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When The Washington Post endorsed Delano Hunter for D.C. City Council it endorsed homophobia by justifying his stance against marriage equality.

DELANO HUNTER X390

Journalists tend to stay away from criticizing other news outlets because, let’s face it, we have enough enemies and suffer enough demonization from the Palins of the world without sniping at each other.

But there’s just no getting around The Washington Post editorial board’s endorsement of Delano Hunter for Washington, D.C., city council.

After labeling Hunter “an engaging newcomer” with "intimate knowledge of the needs of the ward," here’s how the Post whitewashed Hunter’s antigay stances:

“Mr. Hunter is not a supporter of marriage equality, but he is not the homophobe his critics make him out to be, but rather someone who thinks there is a way to provide equality for gays while respecting the beliefs of religious groups. He said he would not seek to change the law.”

There’s plenty of evidence to suggest the Post undersold Hunter’s homophobic cred, not least of which is that he’s been endorsed by the National Organization for Marriage and actually showed up at the D.C. rally last month celebrating the end of the organization’s disastrous Summer for Marriage 2010 tour. NOM also sent out a mailer on Hunter's behalf proclaiming that he supports the “Right of DC Residents to Vote on Homosexual Marriage,” among other of his winning attributes. But let’s set aside the facts for now.

First off, can we please drop the canard that allowing certain people to marry each other somehow impinges on certain other people’s religious freedoms? No one will be forcing churches or religious leaders to perform same-sex ceremonies against their will, and people will undoubtedly maintain their right to worship as they choose completely free of government interference—as they always have. And for the Post to suggest that recognizing marriage equality necessarily conflicts with the beliefs of all religious groups is completely disingenuous, especially after nearly 200 religious leaders in the district stood with the multifaith group D.C. Clergy United for Marriage Equality.

But perhaps more to the point, it’s time for mainstream America to realize that endorsing politicians who claim to support “equality” for LGBT Americans but not marriage equality is tantamount to aiding and abetting homophobia; that they are mounting a direct attack on the love shared by fellow tax-paying, law-abiding citizens who want to make lifelong commitments to care for one another; that they are relegating people they work with, live with, and, yes, worship with, to second-class status.

There is no gray any longer, no hair-splitting, no rationalization or triangulation that suffices anymore. If you don’t support same-sex marriage, you don’t support equality and that is quite simply homophobic.

Sure, some pols are more virulently homophobic than others, but the outcome is the same: equality denied.

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Reader Comments
  • Name: Brad Wright
    Date posted: 9/9/2010 3:22:49 AM
    Hometown: Seattle

    Comment:

    Wow, WAY too shrill. I believe the whole idea of marriage belongs in churches, not city halls. The whole marriage equality thing is a canard. It should be civil unions for all. Then get married if you so desire. I have no use of a "husband". My partner will do just fine.

  • Name: Bill
    Date posted: 9/7/2010 1:56:04 PM
    Hometown: Arlington

    Comment:

    @ Greg - With Hunter's connection to NOM and the fact that he is a conservative christian minister, I don't believe for one second that, if elected, he would not support repeal of marriage equality in DC. I can easily see him joining forces with those who are itching to put the issue on the ballot before DC voters. Why else would he have NOM's support? Why would they care?

  • Name: Greg
    Date posted: 9/7/2010 9:28:30 AM
    Hometown: Providence RI

    Comment:

    "He said he would not seek to change the [new] law." DC already has gay marriage, he's not going to do anything about it, so what is the point of this dumb article? There ARE other gay issues to ask him about!

