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Obama Wants the Gay Vote ... Sorta

Posted by Deeky , Shakesville at 6:25 AM on August 29, 2008.


This isn't change I can believe in, it's the same old bullshit I've been hearing for most of my life.

Obama wants the LGBT vote, insists campaign manager Steve Hildebrand. Just not enough to ask for it. Not directly anyway.

Speaking at the Dem Convention's LGBT caucus yesterday Hildebrand said had this to say:

I believe that our campaign has not done the effective job it needs to do to persuade and convince LGBT voters that Barack Obama is someone who will lead for them, who will fight for them, fight for us. That’s a failure on behalf of our campaign in my opinion, and I've played a role in it. What we need is for all of you to be our voices in our communities and to work tirelessly to give every single day, as much time as you can give, to know Barack’s record and to know John McCain's failed record and to go out and talk to people who care about the future of LGBT people in this country.
Here's the thing. I know Obama's record. And, as I've pointed out recently, that record includes McClurkin and Meeks. But really, aside from that, what is the campaign saying?

That McCain is worse than Obama? Yeah, we know. We all know that. We've never said otherwise. But you know what? That old saw is not exactly change I can believe in. It's the same old bullshit I've been hearing for most of my life. And I need something more than that.

But should I be expect it? Not according to the Advocate: "For any gay voter waiting to hear someone from the Obama campaign ask for their support, there it was." Really? That's it? Not even a word from the candidate himself? That's nice.

Michelle Obama did speak at the LGBT delegate luncheon on Tuesday, and spoke for nearly 30 minutes. Too bad Michelle isn't running for president. Too bad the man who wants the LGBT vote couldn't deliver that request himself.

As the article also notes, "[t]hree major convention speeches – those of Sen. Hillary Clinton, President Bill Clinton, and Sen. Ted Kennedy – have included references to LGBT Americans." It remains to be seen if Obama will add his name to that list.

AlterNet is a non profit organization and does not make political endorsements. The opinions expressed by our writers are their own.

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Tagged as: clinton, obama, mccain, change, kennedy, glbt vote

Deeky is a regular blogger for Shakesville


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About his speech last night, Peggy Noonan is a troll.
Posted by: Lauren on Aug 29, 2008 6:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I thought Obama hit it out of the park. A very big park it was too. Just about perfect in every way.

Shows up who has class too, and who doesn't. Did you catch Peggy Negative this morning? Dissing him this am in the diner? What does she drink for breakfast?

I couldn't believe her outrageous falsehoods. Someone needs to run her through the truth-o-meter, she was off the charts.

It was a nearly flawless speech, just like a diamond. The tiny flaw, the only flaw I saw, was the look of worry on Barack's face when he heard how large support for gay marriage was in the crowd. It was news, it worried him, and it showed on his face. That was no poker moment.

Despite Peggy's heresy, his policy pitch was superb, he toned back on Afghanistan, showing us he is listening to the returning troops. He will be looking for a good exit from that disaster. I feel very confident he will be an excellent leader.

I am also very proud to see my own small bit of handiwork show up in him, as a coach or other part of this winning team I am really proud to be involved. Believe it or not, this was a part of my vision. Why? Because it had to be.

As Barack and I have both said, it is not about me, it is about us. That means all of us.

Way to go, Barack! You scored mightily for our team. Now we go on to beat them in the fall.

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Senator Obama wants the youth vote
Posted by: redfrog on Aug 29, 2008 7:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and the youth are more accepting of gays. Maybe he will sometime get around to addressing the real, pervasive inequality of gays in this society, but he also wants the evangelical xtian vote, the old white vote, and the institutionalized catholic latino vote. The homophobic hatred in these groups and others is alive, well-entrenched, and still being watered and fed by its leaders.

We are of an us-vs-them mindset in this country and I don't know if Obama's we-are-all-us professions extend to cover all of us. There is a huge gap between the equality sanctioned by marriage and civil unions. The right to visit our life-partner in the hospital is the tip of that ship-killing iceberg of inequality.

I was deeply touched by Senator Obama's speech last night and believe him to have qualities that we sorely need in our leaders. If I was a Republican listening to that speech, waiting for the convention in the twin cities, I would have packed my bags and tattered heart and left under the cover of darkness last night.

But I am a Democrat and a lesbian who was deeply touched by Senator Obama's speech, hopeful that he will be the next President, ready to vote for him, and open to hearing what he says while sensitive to hearing what he does not say.

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