Stonewall Oregon

Democratic Party of Oregon GLBT Caucus

White House Civil Rights Agenda Live at 12:01pm EST!

Posted by Laura Calvo on 20th January 2009

At noon today President Barack Obama was sworn in as the 44th President of the United States of America.

One minute after the stroke of noon the new White House web site went live!

Take a moment to read President Barack Obama’s full agenda, especially his Civil Rights agenda.

“While we have come a long way since the Stonewall riots in 1969, we still have a lot of work to do. Too often, the issue of LGBT rights is exploited by those seeking to divide us. But at its core, this issue is about who we are as Americans. It’s about whether this nation is going to live up to its founding promise of equality by treating all its citizens with dignity and respect.”

– Barack Obama, June 1, 2007

The Civil Rights Agenda is a comprehensive statement which prominently outlines President Obama’s agenda in regards to a number of fully inclusive LGBT Civil Rights issues:

Expand Hate Crimes, ENDA, Repeal of DADT, Adoption Rights, Repeal of DOMA, and HIV/AIDS policy are listed White House agenda items.

Also of note is the White House Office of Public Liaison, a link to the office allows direct input to the White House.  The Deputy Director of the White House Office of Public Liaison is Brian Bond, whose appointement was featured in the The Advocate.

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A Glimpse Towards the Future of the Supreme Court

Posted by Laura Calvo on 17th October 2008

What will the U.S. Supreme Court look like under the outcomes of this election when it comes to LGBT people?

Paul Smith’s editorial at The Advocate:

“IF YOU CARE about the rights of LGBT citizens, the two most important things you can do in the next few weeks are to vote for Barack Obama and to persuade friends and family to join you. Without for a moment diminishing the importance of the ongoing California initiative fight (which is itself huge), the ground zero for the movement pursuing LGBT equality right now is the presidential election. Either we will go backward, losing key rights we now have and leaving the country in the hands of those who offer at best their grudging “tolerance” (the term Sarah Palin used in the debate), or we go forward with real equality within our grasp.”

Read the rest at The Advocate. (Definitely worth the read)

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Biden – Palin Debate on Gay Marriage

Posted by Laura Calvo on 7th October 2008

Conversations on the street about the exchange on relationship recognition at the VP debate between Biden and Palin have been mixed as to what exactly was said and what it means.

Below is the transcript of the entire exchange thanks to CNN and the video clip found on youtube.com.

FILL: The next round of — pardon me, the next round of questions starts with you, Sen. Biden. Do you support, as they do in Alaska, granting same-sex benefits to couples?

BIDEN: Absolutely. Do I support granting same-sex benefits? Absolutely positively. Look, in an Obama-Biden administration, there will be absolutely no distinction from a constitutional standpoint or a legal standpoint between a same-sex and a heterosexual couple.

The fact of the matter is that under the Constitution we should be granted — same-sex couples should be able to have visitation rights in the hospitals, joint ownership of property, life insurance policies, et cetera. That’s only fair.

It’s what the Constitution calls for. And so we do support it. We do support making sure that committed couples in a same-sex marriage are guaranteed the same constitutional benefits as it relates to their property rights, their rights of visitation, their rights to insurance, their rights of ownership as heterosexual couples do.

IFILL: Governor, would you support expanding that beyond Alaska to the rest of the nation?

PALIN: Well, not if it goes closer and closer towards redefining the traditional definition of marriage between one man and one woman. And unfortunately that’s sometimes where those steps lead.

But I also want to clarify, if there’s any kind of suggestion at all from my answer that I would be anything but tolerant of adults in America choosing their partners, choosing relationships that they deem best for themselves, you know, I am tolerant and I have a very diverse family and group of friends and even within that group you would see some who may not agree with me on this issue, some very dear friends who don’t agree with me on this issue.

But in that tolerance also, no one would ever propose, not in a McCain-Palin administration, to do anything to prohibit, say, visitations in a hospital or contracts being signed, negotiated between parties.

