Congress Rejects Discrimination Against Gays In Historic
Vote
Religious Right Dealt Stunning Rebuke By Conservative and Moderate
Republicans -- Tables Turned
On Recent Anti-Gay Political Drive
By the Log Cabin Republicans
(WASHINGTON) After weeks of harsh, anti-gay public rhetoric from religious right organizations and members of the GOP Congressional leadership, a record 63 House Republicans fought back, voting along with Democrats to overwhelmingly defeat an amendment by Rep. Joel Hefley (R-CO) which would have rolled back all non-discrimination policies covering sexual orientation in the federal government.
The 252-176 vote to defeat the Hefley Amendment to the Commerce, Justice,
State appropriations bill was a crushing defeat for Majority Whip Tom DeLay
(R-TX) and religious right groups, who supported the amendment, and a victory
for a coalition of conservative and moderate Republicans, along with Log
Cabin Republicans and the Human Rights Campaign, who together led the drive
to stop its passage.
"The message to the Republican leadership is clear -- stop the gay-bashing now and return to a positive, unifying agenda going in to this critical election," said Richard Tafel, executive director of Log Cabin Republicans. "These were Republicans from every political stripe saying to Trent Lott and Newt Gingrich that this attack on gays has gone too far."
The 63 Republicans voting against Hefley set a record for House Republicans on a gay rights issue, doubling the previous record. The last such gay-supportive vote was in the 104th Congress, where 29 Republicans voted against an amendment to repeal the D.C. domestic partnership law.
"We commend these 63 Republicans who stood up for the principle that
all Americans should be judged on their merits, including gay and lesbian
Americans," Tafel said.
"The real story in this vote is that a growing segment of the Republican
Party is emerging," Tafel said. "They are no longer afraid to draw
the line on bashing gays and they are putting the leadership on notice
that it will not work. It's bad policy and it's bad politics.
That's the message of this victory. While so many have reported on
the anti-gay segment of the GOP, this vote shows there is a growing segment
of the party that is inclusive and opposes anti-gay discrimination.”
"This was an unprecedented effort of teamwork in the gay community, with every national gay organization working together in close coordination with key Hill staffers, both gay and straight, on both sides of the aisle," Tafel said. "This victory marks the maturing of the gay political movement, and the end of the old one-party strategy. The gay movement is becoming a strong, bi-partisan movement."
Read President Clinton’s and Democratic Leader Richard A. Gephardt’s statements on the Hefley Amendment.
Log Cabin Republicans is the nation's largest gay and lesbian Republican
organization, with 50+ chapters nationwide, a full-time Washington office
and a federal political action committee.