Category Archives: Arizona

Poll shows Arizonans support marriage

Arizona, rainbow flag, gay news, Washington Blade

(Wikimedia Commons image of Arizona by Huebi modified)

PHOENIX—A Behavior Research Center poll released on Tuesday indicates a majority of Arizona residents support same-sex marriage.

Fifty-five percent of 700 people who responded to the survey between April 3-16 said they back nuptials for gays and lesbians. This support jumps to 70 percent among Democrats, while only 36 percent of Republican respondents support same-sex marriage.

Arizona voters in 2008 approved a constitutional amendment that defines marriage as between a man and a woman.

Anti-trans Arizona bill shelved

John Kavanagh, Arizona, gay news, Washington Blade

Arizona state Rep. John Kavanagh (R-Fountain Hills) (Photo courtesy Arizona Legislature)

PHOENIX — The sponsor of an Arizona bill that would have banned local governments from passing ordinances that would punish local businesses if they did not allow transgender people to use their restrooms has shelved his measure for the remainder of the current legislative session.

State Rep. John Kavanagh (R-Fountain Hills) told the Arizona Republic on June 5 he plans to reintroduce the proposal that became known as the “bathroom bill” next year.

“It makes me rest easier in that we’ve got another six to seven months to educate people,” Equality Arizona President Rebecca Wininger told the newspaper. “I don’t think anybody but Kavanagh had a belief that it was a truly needed bill.”

Books: Right place, right time?

‘They Call Me a Hero: A Memoir of My Youth’
By Daniel Hernandez with Susan Goldman Rubin
Simon & Schuster
$17.99
224 pages

They Call Me a Hero, books, gay news, Washington Blade

(Image courtesy of Simon & Schuster)

The event on January 8, 2011 was supposed to be fun and informative.

Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, who loved interacting with her constituents, had planned a meet-and-greet that Saturday afternoon in Tucson. Daniel Hernandez, then 20 and an intern with Giffords’ office, was there to help register attendees and to do light crowd control.

Everything was going well until he heard explosions and one word: “Gun!”

Almost automatically, Hernandez headed for the stage, with Giffords first on his mind. With barely a pause, he pressed his hand against her wound to slow the bleeding, an action that may have saved her life. He comforted her and rode with her in the ambulance to the hospital.

In his new book “They Call Me a Hero” (with Susan Goldman Rubin), Hernandez says there’s nothing heroic about his actions.

Years before, as a child, Hernandez had wanted to be a doctor. He was a good student in school and was teased for his bookishness and for being gay. Undaunted, he stayed true to himself and sought classes and training for a future medical career.

He blames his “obsession” with politics on Hillary Clinton. He became fascinated by her run for the White House and volunteered to work for her campaign, a love that extended to his college years, the friends he sought and, later, to a desire to serve others in a political career that also allowed him to do motivational speaking.

On that January day in 2011, though, Hernandez was just an intern. His future, he hoped, would be spent serving others through volunteering.

But he was destined to become a hero first.

There are a lot of bumps in “They Call Me a Hero,” starting with the subtitle (“A Memoir of My Youth”).

Authors Hernandez and Susan Goldman Rubin don’t include a whole lot about Hernandez’s youth; instead, the vast majority of this memoir is about that one day in Tucson, the whirlwind of media attention afterward and Hernandez’s subsequent political activities.

There’s also an awful lot of back-patting here.

To the good, however, this book may loudly urge teens to give of themselves to better their worlds. With an overwhelming record of achievements, Hernandez is a tornado of service to others and he makes volunteerism seem fun, almost like a community in itself. That may spur young readers to mobilize.

Indeed, the intended audience for this book is 12-to-18-year-olds but there’s certainly no reason adults can’t enjoy it as well. If you can look beyond the bumps and boasting in “They Call Me a Hero,” you may find a hunk of inspiration, too.

Ariz. lawmaker introduces anti-trans bill

John Kavanagh, Arizona, gay news, Washington Blade

Arizona legislator John Kavanagh (Photo courtesy Arizona Legislature)

PHOENIX — After failing to gain support for a bill that would make it a crime for some transgender Arizonans to use the bathroom, an Arizona lawmaker is now attempting to make it illegal to punish businesses that discriminate.

Republican John Kavanagh has updated his proposed language, prior to its committee hearing this week, to protect businesses and facilities that choose to bar trans visitors from using the restroom corresponding to their gender. The bill initially called for making the act of using a bathroom opposite from one designated for a person’s birth gender a class one misdemeanor.

According to the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, Kavanagh’s efforts to target transgender Arizonans follows passage of a local ordinance in Phoenix that prohibits public accommodation discrimination based on gender identity.