But I will tell Americans straight up that I don’t support defining marriage as anything but between one man and one woman, and I think through nuances we can go round and round about what that actually means.

But I’m being as straight up with Americans as I can in my non- support for anything but a traditional definition of marriage.

IFILL: Let’s try to avoid nuance, Senator. Do you support gay marriage?

BIDEN: No. Barack Obama nor I support redefining from a civil side what constitutes marriage. We do not support that. That is basically the decision to be able to be able to be left to faiths and people who practice their faiths the determination what you call it.

The bottom line though is, and I’m glad to hear the governor, I take her at her word, obviously, that she think there should be no civil rights distinction, none whatsoever, between a committed gay couple and a committed heterosexual couple. If that’s the case, we really don’t have a difference.

IFILL: Is that what your said?

PALIN: Your question to him was whether he supported gay marriage and my answer is the same as his and it is that I do not.

IFILL: Wonderful. You agree. On that note, let’s move to foreign policy.

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Posted in News, Oregon Democrats, gay lesbian bisexual transgender | 1 Comment »

Trans Bloggers Can’t See Russia From Their Front Porch, But………

Posted by Laura Calvo on 29th September 2008

Laura Calvo, Portland ORtrans fro Obama

Trans Bloggers and the trans community can see a whole lot of folks who believe in the hope of a better future for ALL Americans. We can see whole lot of folks who believe in the change we need to have in the way ALL Americans are treated equally and with respect, regardless of who they are.

We can see a whole lot of people coming together to bring the hope and change to put America back on track as a world leader and who believe we can do it!

When you look out your front porch, you can see all the different and wonderfully diverse people who share in the belief that hope and change are just around the corner.

To be honest, I was not on my front porch when I was a small part of the 84,000+ people who came together from every walk of life to celebrate the Democratic Party nomination of Senator Barack Obama for President of the United States of America.  Actually it was more like I was sitting my living room with all of my family around me. Plus knowing there were tens of millions of people around the country who shared what I was experiencing and believe in was reason to give rise to the hope of a real future.

Among the throngs of people all across America were transgender people who feel as deeply as the rest of the country believing in the message of hope and change. Transgender people have a life stake in the outcome of this election. Transgender Americans, like everyone else in America recognize the crucial juncture we are faced with in this election.

With the partnership of National Stonewall Democrats, Transgender Americans and their allies have launched a fundraising drive to help elect Barack Obama. People all across America are encouraged to go to the secure contribuiton page to help elect Obama. Contributions made on the secure Act Blue page go directly to the Obama campaign. But just as important your contribution helps to bring attention to the voice of trans Americans in fighting for the equal and basic rights for all Americans.

For those not familiar with Act Blue, it is an extremely innovative grass roots oreinted way for anyone to help support candidates over a braod spectrum. Act Blue pages, like Transgender Community and Allies Support Obama, have raised nearly 3/4 of a million dollars from over 10,000 supporters. The Transgender and Allies Support Obama page is in the top 10 fund raising sites on Act Blue and rising.

If you are blessed enough to give the full maximum amout of $2300 to support Obama as President of the United States, please don’t hesitate.  At the same time don’t be mistaken that your contribution of even $5 won’t make a difference. Your contribution, no matter how small, does and is making a profund difference. The Obama campaign has repaeatedly proven that fact over and over again.

If you support Obama and you support trans people’s fight to have an equal and basic right to hold a job, not be victimized by violent crime, have equal access to housing and healthcare, like every other American value we hold dear, give a little to show your support.

That is why so many Trans Americans and their allies have thrown their support to elect Barack Obama as the next President of the United States.

Please leave a comment when you contribute or voice your support for all the Trans Americans you can see from your front porch.

