsuit.

· April 27: Five years after a gay state senator pushed for marriage equality, New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer, a Democrat, becomes the first governor to introduce gay marriage legislation.
If you ever wonder whether it's important for gay people to risk being out at work, just review this wonderful list. Gay lawmakers are rocketing our country forward.

Reach Deb Price at dprice@detnews.com or (202) 662-8736.

For all information related to this story please see:
http://detroitnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070430/OPINION03/704300310