A Message From HRC’s Pres Joe Solmonese
December 19, 2008 by James Hipps · Leave a Comment
Have you heard the latest news on plans for the Presidential Inauguration?
On Wednesday, the Presidential Inaugural Committee invited anti-LGBT and Prop. 8 supporter Rev. Rick Warren to give the invocation at the Presidential inauguration.
Within hours, this announcement unleashed a deservedly loud cry from the Human Rights Campaign and the community at large. Indeed, our frustration has been voiced on blogs, radio, TV and print news across the country (check out HRC’s Harry Knox on NBC Nightly News and my editorial in the Washington Post below).
Today, I am writing to you because we have a chance to turn all of our energy and outrage into action. Make no mistake - this is a moment of opportunity we must not squander.
President-elect Obama may not change his mind on Rev. Warren, but he can turn the corner on this controversy by officially committing to HRC’s Blueprint for Positive Change - a concrete plan for LGBT equality.
Ask President-elect Obama to support HRC’s Blueprint for Positive Change — a Five-Point plan for LGBT Equality in America.
Our community worked tirelessly for Obama’s election. We staffed the phones. We walked the neighborhoods. We talked to our families and friends.
Obama’s election night victory filled us with great pride and joy. But the following day, our community was hit hard when we knew that Prop. 8 had passed and Californian’s legal marriage rights were dismantled.
Yesterday, President-elect Obama defended his selection of Rev. Warren by saying “I am a fierce advocate for equality for gay and lesbian Americans.” That makes me believe Obama can restore our trust by taking action and hearing from all of us.
Ask President-elect Obama to support HRC’s Blueprint for Positive Change.
Once you send your message to President-elect Obama, please forward this e-mail to your loved ones urging them to join you.
I am so grateful and so honored to work with you every day. And in these troubling times, the support we give to one another is a tremendous comfort and blessing. I look forward to the hard, but critical, work ahead as we fight for equality for all Americans.
Warmly,
Joe Solmonese
President
Rick (Anti-Gay) Warren to Give Inaugural Invocation
December 18, 2008 by James Hipps · Leave a Comment
President elect Obama has invited Rick Warren to give the invocation at his inaugeration. This is a bit disturbing being that Rick Warren recently compared same-sex marriage to pedophilia, incest and polygamy, not to mention the fact Rick Warren lied about Obama during the campaign by stating he supported Proposition 8. Rick Warren also actively advocates denying a woman’s right to choose. Many of us in the LGBT community are not taking this lightly, including HRC President Joe Solmonese. Below is a copy of his letter to Mr. Obama.
Dear President-elect Obama,
Let me get right to the point. Your invitation to Reverend Rick Warren to deliver the invocation at your inauguration is a genuine blow to LGBT Americans. Our loss in California over the passage of Proposition 8 which stripped loving, committed same-sex couples of their given legal right to marry is the greatest loss our community has faced in 40 years. And by inviting Rick Warren to your inauguration, you have tarnished the view that gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender Americans have a place at your table.
Rick Warren has not sat on the sidelines in the fight for basic equality and fairness. In fact, Rev. Warren spoke out vocally in support of Prop 8 in California saying, “there is no need to change the universal, historical definition of marriage to appease 2 percent of our population … This is not a political issue — it is a moral issue that God has spoken clearly about.” Furthermore, he continues to misrepresent marriage equality as silencing his religious views. This was a lie during the battle over Proposition 8, and it’s a lie today.
Rev. Warren cannot name a single theological issue that he and vehemently, anti-gay theologian James Dobson disagree on. Rev. Warren is not a moderate pastor who is trying to bring all sides together. Instead, Rev. Warren has often played the role of general in the cultural war waged against LGBT Americans, many of whom also share a strong tradition of religion and faith.
We have been moved by your calls to religious leaders to own up to the homophobia and racism that has stood in the way of combating HIV and AIDS in this country. And that you have publicly called on religious leaders to open their hearts to their LGBT family members, neighbors and friends.
But in this case, we feel a deep level of disrespect when one of architects and promoters of an anti-gay agenda is given the prominence and the pulpit of your historic nomination. Only when Rev. Warren and others support basic legislative protections for LGBT Americans can we believe their claim that they are not four-square against our rights and dignity. In that light, we urge you to reconsider this announcement.
Sincerely,
Joe Solmonese
President
Human Rights Campaign
In Obama’s defense, Linda Douglass, a spokeswoman for Obama, defended the choice of Warren by stating;
“This is going to be the most inclusive, open, accessible inauguration in American history. The president-elect certainly disagrees with him on [lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender] issues, but it has always been his goal to find common ground with people with whom you may disagree on some issues.”
