Obama Faces Gay Groups’ Growing Anger

The anger from gay rights advocates toward President Obama is starting to boil over.

On Monday, Joe Solmonese, the president of the establishment gay rights group The Human Rights Campaign, sent an angry letter to the president objecting to the decision by the Obama Justice Department to file a brief defending the Defense of Marriage Act.

“I realized that although I and other LGBT leaders have introduced ourselves to you as policy makers, we clearly have not been heard, and seen, as what we also are: human beings whose lives, loves, and families are equal to yours,” Solmonese wrote. “I know this because this brief would not have seen the light of day if someone in your administration who truly recognized our humanity and equality had weighed in with you.”

The Clinton-era Defense of Marriage Act, or DOMA, mandates (1) that the federal government not recognize same-sex marriages and (2) that states not be forced to recognize same-sex marriages from other states.

Mr. Obama vowed to repeal DOMA as a presidential candidate but he has not taken any action to do so since becoming president. The Justice Department brief calls the legislation a “valid exercise of Congress’ power” and says it is “reasonable and rational for Congress to maintain its longstanding policy of fostering this traditional and universally-recognized form of marriage.”

“The government does not state why denying us basic protections promotes anyone else’s marriage, nor why, while our heterosexual neighbors’ marriages should be promoted, our own must be discouraged,” Solmonese writes in his letter.

He goes onto single out a portion of the brief referencing a case involving “marriage of uncle to niece” to support the Justice position.

“I cannot overstate the pain that we feel as human beings and as families when we read an argument, presented in federal court, implying that our own marriages have no more constitutional standing than incestuous ones,” he writes. See Obama Faces Gay Groups’ Growing Anger

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Supreme Court Rejects Challenge To “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”

The Supreme Court on Monday agreed with the Obama administration and upheld Pentagon policy barring gays and lesbians from serving openly in the military.

The court said it will not hear an appeal from former Army Capt. James Pietrangelo II, who was dismissed under the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy. The federal appeals court in Boston earlier threw out a lawsuit filed by Pietrangelo and 11 other veterans. He was the only member of that group who asked the high court to rule that the Clinton-era policy is unconstitutional.

During last year’s campaign, President Barack Obama indicated he supported the eventual repeal of the policy, but he has made no specific move to do so since taking office in January. Meanwhile, the White House has said it won’t stop gays and lesbians from being dismissed from the military.

In court papers, the administration said the appeals court ruled correctly in this case when it found that “don’t ask, don’t tell” is “rationally related to the government’s legitimate interest in military discipline and cohesion.”

Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman referred requests for comment to the Justice Department, but said the military policy “implements the law.”

“The law requires the (Defense) Department to separate from the armed services members who engage in or attempt to engage in homosexual acts; state they are homosexual or bisexual; or marry or attempt to marry a person of the same biological sex,” Whitman said in a statement.

A legal advocacy group vowed to press ahead with efforts to reverse the policy despite the legal setback.

“We don’t see that at all as bad news for repeal,” said Kevin Nix, spokesman for the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network. “What happened today puts the ball back into the court of Congress and the White House to repeal the law, and that’s where we think it should be right now.”

See Supreme Court Rejects Challenge To “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”

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DADT repeal bill refiled

(Washington) Legislation to repeal “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” the ban on gays serving openly in the military was filed Monday in the House of Representatives.

The last attempt to void the Clinton-era law died at the end of the last Congress.  The new attempt was filed by Rep. Ellen O. Tauscher, …

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Tauscher moves to end gay ban

Walnut Creek Democrat Ellen Tauscher will move today to end the “Don’t ask, don’t tell” ban on gays in the military, a 15-year relic of the Clinton-era culture wars.

Tauscher last summer had promised a full-scale push to end the ban this year. The Obama presidency clearly lifts the veto threat that had blocked any such move during the Bush administration. Obama promised to support repeal during his campaign. His Republican opponent Sen. John McCain remained opposed.

Polls show solid public support for lifting the ban, with as many as 75 percent backing repeal, a number that has climbed steadily during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The argument for the ban is that allowing gays and lesbians to serve openly would damage morale.

McCain made that argument last year, saying, “I believe the polarization of personnel and breakdown of unit effectiveness is too high a price to pay for well-intentioned but misguided efforts to elevate the interests of a minority of homosexual service members above those of their units.”

A General Accountability Office study in 2005 showed the military lost 800 service members in 161 occupations. The ban has led to the discharge of desperately needed linquists and translators during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. See

Tauscher moves to end gay ban

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