
October 2008 Cover
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By
Jim D'Entremont
In late August, as the 2008 U.S. presidential race
approached its last lap, the nominees of both the
Democratic and Republican parties chose running
mates whose biases and sensibilities lie to their
political right -- not least on issues of sexual
freedom and civil liberties impacting gay people.
Democratic candidate Barack Obama, whose bid for
the presidency is predicated on change, chose
Senator Joe Biden (D.-Delaware), an exemplar of
the status quo. The announcement, at least, was
made by nontraditional means: a text message
transmitted to Obama supporters' cell phones at 3
a.m. on August 23.
A career politician first elected to the U.S. Senate in
1972, Biden is a consummate Washington insider
whose baggage includes a cozy relationship with
lobbyists who find him responsive to their needs.
His status as Chairman of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee is regarded by some as a
fitting counterweight to Obama's perceived lack of
foreign policy experience. Because Biden advocated
a "preventive" invasion of Iraq as far back as 1998,
his selection as his party's vice-presidential
nominee also seems intended as a sop to "national
security Democrats" who keep prodding Obama to
back away from his antiwar stance and get tougher.
Biden's voting record on civil liberties is a mixed
bag. He has leaned toward endorsement of pro-gay
legislation, although he did vote in favor of the
homophobic federal Defense of Marriage Act in
1996. The centrist gay rights organization Human
Rights Campaign gave Obama high marks for
choosing Biden; in a statement, HRC president Joe
Solomonese called Biden "a proven and effective
advocate for fairness and equality that our
community can be proud of." The HRC currently
measures Biden's voting record on its issues with a
78 percent rating.
Biden was also heartily endorsed by the National
Gay and Lesbian Task Force and other major gay
organizations. "We're very enthusiastic about
Biden," says Peter Schott of Stonewall Democrats'
Delaware chapter. "Voting favorably on gay issues is
his natural instinct."
Among gay activists, most of the dissent has come
from individuals. "Biden is to the right of John
McCain on the war," complains Bill Dobbs, founder
of the queer organization Sex Panic and a vocal
opponent of U.S. involvement in Iraq. "Gay
Democrats have been towed into the junkyard the
Democratic Party calls a social movement."
"Maybe Biden's been in the Senate for 35 years, but
I'm not convinced he's done a goddamn thing that
really matters," says Florida-based lesbian historian
Gail Cohen, who considers Biden an old-guard
politician with an overrated record on gay and
women's issues.
On the Republican side, John McCain -- apparently
responsive to the idea that longevity of service
doesn't necessarily count -- homed in on Sarah
Palin, a right-wing Alaska politician just two years
into her first term as governor of her home state.
She previously served as mayor of Wasilla, a
minuscule town within commuting distance of
Anchorage. A dedicated born-again Christian and a
member of Feminists for Life, Palin chaired the
Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission in
2003-2004. Early press releases from the McCain
camp cited Palin's purported strength on energy
issues as a major reason for her selection.
But the most compelling reason why Palin edged
out McCain's personal preference, Senator Joe
Lieberman (I-Connecticut), is her appeal to social
and religious conservatives. In 2007, Christian Right
power broker James Dobson, founder of Focus on
the Family, said, "I would not vote for John McCain
under any circumstances... I pray we won't get
stuck with him." Shortly after the announcement
that McCain had designated Saran Palin as his
running mate, however, Dobson pronounced the
choice "outstanding" and "reassuring to the
conservative base" of the Republican Party. A
secondary consideration is Palin's possible appeal
to blue-collar Democrats wary of Obama. The
astuteness of the choice was reflected in a sudden
uptick of campaign donations from previously
undecided voters.
Palin was somewhat upstaged by Hurricane Gustav
bearing down on New Orleans as the Republican
National Convention got underway in St. Paul,
Minnesota. Scrambling to avoid a repeat of the
public relations disaster surrounding Hurricane
Katrina in 2005, Republicans canceled much of the
scheduled hoopla. By Labor Day evening, however,
Hurricane Gustav was itself being upstaged by
accounts of Palin's 17-year-old daughter Bristol's
out-of-wedlock pregnancy. Also upstaged were
many more meaningful concerns regarding Palin's
competence, her integrity, and the vetting process
that had led to her selection.
Nevertheless, as more facts became known about
Palin, many of Biden's critics fell silent.
Gay journalist Bruce Mirken, currently a spokesman
for the pro-legalization Marijuana Policy Project
(MPP), believes the election of a Democratic
President is essential for humane and meaningful
social reform. "The bottom line," he says, "is that
the Obama-Biden ticket offers hope. McCain-Palin
offers none."
Also this issue:
Joe Biden: A gay-rights liberal
Is Palin queer?
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