  • Name: @Monica
    Date posted: 9/6/2010 10:31:31 PM
    Hometown: PHILADELPHIA

    Comment:

    Wow Monica, you are an embarrassment to the city of brotherly love. How can you be so one sided? So close minded? Just b/c certain states allow Same Sex marriage doesn't mean there is no discrimination and everything is perfect in those areas. haha what world are you living in? You give specific examples of discrimination and then say, has a gay person gone through that? Well NO, and OF COURSE NOT. No one else is your grandfather or you or your uncle. But that doesn't mean that gays aren't discriminated against or it isn't as violent or cruel. So let me ask you this, did two men ever trick you?, kidnap you or your father?, beat you to the brink of death, take you into the hills and tie you up naked, with your arms spread, beaten and bloody, to a fence left for dead, for three days, like two men did to Matthew Shepard JUST b/c he was gay. No, I didn't think so. Don't act like you know what it's like to be gay and don't act like you know the plight of the gay man/woman.

  • Name: Jay
    Date posted: 9/6/2010 11:14:37 AM
    Hometown: Santa Monica

    Comment:

    Kelly, thank you so much for your excellent column. It should be required reading for all journalists.

  • Name: Kevin
    Date posted: 9/6/2010 11:10:39 AM
    Hometown: New Orleans

    Comment:

    Monica, when your Mississippi relatives were discriminated against in Mississippi they could always move to Chicago and New York and California, where they may still be discriminated against but not to the same extent. What are you bellyaching about? Wasn't the water in the "Colored Only" fountains in Mississippi the same in the "Whites Only" fountains? And only a few Blacks got lynched. Wow. You sure are sensitive. Sounds like you might be gay. Oh, that's right, the gay and black experiences are so different one can't compare them. Well, they are not the same, but it turns out that a lot of bigots would deny equal rights to gay people and equal rights to black people. That should make both black people and gay people supportive of each other.

  • Name: Alex Blaze
    Date posted: 9/6/2010 9:03:57 AM
    Hometown: Paris, France

    Comment:

    Great column, Kerry. But to respond to your civil rights movement comparison, if the Washington Post editorial board were as far to the right in, say, 1960 as it is today, they'd probably oppose integration. Heck, they'd probably have opposed it well into the 70's.

  • Name: Kimberly
    Date posted: 9/5/2010 11:29:45 PM
    Hometown: Malibu, CA

    Comment:

    @Monica - It saddens me to see comparisons that equate the struggle for civil rights for black Americans, and the struggle concerning the civil rights of lesbian and gay Americans taking such a selfish turn. Homosexuals, in America, are a minority that is quietly hated, to some extent, by all races and ethnic groups. Whether it's 'religion', 'tradition', 'culture', or simply fear, many people hide behind their sanctimonious excuses to help shelter their hidden homophobia. It amazes me when I see a black American forget the struggles, the pain of segregation. It has just become words to many. History should never be forgotten, or continually repeated. Discrimination, of all types, has it's roots in ignorance and fear. The question of... same sex marriage equality, is simply the act of treating all Americans fairly, and NOT discriminating against anyone by giving preference, and privilege to some, and not all Americans. Monica, I hope that you'll agree that - love is all that matters.

  • Name: Bill
    Date posted: 9/5/2010 8:33:51 PM
    Hometown: Arlington

    Comment:

    @ Monica - And how has any of this happened to you? Do you have any idea about the amount of violence against gays and lesbians, including gays and lesbians of color (often by other blacks)? Do you know that gay teens commit suicide at five times the rate of their straight counterparts? Stop the immature hierarchy of victimhood. Blacks are a protected class with a lot of opportunity. It is still legal to deny housing, employment and accommodations to gays. Is that true for you NOW? Have you been fired b/c you are black; I've been b/c I am gay. Have you been assaulted b/c you are black; I have been three times (twice by blacks) b/c I am gay. Have you been denied an apartment b/c you are black; I have b/c I am gay.

  • Name: RonK
    Date posted: 9/5/2010 2:57:54 PM
    Hometown: Clifton, NJ

    Comment:

    I was so impassioned, I got carried away: Barry Winchell was perceived to be gay because he was in love with a transgendered woman and was murdered by his fellow soldiers.defres investment

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