Douglass also notes that Obama and Warren agree on several issues, including advocating on behalf of the poor, the disadvantaged and people who suffer from HIV/AIDS.
Do you want to contact Barack Obama about this issue? Here’s how:
You can emailBarack Obama through his websites or one of his social networking accounts:SENATE EMAILhttp://obama.senate.gov/contact/PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN EMAILhttp://www.barackobama.com/index.phpMYSPACE PAGEhttp://www.myspace.com/barackobamaLINKEDIN PAGEhttp://www.linkedin.com/in/barackobama
Finally, you can pick up the phone and reach any of Barack Obama’s five senate offices or his campaign headquarters in an instant. SENATE OFFICESWashington D.C. Office (202) 224-2854 (202) 228-4260 fax (202) 228-1404 TDD Chicago Office (312) 886-3506 (312) 886-3514 fax Toll free: (866) 445-2520 (for IL residents only) Springfield Office (217) 492-5089 (217) 492-5099 fax Marion Office(618) 997-2402 (618) 997-2850 fax Moline Office (309)736-1217 (309)736-1233 fax PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS(866) 675-2008
You can also check out what the editor has to say about Rick Warren on BlogTalkRadio!
A Letter in Response to Critics of the HRC
November 21, 2008 by James Hipps · 1 Comment
I found several blogs recently that have been questioning (to put it politely) the validity and efforts of the Human Rights Campaign’s (HRC’s) efforts in the face of the past election where constitutional amendments passed in 3 stated banning same-sex marriage. Prop 8 in California, Amendment 2 in Florida and Amendment 102 in Arizona. Below is an excerpt from a blog posted by Andrew Sullivan entitled; The Day The Music Died For The Human Rights Campaign.
Like so many other models of political organization, like the top-down Clinton campaign, the special interest group politics of an institution like the Human Rights Campaign is finished. They are no longer even faintly relevant to the struggle for gay equality. Markos Moulitsas:The Human Rights Campaign … is being rendered irrelevant by current events, and with irrelevance, it will shrivel up and die on its own. … The anti-Prop 8 campaign was an exercise in frustration. What we’re seeing now … is brilliant. … These nationwide protests are a watershed moment of sorts — the moment when the gay community realized that it had the power to fight for change on its own, and didn’t require any of its so-called, self-appointed ‘leaders’ to give them permission to engage.
I’ve been dreaming of the death of this useless, fearful, money-vacuum ever since I saw the potential for marriage equality and they wouldn’t. Rex Wockner:
You don’t have to listen to the gay “leaders” who failed you anymore, you don’t have to give them any more money, you just have to figure out what you want to do next with the power that now is yours — to get what you want: Full equality.
I decided to contact the HRC, as I have been a dedicated supporter for years in order to get their response to such criticism. Below is their reply.
Dear James,
Several bloggers have questioned the leadership of the campaign as well as organizations involved in various aspects of the campaign. A few bloggers who have posted comments criticizing the Human Rights Campaign specifically are individuals who have had a long standing anti-HRC stance. They are indeed entitled to their opinions about the organization, but we believe it is important to make sure that our community has a full accounting of the facts behind critics’ claims, especially when it comes to such an important issue as the Prop 8 campaign and HRC’s work for full marriage equality.
Below are several general questions raised that are directly or indirectly asked of HRC and our responses:
Q1. The protests that sprung up across the country were created from the grassroots and not organized by any national or state organization. Our larger institutions did little or nothing to support these protests, other than highlight them after the fact. How can our larger institutions claim to be leaders?
A1. The Human Rights Campaign (HRC) is proud to be our nation’s largest organization working for LGBT equality.
We are a membership-based organization that relies on a volunteer structure that has always believed that the power of our community lies in the strength of LGBT individuals and their allies throughout the country. HRC has almost three dozen volunteer-led committees across the country, each helping to engage and fight for LGBT equality in their own unique way.
HRC’S local committees seek to support HRC’s federal work at the local level, as well as working with local LGBT and allied groups to support local efforts that impact their LGBT community.
The HRC website, along with an email letter from HRC President Joe Solmonese to our entire membership, promoted the Join the Impact protests that happened last Saturday. We actively encouraged our members to attend and, in some cities, HRC’s volunteer structures helped organize the protests.
After the protests, on Monday morning HRC’s Backstory blog ran pictures and personal accounts from protests held throughout the country.
