
Quinn asks Obama to support gay rights
Thu, Mar 19th 2009, 15:43
New York City Speaker Christine Quinn, a current Victory Fund
endorsee, asked President Barack Obama to support gay rights during her
recent visit to the White House for St. Patrick’s Day.
Quinn, who was famously arrested for marching as an open lesbian
during the Fifth Avenue St. Patrick’s Day Parade in 1999, was one of
Obama’s honored guests for the presidential celebration. She is the
city’s first openly gay, first female and first Irish city council
speaker.
The Advocate reports:
“It was an interesting moment,” she said, “even though
you’re so honored to be there, there’s still a part of you that, until
we address the issue on Fifth Avenue, will always feel like wherever
you are — even if you’re an honored guest — there’s still somewhere
that you’re not invited to be.”
Quinn has boycotted New York’s parade for years because organizers
refuse to let LGBT marchers display anything that indicates their
sexuality or support for gay issues.
For that reason, she felt particularly moved to say something not
only about the Obama administration’s diplomatic relations with Ireland
but also about LGBT equality. So Quinn took her moment during a photo
with the president to urge his support for two California court
decisions stipulating that same-sex partners of federal court employees
should be entitled to health benefits. Following the rulings, the
federal Office of Personnel Management blocked the benefits, citing the
Defense of Marriage Act, which prohibits federal recognition of
same-sex marriages.
“I asked the president to change the government’s policy and
position as it related to the recent rulings,” she said. “He could
immediately say, ‘I’m not going to challenge that ruling,’ and I think
it would send a message about where he is headed and that he’s
certainly not moving backwards. If he doesn’t stand by that ruling,
it’s a tremendous setback.”
But Quinn didn’t lose sight of Ireland either and thanked President
Obama for his support of the peace process in Northern Ireland, where a
couple of politically motivated murders have taken place within the
past 10 days. Guests at the White House St. Patrick’s Day celebration
included British and Irish dignitaries, including Gerry Adams, the
longtime leader of Sinn Féin. According to Quinn, who was invited to
Dublin for St. Patrick’s Day in 2007, they were all uniformly enthused
by the Administration’s response to the recent violence.
“Everyone was very happy with President Obama, who has been
incredibly strong and steadfast in support of the peace process in the
North,” she said.
Quinn will speak at the Victory Fund’s annual Champagne Brunch on April 19 in Washington, D.C. Reserve your ticket here.