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By Karen Ocamb
Keep your eyes on Bill Richardson. The governor of New Mexico
not only has the best resumé and sense of humor of
the 2008 Democratic presidential contenders, but he also
has the distinct advantage of not being a member of Congress.
The anti-war grassroots are furious that Democrats, given
a clear mandate in the November elections to end the war
in Iraq, once again acquiesced to President Bush and passed
an Iraq spending bill without a timetable for troop withdrawal.
They are so angry, in fact, that they noted not only how
presidential aspirants Sens. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama
voted (both voted no), but when—after the bill was
already assured passage. Not exactly a display of presidential
leadership, they say.
The intense disappointment may prompt Democratic voters to
take a fresh look at Richardson who, while not a “rock
star,” recently nudged into double-digits in Iowa and
New Hampshire polls.
According to the New York Times on May 25, Richardson said
the spending bill was a “missed opportunity” and
that Congress should repeal its original use of force authorization
(Clinton already introduced such a measure) and “replace
it with one that requires the President to take all the troops
out of Iraq by the end of the year.”
The key to Iraq, as well as other hot spots, is diplomacy
and “negotiated political settlements” with “interested
parties” in the region, Richardson said repeatedly
at a May 21 news conference at the Biltmore Hotel officially
announcing his run for the presidency. Unlike his rivals,
Richardson has a strong record of effective diplomacy, serving
as the U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, brokering peace
agreements in Darfur and more recently in North Korea, as
well as winning the release of hostages.
The only hitch at the news conference, where West Hollywood
Mayor Pro Tem Jeff Prang was introduced as a supporter on
Richardson’s campaign steering committee, was when
he dodged a question about marriage equality from IN Los
Angeles magazine. When this reporterpressed him, he turned
away, looking for another reporter: "Did you have a
question?" he asked KABC News reporter John North. "Where
are you when I need you?"
The roomful of supporters and reporters sitting in still
silence, expecting a confrontation, cracked up, though there
was still a lingering question of why he didn’t respond.
Openly gay labor leader John A. Perez, who has not yet endorsed
a candidate, thought that what Richardson did not say was
interesting.
”He didn’t go to the old sop of saying in front
of the press, ‘I’m for marriage between one man
and one woman,’—and I think his silence in that
way was actually very telling,” Perez told IN. “I
think it spoke to the fact that he thinks about this issue
in a lot more complicated and nuanced ways than we’re
used to candidates speaking about it, and when you look at
his track record as governor of New Mexico, I think he really
has been one of the most progressive governors in a not very
progressive state, with respect to a whole host of issues
in the LGBT community.”
New Mexico Lt. Gov. Diane Denish told IN, “I have not
supported marriage because I’ve been working with the
gay community in my home state, and they have given us kind
of a plan [to work] incrementally. We’ve been working
with them on domestic partner rights—domestic partner
rights were instituted by [Richardson’s] executive
order in the state, and we work very closely with them to
try to increase their rights and nondiscrimination across
the board. We have a very strong gay, lesbian, bisexual and
transgender community—it’s very active. Equality
New Mexico—we work very closely with them on legislation
and what we should be doing now.”
In the middle of the interview with Denish, Richardson’s
communications director, Pahl Shipley asked if IN would like
a one-on-one interview with the presidential candidate. This
is possibly the first time a major presidential candidate
has reached out to the LGBT press directly—as opposed
to responding to persistent appeals by individual reporters.
Richardson is so approachable and affable, he is disarming—a
point his “job interview” commercial makes with
humor (www.richardsonforpresident.com). IN spoke with Richardson
backstage for about 20 minutes because, he said, “I
didn’t want you to think I dissed you” during
the news conference.
“I believe that my record makes me the most pro-gay/lesbian
candidate in the country,” Richardson said. “My
record as a congressman, which was nearly perfect on gay
rights issues—I voted against ‘Don’t Ask,
Don’t Tell.’ I would get rid of it as president.
My record as governor: I have passed and pushed issues relating
to domestic partnership—I had a special session that
included domestic partnership three months ago, [making me]
the first governor to have a special session on [such] an
issue. We’ve passed nondiscrimination laws in New Mexico
that deal with insurance, jobs. We passed a hate crimes law.
I had an executive order that permitted domestic partners
to have insurance rights and health care.
“You’re looking at the candidate that has done
the most for the pro-gay/lesbian community—also included
transgender,” Richardson said. “And so I would
hope the gay rights community supports my candidacy for president,
not just on how I will vote, but what I have done as governor
and as a political leader to recognize that it’s important
not to discriminate on the basis of race, gender or sexual
orientation.”
IN asked if Richardson thinks gays are a specific “class” of
people, a distinct cultural minority.
