Loading...
|| ||
Share EMAIL PRINT
 
1 2 3 NEXT  Page 1 of 3

The Gay Goodfellas

Inside the Gill Action Fund, the most effective pro-gay political weapon you never heard of.



Patrick Guerriero and Bill Smith of the Gill Action Fund have a problem. Guerriero, former leader of the Log Cabin Republicans and onetime candidate for lieutenant governor of Massachusetts, and Smith, a political consultant and former employee of Karl Rove, want LGBT people to understand their strategy for winning equal rights -- a targeted approach to developing what they call “fair-minded majorities” in state legislatures across the country. During the 2006 election, the first cycle in which the organization set its sights on state legislative races, control of 13 state chambers switched hands. Ten were Democratic takeovers -- chambers that are now more likely to make gay-friendly decisions.

Smith and Guerriero want to get that story out, yes, but they don’t want Gill Action to be a centerpiece of the article, nor do they want any of its internal or external machinations to be revealed. No focusing on Gill Action’s founder, Tim Gill, a self-made millionaire who by all accounts is exceedingly modest and usually ducks the press at all costs. No naming any of the state legislators the organization helped to elect in 2006, lest those candidates find themselves in the cross hairs of the Christian right in the next election. They won’t disclose the states they worked in during the last election cycle, and in terms of 2008, they’re willing to discuss only two states in which they will be active: Florida, where Gill Action will be playing defense against a constitutional marriage amendment; and Massachusetts, where they will be helping to reelect Democratic and Republican legislators who had voted to protect the state’s same-sex marriage law. And although I can talk to one of their donors, I can’t name that person in print. Any breach of confidentiality there might scare off future donors or, perhaps worse, let the opposition know where Gill will strike next.

Essentially, Guerriero and Smith want to turn their face to the sunlight ever so briefly, then retreat to the shadowy world of politics to work in virtual anonymity -- developing a hit list of the community’s worst enemies, identifying our best friends, and doing whatever has to be done to get the next hate-crimes bill passed or constitutional amendment killed at the state level.

As a journalist, I felt like they were tying both hands behind my back and smashing my recorder. It would be nearly impossible to verify just how much of an impact they were really having. These were the good guys, I reminded myself, forced to use the same brass-knuckle tactics pioneered by the likes of Newt Gingrich and Karl Rove. And who better to take the weapons Rove and Gingrich deployed against LGBT people -- and train them back on conservatives -- than a couple guys who came up through the GOP ranks?

Gill Action, in my estimation, bears some resemblance to GOPAC, the political action committee Gingrich wielded to obtain the GOP’s landslide victories in 1994, when -- along with taking control of the U.S. House of Representatives for the first time in four decades -- Republicans stormed state legislatures to seize power in 18 chambers. In the 2006 election, by its own account, Gill Action’s nationwide donor base directed some $2.8 million to 68 candidates across 11 states. And 56 of those candidates won -- presumably knocking out 56 other candidates who weren’t so friendly with the gays.

Gill Action isn’t the financial juggernaut that GOPAC was, nor does it have the sweeping ideological agenda of Gingrich’s Contract With America. But Gill’s emphasis on growing power from the bottom up -- planting one school board member or city council person at a time until Congress is eventually overrun by politicians who support LGBT rights -- is strikingly similar to the way GOPAC helped create a Congress full of pols who had been vetted by the Christian right before rising up through the GOP ranks. It was Gingrich’s revolution that laid a foundation for the Rovian politics of fear that has locked gays out of relationship recognition at the state level nearly across the country.

In the course of my conversation with Guerriero and Smith, I hesitatingly offer up the Newt analogy, thinking that few self-respecting LGBT activists -- of Republican persuasion or not -- would welcome the comparison. Instead, Smith and Guerriero flash a glance at each other. Far from drawing a distinction, Smith offers, “We’re not afraid to learn from anyone across the political spectrum who’s doing really smart work, be it EMILY’s List or GOPAC.” Sure, you could call these guys activists, but what Smith just gave me is neither gay nor straight. It’s the response of a political operative.

