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The Gay Goodfellas

Inside the Gill Action Fund, the most effective pro-gay political weapon you never heard of.
From The Advocate June 21, 2008
The Gay Goodfellas

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.  

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Eleveld is news editor of The Advocate.

Reader Comments

These comments are reproduced as written by visitors to this Web site. They have not been edited for content, grammar, or spelling. The viewpoints appearing here are those of the writer, and do not necessarily reflect the opinion or views of advocate.com, The Advocate, or its affiliates.

  • Name: Lester
    Date posted: 2008-07-06 1:42 PM
    Hometown: San Francisco

    Comment:

    This is an excellent, well-written, intelligently-conceived article. Thank you. No one has gone into this strategy so well - and I read a lot of political writing.


  • Name: Clay
    Date posted: 2008-06-28 4:20 PM
    Hometown: Nashville

    Comment:

    It's plain that many of the people commenting haven't even properly read the article. Everything from tired cattiness to conspiracy theories in place of an elementary understanding of the nature of politics. If you want endless cocktail party bitch sessions, there's always HRC. Tiresome.


  • Name: Mark
    Date posted: 2008-06-26 12:54 PM
    Hometown: Tampa

    Comment:

    After reading this article, I'm not sure I have a warm, fuzzy feeling about Gill Action. I'm afraid I share Stephen-from-Cambridge's skepticism. 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 input from those of use who may be affected? 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: Stephen
    Date posted: 2008-06-25 12:24 PM
    Hometown: Colorado Springs

    Comment:

    Saying that Tim Gill has to be accountable is telling him how to spend his money. Tim's political compass comes from his donor network. If this was truly damaging, do you think funders in our movement would embrace this tactic and spend their dollars in states that would normally be going to federal candidates? Hiring Karl Rove proteges to combat the very machine that has been attacking our community is innovative. Would you say that Rove's tactics have been ineffective? When your opponent is kicking you in the gut, do you run away or kick back harder? Unless you propose we sit around in committee and talk about mediocrity and how things should be - join HRC, sit around at a Black Tie dinner, drinking your cosmopolitan and wait for politicians to have an epiphany.


  • Name: Stephen
    Date posted: 2008-06-25 12:06 AM
    Hometown: Cambridge

    Comment:

    Stephen II- Please. Don't be obtuse. I don't presume to tell anyone how to spend their money--whether it is $1 or $1million. I have complimented Tim Gill for the past investment in political organizing but...when he funds a shadowy group with ties to the person and tactics of Karl Rove taking credit for victories long in the making, his "independent funding stream" becomes a dangerous lack of accountability. This mentality needs to be driven out of politics, not embraced without critique.


  • Name: Stephen
    Date posted: 2008-06-24 10:16 AM
    Hometown: Colorado Springs

    Comment:

    Sprint ahead before the finish line? Gill has been in the front for the last decade. His philanthropic and political contributions have never been self serving. He helped build the infrastructure you reference and yet you continue to berate him as though you have a better solution. It's evident that neither party truly represents the gay community - to align ourselves with either side would be a critical error. So we have Gill, born into one of Colorado's most well known Republican families, a lifelong democrat, who alligns himself with the center. This is bad because.... Not relying on a broad base of contributors, Gill has the luxury of being able to spend his money in any way he chooses. Your comments seem to assume that the LGBT community in general has a right to decide how Mr. Gill spends his money. Fortunately, you don't. Go make a billion and spend it the way you see fit.


  • Name: Stephen
    Date posted: 2008-06-24 7:10 AM
    Hometown: Cambridge

    Comment:

    Gannon- Did you put your application in already? You are arrogant enough to work with these folks. Perhaps the other Stephen can be a reference for you. Not professional politics? State and local groups have more paid lobbyists and professional political organizers than all the national lobby groups combined. That is why we are making so much state and local progress while DC grinds along. Again I say, the low hanging fruit they claim to be cherry picking is the result of that excellent, professional work of organizations across the country. I too applaud the investment in the political infrastructure of Tim Gill. But this Gay Goodfellas BS makes my blood boil. It is competition when they sprint out of the crowd in the final mile and claim to have won the marathon. The few caveats the reporter puts in about their lack of transparency as they claim victory after victory is not enough to absolve this kind of wide-eyed, uncritical reportage.