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Posted in Events, National Stonewall Democrats, News, Oregon Democrats, Statewide, gay lesbian bisexual transgender | 6 Comments »

Obama: A Global Leader on HIV/AIDS Issue

Posted by Laura Calvo on 25th September 2008

Aids Walk Portland is happening Sunday, October 12, 2008. Sign up to start your own Aids Walk team or join up with Just Out’s team. It is a great event!

Aids Walk Portland is an important reminder of one the serious issues that face the world, our country and our communities.

While the world is watching the financial crisis, we can’t afford to lose sight of the other pressing issues. The research, treatment and prevention of HIV/AIDS is a global issue and we need to be sure that our world leaders will work to dedicate the resources to fight this disease.

“He has supported full funding for the Ryan White CARE Act and has pledged to implement a national HIV/AIDS strategy to combat the continuing epidemic in the United States. He has also spoken out against the stigma surrounding HIV testing, a stigma tied all too often to homophobia. And he’s led by example: On our trip to Kenya, we both took a public HIV test.–Michelle Obama

Senator Obama has a long history of leading the fight.

“Only Senator Obama has presented a specific spending plan that would not only increase AIDS spending but also provide the increase needed overall for the US anti-poverty effort to have a holistic impact. The call for the U.S. to dedicate just one percent of its budget to fighting global poverty is a reasonable and practical proposal. Senator Obama has shown he understands why reaching this goal is both a moral imperative and in the interest of the United States.” –Paul Zeitz, Executive Director of the Global AIDS Alliance Fund

“U.S. Sen. Barack Obama of Illinois told more than 2,000 evangelical leaders in Orange County on Friday that he ‘respectfully but unequivocally’ disagrees with those who oppose condom distribution to fight the AIDS pandemic. . . Obama drew a standing ovation from the 2,072 pastors and others who came from 39 states and 18 nations.”– Los Angeles Times, December 2, 2006

You can read Barack Obama’s plan to fight the HIV/AIDS pandemic

You can also go to Obama Pride

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Photo slide show of DNC in Denver

Posted by Laura Calvo on 31st August 2008

Here is some of the unedited photos from Denver:

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2008 DNC: Hope + Change = Equality For All

Posted by Laura Calvo on 30th August 2008

Our Oregon delegation is back from the Democratic National Convention.  I can only speak for myself, but it would probably fair to say we were all left breathless with emotions at one point or another during our  convention.

KC Hanson, Sam Sappington and myself arrived three days ahead of the DNCC to attend the National Stonewall Democrats convention. Frank Dixon was there too. With his duties as Vice Chair of the DPO, Frank was left with a few unavoidable scheduling conflicts.  All of us suspected we too would be having our fair share of scheduling problems in the coming days.  There were just so many events and too little time. I had over 20 pages of spread sheets with event information. Everything from political forums and receptions to baseball games and rock concerts. There was even a poker tournament with Ben Affleck to benefit paralyzed veterans.

At last count,  continuing to rise at the convention, 374 LGBT people officially registered as delegates, alternate delegates, committee people, or convention pages at the 2008 DNCC in Denver. Interestingly, if the 374 person delegation were a state delegation, we would be the third largest state delegation, with only California and New York having more delegates.

The aftermath of last years non-inclusive ENDA struggle some of the detracting sentiment heard by our community was related to trans people not being considered a  part of the larger gay and lesbian community, trans folk had been riding on the coat tails of the gay and lesbian community, and that trans people had done a really poor job of lobbying their congressional representatives to be included in ENDA. On the flip side of that issue was over 300 LGBT advocacy organizations that opposed the non-inclusive ENDA, holding fast to the commitment that we are a community which can not be divided.

The convention personally and politically touched me on so many levels as a latina lesbian transwoman with a gay son, another son in the military, a gay nephew who adopted a child with his partner, a lesbian niece who works her fingers to the bone in health care, and as an American. Not to mention being a member of one of possibly one of the most marginalized groups of people in society, doubly complicated by being a part of another traditionally marginalized group of people.

