Democratic candidate Buttigieg: 'No going
back' in fight for LGBTQ rights
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[June 10, 2019]
By John Whitesides
DES MOINES, Iowa (Reuters) - Democrat Pete
Buttigieg, running to become the first openly gay U.S. president, told
activists at an Iowa Pride festival on Saturday there was "no going back
to normal" in fighting discrimination against the LGBTQ community.
Buttigieg, speaking at a rally on the steps outside the Iowa state
capitol in Des Moines, said rights for the community were still under
threat from Republican President Donald Trump, and he warned against
complacency.
"Don't listen to anybody in either party who says we can just go back to
what we were doing," Buttigieg told a crowd celebrating the 10th
anniversary of the Iowa Supreme Court's decision to overturn a ban on
same-sex marriages.
"We know that the struggle is not over, not even close. At a time like
today when you can still be legally fired in so many parts of this
country because of who you are or who you love, we have work to do," he
said.
Buttigieg was one of 10 Democrats who took part in some of the
festivities at a Pride festival in Des Moines, an indication of the
community's growing importance in an increasingly diverse party and a
gauge of its clout in a Democratic presidential nominating race with
more than 20 candidates.
U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand served drinks at a gay bar in Des
Moines, former U.S. Representative Beto O'Rourke participated in a
morning 5K Pride run, and Buttigieg spoke at a dinner honoring Wyoming
college student Matthew Shepard, who was beaten to death in 1998 for
being gay.
A half-dozen other Democratic candidates, including U.S. Senator Bernie
Sanders, spoke at a presidential forum. Nearly all expressed support for
the Equality Act, a bill to ban discrimination on the basis of sexual
orientation and gender identity, and condemned Trump's ban on
transgender people serving in the military.
Sanders and O'Rourke said Supreme Court decisions legalizing same-sex
marriage in Iowa and nationally were the result of a sea change in
public attitudes.
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Democratic 2020 U.S. presidential candidate Mayor Pete Buttigieg,
who is gay and married to another man, waves as he arrives to
campaign at the Capital Pride LGBTQ celebration at the Iowa State
Capitol in Des Moines, Iowa, U.S. June 8, 2019 REUTERS/Brian C.
Frank
"The credit should not be given principally to those Supreme Court
justices who made those decisions, but to every single person who
for decades has been marching and struggling and fighting for their
full civil rights in this country," O'Rourke said.
Added Sanders: "Change is never from the top down, it is from the
bottom up."
The appearances at the Pride festival are part of a busy political
weekend in Iowa, capped by speeches from 19 Democratic contenders at
a party dinner in Cedar Rapids on Sunday. Iowa kicks off the
state-by-state race for the 2020 nomination next February.
Buttigieg said gay rights activists should welcome those who have
changed their minds on the issue and become more accepting. