Thousands in Streets Defend Same-Sex Rights Workers World By Imani Henry
November 14, 2008
Right-wing Churches Bankrolled Prop. 8 in Calif.
The election victory of Barack Obama will go down
in history as a triumphant step forward in the
struggle against racism and national oppression in
the U.S. Unfortunately, it was also an election
where more than 10 million voters in Florida,
Arizona and California supported right-wing ballot
initiatives to deny marriage rights to lesbian, gay,
bi and trans people.
Thirty states now have constitutional bans on
same-sex marriage. A proposal in Arkansas was also
passed to stop gay men and lesbians from adopting
children.
The struggle around California’s Proposition 8,
which amends the California Constitution to
eliminate the right of same-sex couples to marry,
garnered national attention. Prop. 8 was the
highest-funded campaign in any state and exceeded
every other electoral campaign in spending except
for the presidential race.
Prop. 8 was launched by ProtectMarriage.com to
counter the California Supreme Court’s May 15 ruling
which deemed unconstitutional a 2000 ban on same-sex
marriage. “Vote Yes on Prop. 8” forces raised $35.8
million. The ban won 52 to 48 percent.
The coalition of right-wing organizations that
supported Prop. 8 included the Roman Catholic
Church, Knights of Columbus, Union of Orthodox
Jewish Congregations of America, American Family
Association, Focus on the Family and the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon).
The Utah-centered Mormon Church actively
organized support for Prop. 8 and raised significant
funds in both that state and California. Every
congregation was read a letter in support of the
bigoted ballot measure and urged to donate and raise
funds. About 45 percent of donations to
ProtectMarriage.com from outside California came
from Utah, much more than any other state. (Mercury
News, Oct. 24)
Prop. 8 marriage ban ignites protests
On Nov. 4 across the country, LGBT people of all
nationalities gathered to watch and then celebrate
Obama’s victory. But on Nov. 5—with the announcement
of the passing of Prop. 8—a new firestorm of protest
was ignited. LGBT political and legal organizations
immediately started an appeal process.
An estimated 10,000 people rallied, marched, sat
down in the streets and/or shut down traffic in Los
Angeles and San Francisco. On Nov. 6, the protests
spread to more cities, including San Diego and
Westwood, Calif. More than 3,000 people protested on
Nov. 7 in downtown Salt Lake City at the Mormon
temple and church headquarters.
Actions took place throughout California on Nov.
8, including a march of 13,000 in Los Angeles and
10,000 in San Diego. On Nov. 9, the California
Highway Patrol was forced to close two state highway
traffic ramps for 13 hours, as 350 people protested
outside the largest Mormon temple in Oakland.
Saturday, Nov. 15, has been called as a national
day of action against Prop. 8. In California,
protesters are planning massive rallies at city
halls all across the state. Legal and economic
campaigns have been launched throughout the country
to strip the Mormon Church of its tax-exempt status.
An economic boycott is being discussed.
According to the Associated Press: “Utah’s
growing tourism industry and the star-studded
Sundance Film Festival are being targeted for a
boycott by bloggers, gay rights activists and others
seeking to punish the Mormon church for its
aggressive promotion of California’s ban on gay
marriage. It could be a heavy price to pay. Tourism
brings in $6 billion a year to Utah.” (Nov. 6)
Don’t blame Prop. 8 win on Black community
In a despicable effort—played heavily in the
media—to deflect attention from the rich and
powerful religious right, California’s Black
communities have been blamed for Prop. 8’s passage.
The media falsely concluded that the high voter
turnout of Black people resulted in the measure’s
passage.
The LGBT movement has been erroneously depicted
as entirely white and middle class, and Black
communities as politically conservative, highly
religious and heterosexual.
But LGBT communities and movements in the U.S.
are overwhelmingly multinational and working class
in character, and neither Prop. 8 nor the oppression
of LGBT people originates from the African-American
community. The millions in donations raised by the
anti-LGBT forces did not come from the pockets of
Black churchgoers.
A new study released by the University of
California, Los Angeles-based Williams Institute
indicates that more than 7,400 Black men and women
in California are in same-sex relationships.
Fifty-five percent of Black women and 11 percent of
Black men are raising children within these couples,
the study found. It also found economic disparities
among Black same-sex couples and their heterosexual
counterparts.
Christopher Ramos, the study’s co-author, noted:
“These analyses break stereotypes about gay,
lesbian, and bisexual people, like the idea that
they are all wealthy. We find that gay and bisexual
[African-American] men in California have household
incomes that are 44 percent lower than their
heterosexual counterparts.” (L.A. Reporter, Oct. 23)
In a statement, Kathryn Kolbert, a reproductive
rights attorney and president of the pro-LGBT People
for the American Way, countered the divisive news
coverage: “[We have looked] at the basic numbers and
concluded that it is simply false to suggest that
Prop. 8 would have been defeated if African
Americans had been more supportive.
“The amendment seems to have passed by more than
half a million votes, and the number of black
voters, even with turnout boosted by the
presidential race, couldn’t have made up that
difference. ... Republicans and white churchgoers,
among many other groups, voted for Prop. 8 at higher
rates than African Americans. ...Who’s really to
blame? The religious right.” (www.pfaw.org)
The right-wing campaign of lies and deception
during the campaign included “robocalls” directed at
Black households that falsely portrayed Obama as a
Prop. 8 supporter. In fact, it was Black communities
and religious leaders who mobilized to counter much
of the right-wing efforts.
The California NAACP sent mailers opposing Prop.
8 to 140,000 Black households. In October the
campaign in the Black community against Prop. 8
ranged from an evening of preaching against Prop. 8
at a predominantly Black church in San Francisco to
a press conference held on the steps of Oakland’s
city hall by prominent African-American leaders.
While John McCain was a supporter of Prop. 8 and
Obama publicly opposed it, both candidates voiced
opposition to gay marriage. Obama is only for the
right of civil unions for LGBT persons, which do not
confer the same rights and benefits as marriage
does.
According to the National Gay and Lesbian Task
Force: “The 1,138 federal benefits and protections
of marriage are only available to couples that are
allowed to legally marry. These include Social
Security survivor and spousal benefits, the ability
to file a joint tax return, immigration rights, and
coverage under the Family and Medical Leave Act. To
date, civil unions are not ‘portable,’ meaning that
when a couple moves to another state, none of the
benefits, rights or responsibilities coming from
civil unions move with them.”
At the heart of the Prop. 8 and marriage equality
struggle is the right to health care and employment
benefits that all workers of every nationality,
gender and sexuality should have. LGBT marriage is
essentially about workers’ rights. This is why
organized labor has fought the bosses to have
domestic partner benefits in their contracts. Prop.
8 is a setback to the entire progressive movement
for social and economic justice.
It is not surprising during this capitalist
economic crisis that the right wing poured millions
of dollars into a campaign to deny benefits to LGBT
workers. At the heart of their efforts is an attempt
by the entire ruling class to pit workers and
oppressed communities against each other in the hope
we won’t unite to fight back against them.
The struggle to overturn Prop. 8 will continue. A
multinational, multisexuality movement will be a
powerful force to turn back all the economic attacks
coming down on the working class in this period.