September 5th will mark the thirteenth anniversary of the time I was involuntarily outed at work and forced into a disability retirement solely because my trans history was discovered and was labeled a freak.  It took a long time for me to recover from that ugly time in my life to get where I am at today.

For anyone, gay, straight, or otherwise, who has any doubt that I, or any other trans person,  have no worth, do not deserve equal rights, can wait while the rest of the community moves forward to equality under some sort of instrumentalist theory, or are not a part of the larger gay and lesbian community, I don’t have the words to respond politely.

We are not gay people. We are not lesbians. We are not bisexual or trans persons. We are people, inseparable and inextricably connected to one another. Our allied brothers and sisters come from a diverse mix of colors, issues, and unique personal histories.

On the anniversary of the “I have a dream speech” delivered by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. another momentous time in history also happened at Invesco Field in Denver Colorado.  The Democratic Party became united. But that is not the whole of the legacy of Barack Obama. I believe the message of hope and change for a better and brighter future for all of us was heard around the world.

Barack Obama is the real deal. Certainly our world is not in a happy place and will likely never be a perfect place. If you’re view is the “glass is half empty”, as is much of the the world in this time in history, then perhaps it is time to start viewing your world as a glass being half full. Fill yourself with the hope that we can work together to change our world for the better.

We must end the war in Iraq but maintain our security at home and elsewhere with intelligence and diplomacy. We must never again adopt a policy which includes the preemptive invasion of another country. We need a commander-in-chief who will not squander our best and brightest for the sake of a dollar.We need to feel the safety of our homes and streets.

We urgently need to begin the restructure of our health care delivery here at home, making health care a basic right for all people.

We must change the way the system works against families of all kinds. Children should not go hungry and parents should not have to work three or four jobs just to keep a roof over their heads and safe nutritious food on the table.

We must all work to guarantee that the people who we elect to represent us do actually represent us and work for our benefit.

We must continue to be vigilant of those who wish to keep us oppressed and deny basic civil rights to us and our families simply because of who we love, our skin color, or how we are born. Not just LGBT people, but all people must be equal in all respects.

Having come from Denver this last week, I see what is meant by the saying that politics is the art of the possible. The possibilities for LGBT people and all people is palpable.

Our brush stroke in the art of the possible is clearly defined and well within our means.  We must indivually and as a whole and united community engage in the belief of change and hope for a better future.

We have a very clear calling, along with some very clear steps we all need take to be bring about the change we all hope for.

We are democrats. Our core values are adopted and defined in our party platform. We are included and a part of the intrnsic fabric of our democratic party. Our well being is woven into those core values expressed in the party platform and echoed in the true meaning of our constitution. We have the tools and means to effect the change we want. We as gay, lesbian, bisexual an transgender are empowered to participate in the change and hope for a better future for all our sakes. We simply can not afford to stand back and watch our future dissolve before our eyes.

Here in Oregon, we have a responsibility as a community to step up to the plate. As a community we have no choice choice but become fully engaged as a community.  Where ever we are in life, we must consider the intolerable outcome if we fail to act now!

We are less than two months away from the election. If you have any spare time or resources to spare in the next two months, consider making an investment in your future.

If you ask yourself or doubt that you can make a difference, please reach out to any democratic campaign office in the state. Call or write your friends and relatives, even those in other states and beg them to support democratic candidates where ever they may be. If you’re still not convinced you can and do make a difference feel free to email treasurer (at) stonewalloregon (dot) org.

Here are a couple of links to get you started:

Jeff Merkley for US Senate

Jeff Merkley is a champion for GLBT people everywhere. As our Speaker of the Oregon House of Representatives, Jeff Merkely was one of the crucial keys to bringing the Oregon Equality and Family Fairness Act from a dream to reality.

Unlike Jeff Merkely’s republican opponent who tries to pretend to be good on our issues, while voting in favor of the Federal Marriage Amendment twice and comparing relationship equality to polygamy. Please contrast that to the fact that the republican nominee for president voted against the Federal marriage Amendment Act.

