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|| Election 2008 ||
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The Obama Camp Asks LGBT Dems For Help 

Obama's highest ranking gay staffer implored LGBT delegates Wednesday to get involved in the election, one of several clear pushes by the campaign this week to tap the resolve of our community.  


Barack Obama’s out deputy campaign manager, Steve Hildebrand, made an impassioned appeal to the DNC Convention’s LGBT caucus Wednesday, just 65 days before Americans cast their votes for president in November.

“I believe that our campaign has not done the effective job it needs to do to persuade and convince LGBT voters that Barack Obama is someone who will lead for them, who will fight for them, fight for us,” Hildebrand told some 300 gays gathered at the Colorado Convention Center. “That’s a failure on behalf of our campaign in my opinion, and I’ve played a role in it. What we need is for all of you to be our voices in our communities and to work tirelessly to give every single day, as much time as you can give, to know Barack’s record and to know John McCain’s failed record and to go out and talk to people who care about the future of LGBT people in this country.”

For any gay voter waiting to hear someone from the Obama campaign ask for their support, there it was. Hildebrand’s speech was a crystallizing moment in a cascade of events this week signaling that the Obama camp believes it both needs the LGBT community to win in November and has not yet closed the deal with this constituency. Three major convention speeches – those of Sen. Hillary Clinton, President Bill Clinton, and Sen. Ted Kennedy – have included references to LGBT Americans. Among the hundreds of events taking place this week, Michelle Obama was dispatched to the LGBT delegate luncheon Tuesday, where she spoke for nearly 30 minutes. And following the news of the passing of Del Martin – the beloved lesbian who finally legally married her longtime sweetheart Phyllis Lyon in June – Barack Obama issued a personal statement to the press.

“Michelle and I were deeply saddened to hear that Del Martin had passed. Del committed her life to fighting discrimination and promoting equality. Our thoughts and prayers go out to her spouse Phyllis Lyon, and all those who were touched by her life,” it read.

The campaign also released Wednesday, for the very first time, an official side-by-side comparison between Barack Obama and John McCain on LGBT issues, contrasting their stances on concerns like adoption, the Defense Of Marriage Act, HIV/AIDS prevention, and gays in the military.

Listening to Hildebrand speak to the caucus Wednesday was like listening to a high school coach bare his soul on game night and ask his team to dig deep despite what trials may have come before.

“Don’t play games, don’t let anyone play games,” he said. “We know what it's been like in the last eight years and we knew what it was like in eight great years of the Clinton administration where we advanced the agenda for our community in a big way. That’s when I came out, that’s when I felt comfortable, that’s when I felt proud. And for the last eight years, I’m just as proud as I can be, but they’re not helping us. And I have a hard time when people like me are Republicans, because I don't get it. I don’t get it. They’re not on our side. Not that people in our party are perfect, but they're a whole Hell of a lot better. And we should be as partisan as we can be.”

Reached by phone following the caucus, Hildebrand acknowledged that Sen. Clinton had a huge gay following during the primaries and said he was concerned that not all LGBT voters had made the conversion.

“I think we’re worried that we haven’t done a good enough job of getting Barack’s record and his positions in front of gay voters,” Hildebrand said. “We’ve got to make up some time. So it was important for Michelle to make that appearance yesterday … and it was really important that we take the opportunity at the convention – where we have a record number of LGBT delegates – to really ask for their help and to really put them to work.”

Asked if he thought gay voters – who usually account for about 4% to 5% of voters in national exit polls – could significantly influence the election’s outcome, Hildebrand responded, “I believe that at least 12-14 states this election will be decided by 2-3 percentage points one way or the other, and if we do our collective work persuading LGBT voters to support Barack, I think it can make a big difference.”

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Reader Comments
  • Name: gaypastor
    Date posted: 9/6/2008 9:14:00 PM
    Hometown: PA

    Comment:

    I will never support the man who decided to run against the "historic" first women with a real shot (he announced his run for president AFTER Hillary) and, in doing so (and in ignoring the obvious VP choice), he's split the Democrats apart! Folks we're going to lose this election...again...and it's Obama's fault. Who can vote for the guy who doesn't care about the actual RESPRESENTATION of women in the WHITE HOUSE (vs. the "look at me...I'm pro-choice" issues spin they keep presenting as "equal" enough). I hate to say it....I REALLY do, but I may be forced to put aside my most cherised issue (gay marriage) and vote Republican for the first time in my life! This man has taken over our party and ripped it into shreds while the world spends its time looking for "Bros before Hoes" tshirts and Palin bikini shots! Disgusting!!!! He should have picked Hillary as VP! It was such a obvious choice and he missed it! I don't want a man like this making bad decisions in the White House!

