PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD  |  WHERE TO FIND THE BLADE    |   WASHBLADE ON MYSPACE    |   RSS  
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7, 2009
 
Please login or create a new account
  ?
HOME
CLASSIFIEDS
AUTO GUIDE

THE LATEST
BLADEWIRE
BLADEBLOG
BLOGWATCH
NEWS
 LOCAL
 NATIONAL
 WORLD NEWS
 VIEWPOINT
 ENTERTAINMENT
 ECLIPSE
 OUT IN DC
 CALENDARS
 FITNESS BY GENRE
 BITCH SESSION













EMAIL UPDATES
New to email
updates? Then click here to find out more.
email address

subscribe
unsubscribe
I have read and agree to our terms
and conditions
.


ADVERTISING
GENERAL INFO
E-EDITION
MARKETING

ABOUT US
ABOUT THE BLADE
MASTHEAD
EMPLOYMENT

 

 

 


California Democrat Cynthia Matthews says she is ‘running as the candidate for the people who live in the district, not for the politicians in Washington.’




MORE FROM THIS AUTHOR
LOU CHIBBARO J


MORE INFO






Printer-friendly Version

Letter to the Editor

Sound Off about this article




 

MORE NATIONAL

Joyous victories, stinging defeats marked 2008
Steps toward equality tempered by several state ballot defeats

2008: A year of change
From politics to protests, 2008 was unique

In memoriam
Notable deaths of 2008

National news in brief
Rick Warren: Not anti-gay to oppose gay marriage


NATIONAL

Activists defend failure of gay congressional
hopefuls

Gay state legislators groomed for eventual House election

LOU CHIBBARO J
Friday, June 23, 2006

When Wisconsin Democrat Tammy Baldwin became the nation’s first openly gay non-incumbent to win election to the U.S. House in 1998, gay activists were hopeful that more out gay politicians soon would follow her to the halls of Congress.

At least nine have tried in the eight years since, but none has won. Most have lost in primaries. This year, one openly gay House candidate lost in a primary and two dropped out for lack of support or sufficient funds to wage a competitive political campaign.

Another three — all from California — won their primaries and will be on the ballot in November. But none has been endorsed or received financial support from the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund, the primary organization in the gay rights movement focused on electing openly gay candidates to public office.

Since Baldwin’s 1998 landmark victory, openly gay congressmen Barney Frank (D-Mass.) and Jim Kolbe (R-Ariz.) have continued to win re-election to the House. But they have done so as incumbents who did not disclose their sexual orientation when they first ran for public office and won their seats. Kolbe has announced his retirement this year.

Congressman Gerry Studds, another Massachusetts Democrat, was the nation’s first openly gay member of Congress, but came out almost a decade after winning office. He has since retired.

“If you study federal elections, you see that 98 percent of House members and 96 percent of senators won re-election last time,” said Chuck Wolfe, the Victory Fund president.

Wolfe and Joe Solmonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest gay political group, explain the dearth in gays elected to Congress by lamenting the “safe seats” most House incumbents enjoy.

Republican and Democratic Party leaders in state legislatures across the country often strike deals to create safe seats by carving up the nation’s 435 congressional districts in a way that assures each party would retain control of certain districts.

“That’s the most telling answer,” said Wolfe, for why so few open gays win election to Congress. “Those of us who are trying to change election outcomes are looking for open seats,” he said.

Wolfe noted that most successful House candidates spend between $1 and $1.6 million to fund their campaigns. Raising that kind of money is difficult unless a candidate is well known, Wolfe said. The best way to raise name recognition is have been elected to an important local office, such as state legislator, mayor or city councilmember, he said.

Perhaps due to the challenge of electing non-incumbents, press releases from the Victory Fund after each Election Day tout the success of the group’s endorsees, the vast majority of which are incumbents.

But Wolfe argued that the percentage of endorsements does not square with where the Victory Fund spends most of its resources: the campaigns of non-incumbents.

“People get misled because we endorse incumbents,” Wolfe said. “But 75 percent to 90 percent of our money goes to non-incumbents.”

Robin Brand, Victory Fund’s political director who monitors the day-to-day campaigns of openly gay candidates, said a growing number of openly gay political hopefuls have won election to state and local offices. Many are being groomed for higher office, with Congress a likely place for them to land, she said.

Patrick Guerriero, executive director of Log Cabin Republicans, a national gay group, echoed that hope.

“There are a record number of openly gay and lesbian Americans running for and serving in office,” he said. “And they are doing it exactly the right way by getting elected to local offices, mayoral seats, state legislatures. They are the farm team for future federal and statewide candidates.”

Three out gay hopefuls lack Victory Fund backing

Supporters for the three out gays running for Congress in California say they are hopeful that the Victory Fund and other local and national gay groups would consider endorsing them as their campaigns progress this summer toward the fall election.

One of the candidates, Democrat Cynthia Matthews, surprised political observers when she received 42.8 percent of the vote in 2004 in her race against Republican incumbent David Dreier in a district located northeast of Los Angeles. Dreier, who had been in office nearly 25 years, received 53.6 percent, and a Libertarian Party candidate received 3.6 percent.

In prior races, Dreier had breezed to re-election with close to 70 percent of the vote, according to media reports in California. Leaders of both parties said Matthews, a political newcomer, benefited from a backlash against Dreier from conservative voters who blamed him for not taking a harder line on immigration.

This year, Matthews defeated two challengers in the Democratic primary on June 6 to once earn the right to challenge Dreier. The Los Angeles County Democratic Party backed one of her opponents in the primary, Russ Warner. Warner boasted about his son serving in the Army in Iraq, while Matthews expressed opposition to the Iraq war.

Democratic Party leaders in the District, believing Warner had a better chance of defeating Dreier in a Republican-leaning district, were befuddled over Matthew’s decisive primary victory.

Matthews said she was confident that political sentiment expressed by voters in public opinion polls against Republicans would boost her vote totals in November, enabling her to defeat Dreier. She said her status as an out lesbian does not appear to have hurt her.

“I’m running as the candidate for the people who live in the district, not for the politicians in Washington,” she said.

One reason the issue has not surfaced may be that Dreier himself has long been the subject of rumors about his sexual orientation, fueled by his own refusal to answer direct questions about whether he is gay.

In San Diego, Democrat John Rinaldi, another political newcomer, also defeated a prominent Democrat in the June 6 primary, after receiving the endorsement of two key labor unions. ...

continued on next page


1  |  2

 

email   password
The following comments were posted by our readers and were not edited by the Washington Blade.  We ask that you treat others with respect; any post deemed offensive will be removed.


 

national | local | world | arts | classifieds | real estate | about us

© 2009 | A Window Media LLC Publication | Privacy Policy