And just as we, like all supporters of Equality for All, had our resolve strengthened by seeing the tens of thousands of activists take to the streets across the country in the aftermath of the vote on Prop 8, HRC was also proud to not only see but have had a leading role in helping to organize and mobilize 44,000 Californians who volunteered on the No on Prop 8 campaign over the preceding nine months.
Q2: Why didn’t HRC and other organizations fund the campaign earlier and with more money?
A2: The simple fact remains that our movement is, and has always been, underfunded when compared to the right wing. In fact, if you look at the major right-wing organizations like the Family Research Council, the Heritage Foundation and others you will see that their annual budgets dwarf the size of HRC’s. When you add in worldwide religious denominations like the Mormon and Catholic Churches, it isn’t really a fair fight. We certainly wish this wasn’t the reality we lived in, but unfortunately it is.
That being said, the Human Rights Campaign was the second largest funder overall for the No on 8 campaign. We were one of the first organizations to put forward $100,000, as well as six field staff, early on in the signature gathering process to try and stop the amendment from reaching the ballot. When the campaign against Prop 8 was formed, HRC’s early contribution of $1 million helped provide the campaign with one-third of the cost of their first media buy. Because it was an early buy, the campaign was able to purchase premium television spots at efficient rates. When all was said and done, HRC contributed $3.4 million directly to the Equality for All campaign.
By the end of the campaign the No on Prop 8 campaign raised more money than our opponents.
Q3: Why were our leading organizations not focusing enough on California and the fight for marriage in general? Did HRC do a poor job in this campaign?
A3: HRC has been and remains in the forefront of the battle for partnership recognition and marriage equality for gay and lesbian couples, both at the national and local levels.
· HRC was involved in many of the marriage amendment battles across our country over the years;
· The Human Rights Campaign has spent millions of dollars to effectively defeat a Federal Marriage Amendment, twice;
· HRC provided the first funds for the then fledgling Massachusetts state group – MassEquality – and over several years contributed over $1 million, as well as staff, to help preserve marriage equality in that state. HRC is proud of our close partnership with MassEquality and provided support to them – while not directing them;
· In 2006, HRC was proud to have been the largest organizational donor to Arizona Together, helping them become the first group to defeat a marriage-related ban. We funded them early and like MassEquality, worked in close partnership without directing them;
· In California, HRC funded the Equality for All Coalition. We were proud to partner with them and to fund them early, be one of the leading funders throughout the campaign and to have staff on the ground donated to the campaign. However, HRC did not direct their work.
As a national organization we work hard to find the correct balance between our entire membership’s interests and giving proper deference to local leadership.
Q4: Will there be a post-mortem done on this campaign so the public can see for itself how resources were allocated and when?
A4: We could not agree more that there should be a full accounting of the way the Prop 8 campaign was waged and it is our understanding that the campaign will seek out an independent audit.
Q5: What did HRC do to help elect Barack Obama? Was it enough?
A5: HRC is proud of its strong support for Barack Obama for President. Several HRC leaders held key positions in the campaign and/or were Obama delegates to the convention. In addition, every election year HRC spends significant resources on mobilizing our members to volunteer on campaigns as well as getting out to vote. On top of this, HRC helped raise over $1.6 million directly for the Obama campaign.
HRC conducted 17 Camp Equality campaign activist trainings this year, arming over 500 campaign activists with key campaign skills and sending them to targeted campaigns throughout the country. Camp Equality locations included the swing states of CO, IN, MN, NV, NM, NC, OH, and VA.
HRC sent more than 50 full-time staff in the final week (or more, in some cases) to many states including the swing states of FL, MN, MO, NV, NH, NM, OH, PA and VA. While most of these staff members worked for congressional candidates, turning out HRC members and other progressive voters helped the Obama campaign as well.
Q6: Why did HRC not give money from its general fund, but solicited donors to contribute to the campaign? How did the Mormon church raise so much?
A6: We established the HRC California Marriage PAC to raise funds specifically for defeating Prop. 8, as required by California law. HRC solicited contributions, both small and large, specifically for the initiative, and all of the $3.4 million we raised went directly into the No on 8 campaign. State law limits our use of general funds from donations and membership dues for California political purposes. However, we did supplement the many contributions made to our California PAC with certain HRC income that we were legally permitted to use for this purpose.
HRC donated staff time to the No on 8 campaign, including 8 staff who spent significant amounts of time on the ground throughout California. Some staff were on the ground for several months. Tracking and calculation of expenses associated with Prop. 8 was done by in-house counsel and accountants, and reported in accordance with California law, which requires the disclosure of in-kind contributions of goods and services.
Note: The LDS church did not make any cash contributions to Prop 8 nor did the church directly raise money via its own PAC as HRC did. The Mormon church encouraged its members to contribute to the campaign.