  • Name: John
    Date posted: 9/4/2008 9:57:00 PM
    Hometown: Hudson, NY

    Comment:

    I don't understand why so many gays are against civil unions, a lot of straights get married by a Justice of the Peace in a civil ceremony, and receive the same benefits of a married couple. It's the church and it's religious beliefs that keep gay marriage out of religious ceremonies. If they don't want us to get married in their houses of worship, get over it and get married by those who care and support us. We also have to keep in perspective that gay issues are not the most important to the candidates. Are we that selfish that we think it is all about us. The economy, health insurance, our standing in the world community and the WAR in Iraq is of utmost importance. All I want is equality, equality with my straight brothers and sister have. I truly believe the rest will follow. We have come a long way and why throw it all out because Obama or for that matter any other Democratic candidate isn't taking a total stance on gay rights.

  • Name: ccjron
    Date posted: 8/31/2008 8:36:00 PM
    Hometown: NYC

    Comment:

    Are not most choices in life between the "lesser of 2 evils"? If you choose to not support Obama - we will end up, once again, with the greater of two evils and I guarantee you that human rights, including ours, will continue to be in jeopardy and we will be a lot worse off. It is childish, irresponsible and plain ignorant to make these stupid arguments as a reason to not support Obama.

  • Name: ccjron
    Date posted: 8/31/2008 8:34:00 PM
    Hometown: NYC

    Comment:

    Are not most choices in life between the "lesser of 2 evils"? If you choose to not support Obama - we will end up, once again, with the greater of two evils and I guarantee you that human rights, including ours, will continue to be in jeopardy and we will be a lot worse off. It is childish, irresponsible and plain ignorant to make these stupid arguments and not support Obama.

  • Name: Tom Kidd
    Date posted: 8/29/2008 1:26:00 PM
    Hometown: Decatur, Illinois

    Comment:

    I will vote for the man, but to get financially involved? Been there, done that, bought the soundtrack; with Bill Clinton. To paraphrase Fleetwood Mac, I'm never goin' back there again.

  • Name: JSF
    Date posted: 8/29/2008 11:51:00 AM
    Hometown: Arlington, VA

    Comment:

    I am torn and do not know what I will do come November, but Obama is a Chicago thug and a liar. He can't even figure out if he is a real Democrat or not. He has no fight in him and wants us to all be sweet and non-partisan. I want my leaders to fight and claw for what we stand for, not grovel to some kumbaya post-partisan dream of hope. He will do anything or say anything to get elected. His thugs stole the caucuses through fraud and intimidation. Do you really think I can trust that this 2-faced flop-flopper will do anything for me as a lesbian? HA!

  • Name: Rob
    Date posted: 8/29/2008 12:17:00 AM
    Hometown: Brooklyn, NY

    Comment:

    Obama has shed the progressive skin. He's for FISA. He's for continuance of Bush's Faith Based Initiative. He's for Off-shore drilling. He's against gay marriage. He has come out in favor of "civil unions", but against marriage. Sorry, I'm a gay independent and I'm not a single-issue voter. There is no way in the world I'd vote for McCain. However, this election has me unexcited. Obama is all talk. He has no record and, where he does, it's a record of saying one thing and doing another. Good luck Barack and John. I lose either way.

  • Name: Michael
    Date posted: 8/29/2008 12:00:00 AM
    Hometown: new york

    Comment:

    I find it odd that Daniel, who seems to respond to the uplifting ideas of Sen. Obama would start calling those of us who don't see eye to eye names. Just because I question his support does not make me bitter or selfish. I want to hear specifically what he would do for our gays, and no, saying that we should be able to visit loved ones does not count. I want to hear that he will support solid ideas that will help us and that he will not throw us over in the face of opposition so he could get more important (to him) legislation passed. I think that I should be able to demand answers that concern me. I do care about other issues, but gay issues are close to me, so I will fight for them, just as a woman has every right to say that she would not vote for a pro-life candidate, even if that candidate agreed with her on other topics. There are some things that are too important, like equality.

  • Name: DANTE F.
    Date posted: 8/28/2008 10:15:00 PM
    Hometown: CHICAGO

    Comment:

    Whether you stay home, write in Hillary, or vote for some hopeless third party candidate, a vote that's not for Obama in this election is a vote for McCain. Gay marriage is not our MOST important issue, and GLBT issues are not the only issues at stake in this race. Hundreds of thousands of dead in a senseless war, an economy in free-fall, thousands without healthcare, the environment being poisoned, a pitifully broken education system, and on and on. If a bunch of bitter, selfish, myopic queer folk can't see that and get beyond their own disappointment, then you deserve another four year or eight years of this grotesque, dangerous, disastrous, shameful government.

  • Name: Paul
    Date posted: 8/28/2008 8:56:00 PM
    Hometown: Minneapolis

    Comment:

    At best, Obama's support of civil unions is of a "separate but equal" philosophy -- and that's disturbing coming from a black man whom I can't believe would trade in his own marriage for the civil union he advocates for me. Nevertheless, he is unquestionably light years ahead of McCain when it comes to GLBT issues in general. A McCain presidency would not be in our community's best interest, so I cannot waste my vote in protest in November. But because of Obama's position on marriage, I can't help but think that when I vote it will be more voting *against* McCain than *for* Obama.

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