“No,” he said. “I believe that gay people
are part of the American mainstream. I would not treat gay
people as a minority. I would treat them as individuals that
should have full rights. I would support civil unions for
gay people. I would support a national effort to eliminate
discrimination of gay people—a federal domestic partners
law. I would be an advocate for these issues, not somebody
who talks about them and then does nothing. I would also
get rid of ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,’ because
we’ve got men and women who serve this country who
should be honored for their service—not quizzed about
their sexual predilections. So that would go right away,
should I be elected president.
“I would be for protecting gays, whatever it takes,
and lesbians. Let them have full rights,” Richardson
continued. “The easiest way is to make laws that cover
all Americans and bar discrimination on the basis of race,
ethnicity and sexual orientation. I would be very comprehensive
in my approach. I would be an activist on these issues. I
would actually promote these initiatives as president. And
so my hope is the LGBT community supports me because of what
I’ve done, not because of what I say I’m going
to do. Every campaign stump speech, I mention the importance
of barring discrimination based on sexual orientation. I’ve
done it in debates, I’ve done it at the Democratic
National Committee, I’ve done it in my stump speech.
It’s part of my being.”
What about AIDS? “I would re-invigorate the federal
AIDS Commission—put activist members on it. I would
give it strength in the bureaucracy. I would consider creating
a Cabinet-level entity to deal with AIDS. I would consider
that—I want to work it through. But as chair of the
AIDS Commission—I would elevate it to the vice president
heading it because that gives it importance. You know like
the way in the Clinton-Gore administration, it was understood
that Gore handled environmental issues, he handled technology
issues. My vice president would handle AIDS internationally.
“And I believe we have made strides on AIDS—on
research, on finding a cure, on easing pain—and we
should continue that research,” Richardson said. “The
millennium goals—internationally—have been actually
a good thing that the Bush administration’s done. You
know, they haven’t had the full support of the Congress.
But I would make the elimination of AIDS, along with the
elimination of international poverty, and issues related
to women— sexual slavery [and] gender-based violence—major
parts of my presidency.”
Richardson said he was not aware of the link between crystal
meth and HIV, but, he said, “l will educate myself.
But I would use the AIDS Commission as a policy entity that
not only would advocate for more AIDS funding domestically,
but also bring American leadership to this issue internationally,
at the United Nations, at other international forums, World
Health Organization. I still worry about Africa. I always
worry about genocide in Africa, AIDS in Africa, refugees
in Africa. We don’t pay enough attention to the human
problems in Africa and I would be a president who would focus
extensively on Africa.”
Richardson also said he would “push” for the
bi-national immigration bill recently introduced in Congress.
IN asked why he does not support full marriage rights for
gay couples.”Well, I’m a Catholic,” he
said. “I believe you’ve got to be politically
realistic. What you want to do is create conditions that
address issues that I believe, in the short term, the American
people support and understand like non-discrimination on
the basis of insurance, like ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t
Tell,’ finding ways to fund AIDS more extensively—basic
protections [like] domestic partnerships—that’s
where we should focus. All I’m saying is that I would
be a very strong advocate in this area.”
Why did he vote for the Defense of Marriage Act when he was
in Congress? “Well, I was the chief deputy Democratic
Whip and it was a party vote and president Clinton wanted
it,” Richardson said. “But I did vote against ‘Don’t
Ask, Don’t Tell’—I thought it was ludicrous.
“And what I believe about DOMA,” he continued, “I
believe this issue is too divisive. I want the states to
handle it. Probably was not necessary. I want to be positive
and realistic in approaching gay rights issues. I think we’ve
got a long way to go to advance them. And I would be an activist
President—pushing mainly the non-discrimination issues,
pushing the AIDS issues, domestic partnerships and civil
unions. And I’ll be there— because I’ve
been there as a governor. And I’ll be there as president.
And I don’t mind saying this.”
IN reminded Perez that the LGBT community has heard this
kind of promise before—when then Arkansas Gov. Bill
Clinton waved his hand over an LGBT and AIDS audience in
Hollywood and said, “I have a vision and you’re
a part of it.”
“It’s more than I have a vision for America and
you’re part of it because it’s not about a view
of America. It’s about a track record as a governor,
as a member of Congress,” Perez said. “So it’s
not just, ‘Look what I’m promising to do for
you.’ It’s ‘Look at my record—the
fact that [as the leader of] a very conservative state, a
state that voted for George Bush, I’ve moved the agenda
significantly forward. When other people would hide from
these issues, I stood up. I was counted and I continue to
be that way.’
“There’s nobody who can say that the politics
at the national level are any more difficult for our community
than they are in the state of New Mexico,” said Perez. “And
so when you look at the progress he made there, it’s
real, and I think it’s very informative of what he
would do as president. “
Richardson will speak at an ANGLE breakfast that is open
to the public on June 11 beginning at 7:30 a.m. at the Hyatt
West Hollywood, located at 8401 Sunset Blvd. in West Hollywood.
Tickets are $35 per person. Go to www.angleonline.net for
more information.
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