THE PIPELINE

Marilyn Musgrave, Colorado congresswoman and child of the Gingrich revolution, cut her teeth in elective office as a school board member in 1991 focusing on abstinence-only education. She graduated to the Colorado state house and senate before winning her U.S. congressional bid in 2002. Two years later she authored and introduced the first Federal Marriage Amendment.

Representative Musgrave has since survived two takedown attempts by Tim Gill and several other progressive millionaires who threw millions in negative advertising at her races in 2004 and 2006. (One ad famously depicted an actress dressed like Musgrave stealing a watch from a corpse in an open casket -- a direct jab at her vote to tax funeral homes in the state.) The attacks have taken their toll, and Colorado politicians have taken note: Musgrave’s margin of victory in the last election shrank to just over two percentage points in the highly conservative fourth district, where voters should wholeheartedly embrace her ideology.

Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Facebook. 1 2 3 NEXT  Page 1 of 3
Share EMAIL PRINT
 
Reader Comments
  • Name: Jackie T.
    Date posted: 7/7/2008 3:05:00 AM
    Hometown: Leesburg

    Comment:

    When you do underhanded things like this, you can't complain when someone else is doing the same thing... even if they did them first. How are these guys showing that gays are any better than radical straights or plain Christians? It's like people trying to pretend that they can't help being gay... we all know that we choose this lifestyle over a straight lifestyle, and if we can't admit that instead of trying to blame it on something 'beyond our control', then how weak we must be. "Are we men or are we mice?", so to speak. I don't get all this riff-raff that is constantly going on, like all this fear related banter... If we are in the right, then we will succeed in marriage laws including gays and it will last more than a few years, but if we are not right in this, we won't. Why worry about it, especially to the point of being underhanded? We are just defeating the point that we are always trying to make about gays being more kind or docile... Are we just lying?

  • Name: Gary
    Date posted: 7/2/2008 2:39:00 PM
    Hometown: San Francisco

    Comment:

    You don't think that the radical right conducts exactly the same type of political canvassing? Get real. They are masters of the political game, and its about time the homos stood up and fought fire with fire! There is a link to this story from the conservative hate site "Americans for Truth about Homosexuality" and how alarmed they are that GLBT are using their tactics against them. Now, were Gill to operate under full disclosure and the article include such information, they would have a roadmap to counter the pro-democratic work. Folks, there are more hate-filled religious people than genuine Christians and way more than GLBT, and they will do everything -- and anything -- they can to continue their radical agenda of excluding you and me from "their" world, from equal rights, from marriage equality, and from pursuing life, liberty and happiness. Coincidence that two of the three comments so far quietly undermine the pro-GLBT group? Not.

  • Name: Steve B.
    Date posted: 6/28/2008 6:08:00 PM
    Hometown: Tucson

    Comment:

    Why are they hiding about this? This makes it seem like something they have to hide. Do you want some shadowy organization representing you? Speaking for you? There is no point in "hiding" anyway--with the election laws, all this information should be available through government sources--and if it's not, perhaps that is why they are hiding? How would you feel if this were some secret Christian organization working against gays? If the point is to convert people and win them to your side rather than force them into submission and silence, you can't do that by acting in underhanded, deceitful ways like this. Isn't this thinking so twenthieth century?

  • Name: Mark
    Date posted: 6/26/2008 12:46:00 PM
    Hometown: Tampa

    Comment:

    After reading this article, I'm not sure I have a warm, fuzzy feeling about Gill Action. I'm supposed to trust a shadowy organization, full of people with lots of money, to make decisions for and about the gay community, without anyone's input but their own? My elderly father prattles on and on about the Trilateral -- a shadowy organization, full of people with lots of money, making decisions that affect the global economy and politics, without the input of the people they affect. Maybe the Old Man is smarter than I'm giving him credit for being.

  • Name: Lee
    Date posted: 6/24/2008 1:58:00 PM
    Hometown: Boston

    Comment:

    Why don't we hear about the HRC doing this?



