Obama signs first major federal gay-rights law
By Margaret Talev, McClatchy Newspapers
Margaret Talev, Mcclatchy Newspapers
2 hrs 51 mins ago
WASHINGTON -- President Barack
Obama on Wednesday signed the first major piece of federal gay rights
legislation, a milestone that activists compared to the passage of 1960s
civil-rights legislation empowering blacks.
The new law adds acts of violence against gay, lesbian, bisexual and
transgender people to the list of federal
hate crimes. Gay-rights
activists voiced hope that the Obama administration would advance more issues,
including legislation to bar workplace discrimination, allow military service
and recognize same-sex marriages.
Congress passed the hate crimes protections as an unlikely amendment to this
year's Defense Authorization Act. Obama, speaking at an emotional evening
reception with supporters of the legislation, said that more than 12,000 hate
crimes had been reported the past decade based on sexual orientation.
He spoke of President Lyndon
Johnson signing protections for blacks in the 1960s and said this was an
extension of that work. "We must stand against crimes that are meant not only to
break bones but to break spirits," Obama said. "No one in America should ever be
afraid to walk down the street holding the hands of the person they love."
Legislation barring firms from firing employees on the basis of their sexual
orientation could win passage in the
House of Representatives by
year's end, gay-rights advocates said. More than half of U.S. states currently
allow employers such freedom.
Obama has promised to push Congress to repeal the military's 'don't ask,
don't tell' policy that prohibits being openly gay while serving. A Senate panel
is expected to hold a hearing on that issue next month, and legislation could be
debated next year.
Gay-rights activists also hope for repeal next year of the 1996
Defense of Marriage Act,
which would give federal legitimacy to
gay marriages recorded in
states that allow them.
The amendment signed into law Wednesday was named partly for
Matthew Shepard , a
21-year-old student at the University of Wyoming who died after a 1998 beating
targeting him because he was gay, and whose parents were instrumental in leading
the fight for such legislation. The law also was named for James Byrd Jr. , a
black Texas man dragged to his death in a racially motivated killing the same
year.
The measure also extends protections to those attacked because of their
gender or disability.
Federal hate crimes law
already covers race, religion and national origin. The new law strengthened it
substantially however, by removing a requirement that a victim must have been
participating at the time of the assault in some federally protected activity,
such as voting, for it to apply.
Matthew Shepard's parents joined Obama for the bill signing, as did the
family of the late Sen. Edward
Kennedy of Massachusetts
, who until his death in August was deeply involved in pushing the legislation.
The Shepards' fight took a decade. With recent elections adding more
lawmakers who are supportive of gay rights, by 2007 the Congress had sufficient
votes to pass the legislation, but then-
President Bush indicated
that he'd veto it.
Obama, campaigning last year, promised to sign it.
Judy Shepard issued a statement saying that she and her husband, Dennis, "are
incredibly grateful to Congress and the president for taking this step forward
on behalf of hate crime victims
and their families, especially given the continuing attacks on people simply for
living their lives openly and honestly."
She also called on Americans to look beyond legislation and work in their own
lives to advance acceptance of gays.
Critics of the legislation, including several Republican congressional
leaders, argued that an attack against another person is an attack, regardless
of motivation and that no special categories are appropriate.
Many also voiced concerns about "thought
police" and fears that the new legal protections could curb free speech
if those who oppose gay rights fear they could somehow be prosecuted for
publicly voicing their thoughts. The law punishes acts, however, not thoughts.
Gay-rights advocates said that the legislation will enable the
Justice Department to step
in when states can't or won't, and will make extra federal money and resources
available to local law
enforcement officials who need help preventing or prosecuting such
attacks.
They also predicted that it would affect American society in a meaningful
way.
"It sends a number of messages across America: that hate will not be
tolerated, that this Congress and administration value all Americans," said
Joe Solmonese , the
president of the Human Rights
Campaign, the largest gay-rights advocacy group.
Malcolm Lazin , the founder of another advocacy group, Equality Forum , said
the legislative progress comes at a time when reported violence against gays is
on the rise. Last year, he said, 29 gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender
Americans were killed because of their sexual orientation.
"This is really the first federal gay rights bill," Lazin said. "So it is a
literally historic moment. This is America acknowledging homophobia as a social
problem."
Lazin, who helped organize a demonstration outside the
White House on Wednesday
calling for more protections, said the legislation "really is the beginning of a
process of addressing homophobia in our schools, our communities, our culture.
We learned from the black civil
rights movement: In 1964, there was the
Civil Rights Act, but that
didn't mean it ended violence or created equality. It was the beginning of a
process that's ongoing. That's how we view the
Matthew Shepard Act."
source
http://news.yahoo.com/s/mcclatchy/20091028/pl_mcclatchy/3343585