2016 Postmortem
Related: About this forumMeet the gay couple who were first ever to be featured in a Presidential campaign ad.
Except for the lesbian couple who were featured in the same ad of Hillary's.
http://www.out.com/popnography/2015/4/13/meet-gay-couple-hillary-campaign-video
On Sunday, Hillary Rodham Clinton announced her candidacy for president in 2016 via a 2-plus minute video that featured a montage of middle-class Americans, including a same-sex couple holding hands with a voiceover about getting married this summer as a centerpiece what one Times reporter wrote "would have been unimaginable even in the President Obama re-elect in 2012."
That gay Chicago couple, Jared Milrad (31) and Nathan Johnson (30), told the Washington Blade that they didn't know exactly what they were getting involved with three weeks ago when they agreed to participate in a video for the HRC campaign. As Johnson told the Blade on Sunday during a telephone interview:
SNIP
"We were really excited to see that our interview was featured in the campaign announcement. It was particularly moving to see Secretary Clinton feature a gay couple engaged to be legally married, the first of any major presidential candidate. To us, this decision demonstrates Secretary Clintons commitment to LGBT equality and the type of inclusive leader she would be as president.
SNIP
Agschmid
(28,749 posts)pnwmom
(108,994 posts)the last few years have been amazing.
onenote
(42,759 posts)It wasn't that long ago such a thing seemed simply unimaginable.
cosmicone
(11,014 posts)Doctor_J
(36,392 posts)Hillary was against gay marriage then. OTOH, it is nice to see a Hillary thread that isn't a poll
pnwmom
(108,994 posts)the same rights as those in straight marriages -- which put her in the same situation as Bernie Sanders who, as recently as 2006, was supporting civil unions in Vermont but not pushing for same-sex marriage in the US. (He thought it should be a states rights issue.)
http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2013/03/20/hillary-clinton-gay-marriage/2001229/
In June 2003, Sen. Clinton introduced legislation to grant homosexual couples the same rights as heterosexual couples. With that, her position on marriage had not substantially or publicly changed. Privately, however, she might have been starting to reconsider.
In the New York Post the next month, reporter Deborah Orin wrote that Clinton suddenly wouldn't take a position on the Defense of Marriage Act, and that Bill Clinton's office was notably silent on whether the former president still backed the bill he signed into law. Orin quoted Clinton spokeswoman Karen Dunn, who said, "This issue is in a state of evolution."
Doctor_J
(36,392 posts)She was against same sex marriage then
pnwmom
(108,994 posts)Until they both switched to supporting marriage equality.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/outward/2015/10/05/bernie_sanders_on_marriage_equality_he_s_no_longtime_champion.html
But Sanders is not quite the gay rights visionary his defenders would like us to believe. Sanders did oppose DOMAbut purely on states rights grounds. And as recently as 2006, Sanders opposed marriage equality for his adopted home state of Vermont. The senator may have evolved earlier than his primary opponents. But the fact remains that, in the critical early days of the modern marriage equality movement, Sanders was neutral at best and hostile at worst.