More Online Only
  • Commentary The Imaginary Debate

    Actor and blogger Chad Lindsey asks, if the secular and devout can comfortably share space at a drive-in theater in Michigan, why can’t the political right share lower Manhattan?

  • Commentary Cross Country Speed Dating

    Would you like to go on a date with this guy? Kevin Patrick Richberg tells you how you can make it happen, and why he's hitting up 30 states in 30 days to find Mr. Right.

  • Internet Video Content Flag Ruffling Some (Peacock) Feathers

    Fresh from attracting 3 million viewers to his "California Gays" video, Ryan James Yezak ups the budget and takes on another Katy Perry tune — the very gay "Peacock."

  • Television Hear What Happens Live

    Fresh off his Emmy win for Top Chef, Bravo executive Andy Cohen talks about Monday night's Real Housewives of New Jersey reunion and being shoved by a table-flipper.

  • Fitness The New 60

    Psychotherapist and Advocate columnist Robert Levithan looks back on his life experiences and finds the journey to personal truth can be complicated and rewarding.

  • Washington D C View From Washington

    The White House may continue to wear blinders on same-sex marriage, but the world is transforming around them as conservatives take up the mantle of equality.

  • DVDs The Hot Sheet

    Katy Perry secures her gay fan base, J. Lo finds her Back-Up Plan, the latest adaptation of Dorian Gray stays gay, and Heart returns for the first time in six years.

  • Health and Treatments Living the Questions

    Living the questions takes takes on a literal meaning as Advocate columnist Tyler Helms describes the day he almost lost everything after being diagnosed with HIV.

  • Theater On the Road With Laramie

    As Greg Pierotti heads into rehearsal with Laramie 10 Years Later, he finds the people of Laramie are eager for their city to be known as something more wholesome than the scene of a hate crime.

  • News Features Mason Wyler Comes Clean

    Porn star Mason Wyler has never been shy about his sex drive — which is why he says he expected mixed response to his announcement that he's HIV-positive.

  • News Features Swim Team

    Swimming three miles between Long Island and Fire Island this weekend, 50 people raised big bucks for gay charities. Check out photos from the the Stonewall Foundation's second annual swim here.

  • Style Canine Couture

    Sparkly accessories, witty T-shirts, and cute capes — New York's Pet Fashion Week let the dogs run the show. Check out the photos.

  • Washington D C View From Washington

    On LGBT and mainstream issues alike, the Obama administration finds progressives irritating. But they let their frustration insulate them from criticism at their own peril on marriage equality.

  • DVDs Video Content Flag The Hot Sheet

    Jerry O'Connell strips down to fend off piranhas, Anthony Hopkins plays gay for Ivory, Jennifer Aniston takes on Bill O'Reilly, and Mad Men undress.

  • Television Come Away With Me

    Flip on the cruise control and discover the nooks and crannies of America with travel show host David Keeps.

  • Media Video Content Flag Advocate On-Air: GLAAD Edition

    What do Sigourney Weaver, Adam Lambert, and Mississippi high schooler Constance McMillen have in common? To find out, watch The Advocate On-Air's Special GLAAD Edition.

  • Books One Night with Valentino

    Book excerpt: In Secret Historian, Justin Spring’s biography of “professor, tattoo artist and sexual renegade” Samuel Steward, a torrid tryst with screen legend Rudolph Valentino is revealed.

  • Marriage Equality White House Meeting Heats Up

    A White House meeting with state equality organizations has inflamed the blogosphere after LGBT Liaison Brian Bond said he was frustrated with bloggers criticisizing an administration that is "99 percent" supportive on equality issues.

  • Theater Seat Filler

    Your man on the New York theater scene RSVPs to Abraham Lincoln’s Big Gay Dance Party, spends A Night at the Tombs with a trans celeb, and checks out the old/new faces in A Little Night Music.

  • Media Mama's Got Something to Tell You

    Progressive radio darling Stephanie Miller knows she shocked some fans by coming out, but the sharp-tongued liberal wants everyone to know she's still a single, childless loser.

Facebook Activity
 
1041 COVER X135 | ADVOCATE.COM