Ariz. congressman’s gay son defends father

Matt Salmon, gay news, Washington Blade

Matt R. Salmon (Photo courtesy of Matt R. Salmon)

The gay son of an Arizona congressman who said he remains opposed to same-sex marriage told the Washington Blade on Tuesday his father’s viewpoints did not come as a surprise.

“It’s nothing I didn’t already know,” Matt R. Salmon said.

U.S. Rep. Matt J. Salmon, who represents most of Phoenix’s eastern suburbs, said during an interview with a local television station that aired over the weekend he feels marriage is between a man and a woman. He stressed his son “is by far one of the most important people in my life.”

“I love him more than I can say,” the Republican congressman said. “It doesn’t mean that I don’t have respect, it doesn’t mean that I don’t sympathize with some of the issues. It just means I haven’t evolved to that stage.”

His comments came less than a week after the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in cases that challenge the constitutionality of California’s Proposition 8 and the Defense of Marriage Act.

Matt R. Salmon, a former president of Arizona Log Cabin Republicans who once dated the second cousin of U.S. Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.,) defended his father against criticism from those within the LGBT community whom he describes as “incredibly intolerant.” He said the congressman received “a lot of hateful comments” on his Facebook page after the interview aired.

“People seem to be trying so hard to analyze where it’s coming from, but really he was quite straight-forward,” Matt R. Salmon said. “My father loves me very much and he supports me and he respects me. He’s very much there for me as one of my closest friends. I think that was obvious in everything that he had to say.”

He further discussed his father’s position on marriage.

“He doesn’t see it as not allowing his son to be with the person he loves because he knows that regardless of where marriage is, I’m going to be with the person that I love,” he said. “Whether I can legally marry in Arizona or not, it’s not going to change that fact and my father knows that and he accepts my desire to be with the man that I love. As far as it goes with marriage for him it’s a matter of what marriage means to him — to him marriage is defined as between a man and a woman. It has nothing to do with the way he views a person’s relationship, and that’s the thing that I think is hard for people to understand.”

The congressman’s comments come less than a month after Ohio Sen. Rob Portman became the first Republican U.S. senator to publicly endorse marriage rights for same-sex couples. Illinois Sen. Mark Kirk on Tuesday became the second GOP senator to support the issue.

An ABC News/Washington Post poll last month shows 52 percent of Republicans and GOP-leaning independents who are between 18-49 back nuptials for gays and lesbians.

Matt R. Salmon said he feels his father, who voted for DOMA in 1996, would evolve to support same-sex marriage.

The congressman’s wife in 2006 led the effort in support of an unsuccessful amendment that would have banned marriages and civil unions for gays and lesbians in Arizona. Arizona Voters in 2008 approved a constitutional same-sex marriage ban, but Matt R. Salmon said in an “It Gets Better” video he filmed two years later that his mother “really didn’t have much to do with” the campaign in support of it.

“My mom told me that she stopped being involved because of me,” he said in response to the Blade’s question about whether he thinks his parents would once again become involved in any anti-gay political efforts. “I don’t know if they would support it, but I know they wouldn’t actively do anything for the movement.”

Year in review: Record number of gay candidates win House seats

LGBT caucus of the U.S. House of Representatives, gay news, Washington Blade

(clockwise from top left) Jared Polis (D-Colo.), David Cicilline (D-R.I.), Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), Mark Takano (D-Calif.), Mark Pocan (D-Wisc.), and Sean Patrick Maloney (D-N.Y.). (Photos of Polis, Cicilline, Maloney and Pocan by Michael Key for the Washington Blade. Photos of Sinema and Takano courtesy of the respective campaigns).

A record number of lesbian, gay and bisexual candidates were elected to the U.S. House this year, nearly doubling the number of out representatives serving in the lower chamber of Congress.

Gay Reps. Jared Polis (D-Colo.) and David Cicilline (D-R.I.) won re-election, and on the same night, out candidates Sean Patrick Maloney of New York, Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, Mark Takano of California and Mark Pocan of Wisconsin won their races. The new additions — minus Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) and Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), who are leaving the U.S. House — means LGB representation in the chamber will jump from four lawmakers to seven.

Maloney, who will be the first openly gay U.S. House member from New York, said upon the announcement that he won his bid to unseat Rep. Nan Hayworth (R-N.Y.) that voters in the state’s 18th congressional district voted for change.

“Across four counties on two sides of the Hudson River, in hundreds of schools, firehouses, community centers, in the Democratic vote of a quarter million of our neighbors, the people have settled this debate,” Maloney said. “They have closed this campaign.”

Sinema will become the first openly bisexual member of Congress and Takano will become the first openly gay person of color to have a House seat. Pocan’s election means Wisconsin’s 2nd congressional district will maintain gay representation as Baldwin heads to the U.S. Senate.