Q7: How could HRC take credit for one of their donors who gave $1 million to their California fund?
A7: Almost all the money HRC raises, either for our general work or for California-specifically, comes from our donors. We are just as proud to take credit for our members who contribute $10 as we are of members who can afford much larger contributions.
Q8: Has HRC just dropped the ball on the fight for marriage equality?
A8: From our work in Vermont, helping to re-elect Governor Howard Dean in his razor-thin re-election victory shortly after signing the historic civil unions bill into law, to helping to build and maintain the group that defended historic marriage equality in Massachusetts, to providing seed money and becoming the largest organizational donor to the historic successful defeat of a marriage-related ban in Arizona to our $3.4 million contribution to the California effort, HRC is deeply proud of our strategic work to move our country forward to equality for all.
While the stripping away of marriage rights is a gut-wrenching blow, we are not down. We lost the similar California battle of Prop 22 in 2000 by 22 percentage points. Earlier this month we lost by four points. We are making progress and HRC is committed to doing all that it can to win back the right to marry in California and win that right in key states over the next several years.
One of those key states is New York. HRC spent $120,000 there this fall to help elect a fair-minded state Senate that we hope will lead to the Empire State becoming the first in our nation to enact marriage equality purely through legislative means.
We are winning, slowly, but surely. By working together, we will see victory sooner.
Respectfully,
The Human Rights Campaign
Metlife Recognized by HRC for 6 Consecutive Years
October 25, 2008 by James Hipps · Leave a Comment
For the sixth year in a row, MetLife has received a perfect score of 100 percent on the Human Rights Campaign Foundation’s (HRC) 2009 Corporate Equality Index, a rating system for how major U.S. corporations treat their gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) employees and consumers.
The HRC Corporate Equality Index rated companies on a scale from 0 to 100 percent on several factors, including a written non-discrimination policy as well as employee benefits, training programs, support networks, advertising and marketing and contributions to the GLBT community.
In addition, Services and Advocacy for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Elders (SAGE), presented its Certificate in Excellence in Leadership to the MetLife Mature Market Institute for its groundbreaking November 2006 research, “Out and Aging: The MetLife Study of Lesbian and Gay Baby Boomers.” The study was produced in conjunction with the American Society on Ageing’s Lesbian and Gay Aging Issues Network.
The first such study of its kind, “Out and Aging” raised important questions for the wide range of professionals who work with older adults, employers, policymakers and everyone interested in ensuring dignity, independence and the highest possible quality of life for the boomer generation as it reaches mid-life and older age.
“We are so honored that the HRC and SAGE have recognized MetLife’s commitment to the GLBT community,” said Denise Singleton, vice president of the Office of Diversity for MetLife. “It’s a testament to our efforts to create an open, inclusive environment for our employees and to provide sound financial advice to the broader GLBT community.”
In the workplace, MetLife offers its U.S. employees and their domestic same- and opposite-sex partners a variety of health and other benefits, including adoption assistance and supplemental life insurance. MetLife also has a recognized GLBT affinity group, as well as a company-wide diversity council, which consists of senior members from across the company and is committed to ensuring that diversity is built into all of MetLife’s business practices.
To better serve the needs of the GLBT marketplace, MetLife has a GLBT Advisory Council and Resource Committee, made up of financial services representatives and members of MetLife’s advanced market and financial planning teams. The Advisory council provides support and guidance for MetLife’s ongoing GLBT marketing strategy, while the Resource Committee recommends best practices and strategies to increase recruiting in the GLBT market.
Arkansas Puts Cruel Ballot Measure Up for Vote
October 23, 2008 by James Hipps · Leave a Comment
There’s been a lot of attention to anti-marriage ballot initiatives in Arizona, California and Florida this year. But you might not have heard about a terrible anti-family ballot initiative in Arkansas. It’s called Initiated Act 1, and it’s a first-of-its-kind ballot initiative that would ban unmarried couples living together – both gay and straight – from becoming foster or adoptive parents.
At a time when thousands of Arkansas children are in foster care, many waiting for permanent homes, this right-wing initiative seems particularly cruel.
Read the rest at hrc.org.
UPDATE:
From ThePhoenix.com:
A new poll — which shows McCain leading Obama by 13 in Arkansas, a poor omen for my 35-state prediction — shows 55% opposing a ballot initiative aimed at preventing same-sex couples from adopting, or being a foster parent. The initiative’s chances are probably not helped by the broad wording, which tries to avoid the appearance of homophobia by prohibiting couples cohabiting outside of a legally valid marriage.


