Political
operatives are in motion sifting through opponents'
latest financial filings in the presidential race, as
The Washington Postreported Tuesday. One point of interest
for LGBT voters is that former Grey's
Anatomy star Isaiah Washington, a lightning rod
lately for gay criticism, gave $2,300 to Sen.
Barack Obama's campaign.
The donation came
on May 4 and is the maximum amount an individual can
give to a presidential candidate per election. Washington
used a homophobic slur against Grey's costar
T.R. Knight last year, then repeated the word at this
year's Golden Globe Awards in January; he later
apologized on Larry King Live, and his contract
was not renewed on Grey's Anatomy.
Obama now faces
the classic "Should he or shouldn't he return the
money?" question asked of candidates who receive funds from
donors that some observers find objectionable.
Kenneth Sherrill, professor of political science at
Hunter College, says the Washington case is par for
the course.
"Virtually
every candidate gets money from people who are
controversial. This is an exercise of free speech on
Washington's part," said Sherrill,
noting that Washington should be able to participate in
the political process. "Under current American
constitutional law, he's got a right to give
his money to a candidate. The difference here is,
it's public; we know who he gave money
to."
All
three Democratic front-runners have faced
check-rejection dilemmas in the past and likely will
again. According to the Chicago Sun-Times, Obama's campaign gave back
$37,000 to Wilmette, Ill., businessman Tony Rezko, who is
fighting public corruption and business fraud
charges.
During Hillary
Clinton's Senate reelection campaign in 2005, the
senator returned $5,000 to the political action
committee of Wal-Mart Stores Inc., after serving on
the company's board from 1986 to 1992. She
believed that the company should provide better worker
benefits, according to the Associated Press.
John Edwards
returned $10,000 to employees of a Little Rock,
Ark., law firm during his 2004 presidential bid after
one of the firm's clerks said she expected her
boss to reimburse her for her $2,000 donation,
according to the San Jose Mercury News.
Obama campaign
officials declined to comment about whether they would
return Washington's donation, instead forwarding the
following statement to The Advocate: "Barack
Obama strongly disagrees with the statements made by
Isaiah Washington last year, but he joins members of
the GLBT community in encouraging [Washington's]
efforts to seek counseling and his decision to tape a
public service announcement on behalf of GLAAD."
Washington made
the PSA, in which he decried hate speech, as part of
his effort to make amends for using the slur against Knight.
It began airing in May.
The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against
Defamation declined to comment on Washington's
contribution to Obama. (Padraic Wheeler, The
Advocate)