The Democratic Party of Oregon, Basic Rights Oregon and eQuality Giving have all enthusiastically endorsed my personal freind Jeff Merkley.

LGBT for Obama

This site has been specifically set up for the LGBT community to easily get involved in helping to elect Barack Obama. The site and drive behind it is the work Oregonian Terry Bean.

Transgender Community and Allies:

Trans folk and their allies with National Stonewall Democrats have set up an easy to use web page to support Barack Obama. It’s a great way to show your support for Obama and the trans people in your life.

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Posted in Events, Jeff Merkley, National Stonewall Democrats, News, Oregon Democrats, Statewide | 2 Comments »

Obama Pride Includes Prominent GLBT Oregonians

Posted by Laura Calvo on 8th August 2008

Dave Noble, the Director of the LGBT Vote at Obama for America, in a national email update mentioned prominent Oregon LGBT leaders Terry Bean and Roey Thorpe. Washingtonians Marsha Botzer, founder of the Ingersoll Gender Center located in Seattle and Alex Wagner, a Seattle attorney are also mentioned. It’s a broad sampling of the who’s who of LGBT Americans.

Rep. Baldwin and other leaders join the team

This week, we’re proud to announce that Rep. Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) has joined our campaign as co-chair of the National LGBT Steering and Policy Committee. Congresswoman Baldwin was Chair of Senator Hillary Clinton’s National LGBT Steering Committee through the primary. She will join Tobias Barrington Wolff, law professor at the University of Pennsylvania and civil rights lawyer, who chaired Senator Obama’s LGBT Policy Committee through the primary. They will be co-chairs of the National LGBT Steering and Policy Committee moving forward.

In a release, Congresswoman Baldwin said “I am proud to support Barack Obama for President and work hard for his election because we share a commitment to equality for all Americans. This is our quest and our common goal. From now through November, we will reach out aggressively to our fellow LGBT Americans to ensure that they know there is only one candidate in this race who will stand up for equal rights and build a coalition that can deliver the change that we desperately need.”

Read the rest of this entry »

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Tickets Available for Obama Historic Speech

Posted by Laura Calvo on 7th August 2008

If you’re going to be in Denver on August 28th and want to witness history in the making, get yourself over to the Obama HQ before August 12th.

The Obama campaign called Oregon delegates to the convention yesterday to check on non-delegates traveling with delegates who want to attend the historic and quite possibly epic event on the anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s “I have a dream ” speech. I’m already getting goose bumps and weepy eyed just thinking about it.

Here’s the link that explains the process. If you decide to go, be sure you bring your pup tents as there’s no room at the inn in Denver. What is available via internet search is a “two star” hotel outside of Denver going for $347.00/night.

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Supporting Obama, not just toeing the party line……..

Posted by Laura Calvo on 5th August 2008

Out Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) supported Senator Clinton in the primary.  Now she is working for Senator Obama. In a statement carried on Queerty, Baldwin had this to say:

“….the primary season is now over and, like Hillary and millions of other Democrats, Independents, and many Republicans, I am proud to support the candidacy of Barack Obama for President. Endorsing Barack was not a difficult decision and it is not based on party affiliation alone. Rather, it is based on my concept of what the promise of America means and on the stark differences between the two candidates.”

Rep. Baldwin, who also co-chairs the Congressional Equality Caucus, also said:

Barack Obama will support legislation expanding federal employment non-discrimination laws and federal hate crime laws to assure the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender Americans.”

John McCain will not.

I am working to elect Barack Obama President, not because I’m toeing a party line, but because we share a commitment to equality for all Americans. We share core values – a commitment to the common good and an aversion to power being granted through friendship and favors. And we share a belief in the power of the individual to create change and the knowledge that in a democracy, “We, the People” decide what is possible.

I am working to elect Barack Obama President because he dares to believe in and work for ‘one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.’”

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