  • Name: Stephen
    Date posted: 2008-06-24 7:08 AM
    Hometown: Cambridge

    Comment:

    Gannon- Did you put your application in already? You are arrogant enough to work with these folks. Perhaps the other Stephen can be a reference for you. Not professional politics? State and local groups have more paid lobbyists and professional political organizers than all the national lobby groups combined. That is why we are making so much state and local progress while DC grinds along. Again I say, the low hanging fruit they claim to be cherry picking is the result of that excellent, professional work of organizations across the country. I too applaud the investment in the political infrastructure of Tim Gill. But this Gay Goodfellas BS makes my blood boil. It is competition when they sprint out of the crowd in the final mile and claim to have won the marathon. The few caveats the reporter puts in about their lack of transparency as they claim victory after victory is not enough to absolve this kind of wide-eyed, uncritical reportage.


  • Name: Art M.
    Date posted: 2008-06-23 8:26 PM
    Hometown: San Francisco

    Comment:

    "These were the good guys" How you can state that Republicans, one a Log Cabin, and the other a crony of Karl Rove are "good guys" without bursting an appendix due to laughing is beyond me. Republicans aren't "good guys" and never will be. There IS no "working from within". There IS no changing the Republican platform which has at its core a homophobic plank, just as it has an anti-choice plank and an anti-minority plank (unless they can appease/dupe them to get votes). We keep hearing that the Log Cabins have done SUCH good - well where is it? Point to a Republican that openly embraces their group and votes for Gay civil rights, same-sex marriage, and the repeal of don't ask, don't tell. You won't find one because there isn't any - and there won't be any, either. I don't care how far up the GOP ass Log Cabins stick their tongue - they will NEVER succeed.


  • Name: Gannon
    Date posted: 2008-06-23 4:34 PM
    Hometown: Jefforsonville

    Comment:

    What state and local groups have been doing is not professional politics. It's activism, and it's necessary, but it's not hard-nosed politics. The Gill folks understand we need to open another front in this war, and they've done it. And they've seen amazing, astounding success so far. Activists needn't feel upstaged by Gill's success. They haven't been playing this game.


  • Name: Stephen
    Date posted: 2008-06-23 4:00 PM
    Hometown: Colorado Springs, CO

    Comment:

    Jaded Stephen? Let's see....Gill has been funding the gay movement since 1994, injecting $120 million into local, state and national non-profit organizations, where he has seen only marginal success. How much have you invested as a percentage of your net worth? What have you done for the movement? Tim Gill is hero and it's quite unfortunate the gay community doesn't know his name, his success or understand that the gay movement, as we know it today, stands on his shoulders. He's partly responsible for funding the hard working state and local groups you mention. Kudos to him for spending more of his fortune for my rights. I for one am extremely grateful.


  • Name: Stephen
    Date posted: 2008-06-23 1:15 PM
    Hometown: Cambridge

    Comment:

    A group of cloistered millionaires dabble in politics without accountability while handing huge sums to their "political advisors" whose primary job is to show how invaluable their own advice is. What they call innovative is nothing new. It is the same work local and state groups have been doing day in and day out usually without the benefit of huge sums of cash. Now along comes a shadowy Karl Rovesque group willing to make deals with the devil as they cherry pick the easy targets and take credit for the long slogging work of activists all over. Innovative? Really? The arrogance truly is stunning. Good for big donors who want to help. Shame on them for undermining solid progress by bullying and bypassing the organizations that made that "low hanging fruit" reachable in the first place.


  • Name: Stephen
    Date posted: 2008-06-23 1:15 PM
    Hometown: Cambridge

    Comment:

    A group of cloistered millionaires dabble in politics without accountability while handing huge sums to their "political advisors" whose primary job is to show how invaluable their own advice is. What they call innovative is nothing new. It is the same work local and state groups have been doing day in and day out usually without the benefit of huge sums of cash. Now along comes a shadowy Karl Rovesque group willing to make deals with the devil as they cherry pick the easy targets and take credit for the long slogging work of activists all over. Innovative? Really? The arrogance truly is stunning. Good for donors who want to help and are willing to invest strategically. Shame on them for undermining solid progress by bullying and bypassing the organizations that made that "low hanging fruit" reachable in the first place.


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