Press. Obama's 'Queer' Dance On Gay Marriage



By Ari Shapiro


President Barack Obama after signing the Don't Ask, Don't Tell Repeal Act of 2010 into law on December 22, 2010.















President Obama's self-described evolution on same-sex marriage is not happening fast
enough for some gay and lesbian activists. His belief that marriage should be between
a man and a woman, and that the legalization of gay marriage should be left up to the
 states, puts him in an awkward position this week as he heads to New York for a
 reelection fundraiser with the gay and lesbian community.

On Thursday, the President will visit midtown Manhattan for an event that's expected
 to raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for his campaign coffers. This is the first
LGBT fundraiser by a sitting President, and it could fall the same day as a vote to
 legalize same-sex marriage in New York's Republican-led state Senate. That makes
this a potentially uncomfortable marriage of money, politics, and social change.

"Justice Stares You Right in the Face"

The organizers of Thursday's event had no idea it would coincide with a potentially historic
moment in New York, says gay activist David Mixner. "I certainly didn't, and I find it
highly amusing," he says.

Amusing because, as Mixner puts it, "You lay out all these plans and try to be as political
as you can on this issue, but in the end justice always stares you right in the face."

Mixner, who has been a longtime supporter of Obama, will attend the fundraiser on Thursday.
He says the marriage issue will be impossible for Mr. Obama to overlook. "Dick Cheney's
for marriage, Laura Bush is for marriage, [former RNC chairman] Ken Melman's for
 marriage," Mixner says, "so get with it."

When Obama last weighed in on this issue in December, he said that while he does not
 support marriage for same-sex couples, his feelings are "constantly evolving."

"At this point what I've said is that my baseline is a strong civil union that provides them the
protections and the legal rights that married couples have," said Obama.

An Earlier Evolution

It's a little awkward for the White House, because during the 1996 Illinois state senate
campaign, candidate Barack Obama responded to a questionnaire with a letter saying,
"I favor legalizing same-sex marriages, and would fight efforts to prohibit such marriages."

In an interview last Friday at a conference of progressive bloggers, White House
communications Director Dan Pfeiffer backpedaled. "That questionnaire was actually filled
out by someone else, not the President," Pfeiffer said.

Then on Monday, White House spokesman Jay Carney said Pfeiffer was wrong. "Dan was
referring to another questionnaire," said Carney in the White House briefing.

In other words, Barack Obama did state in 1996 that he supports gay marriage--a very
progressive position for the time. But at least publicly, the President no longer holds that view.

"He's been very clear about his position on gay marriage," said Carney. "He's been very clear
 about how that position is evolving. I don't have any new announcement to make."

Now the President is headed to New York, where a Republican-led state Senate could pass a
gay marriage bill any day. It sets up a potentially difficult situation for the President, who is
asking same-sex couples at the fundraiser to pay as much as $35,800 for the evening.

A History of Support

As the White House is quick to point out, Mr. Obama has taken steps to advance gay rights in
other areas. Many consider his high water mark to be the signing ceremony to repeal Don't
 Ask Don't Tell.

"You've been asked to carry the added burden of secrecy and isolation, and all the while you've
put your lives on the line for the freedoms and privileges of citizenship that are not fully granted
to you," he told a tearful audience before signing the bill.

Mr. Obama's supporters say he has done more for gay rights than any President in US history.
But John Aravosis, who edits the liberal website Americablog, argues that history is the
wrong yardstick.

"The point is, how much of a civil rights hero you are is determined by the times you live in,"
says Aravosis.

"If you defended the rights of African-Americans to swim in your pool in the 1950s, you'd be
 a huge visionary and we'd give you a huge attaboy for that," Aravosis says. By 1970, the same
views would hardly be noteworthy even though they would be ahead of every previous
generation.

Indeed, today many national polls show that more than half of Americans support
same-sex
 marriage. That puts President Obama among a minority of Americans on the issue,
and a small
minority of Democrats.

Still, no one expects this difference of opinion to sour the mood at Thursday's fund-raiser.
The singer Audra McDonald is performing. The actor Neil Patrick Harris is the emcee.
As activist David Mixner says, this is a gala. "Do not expect this to be a serious evening
 of policy."


Copyright 2011 National Public Radio.
http://www.gpb.org

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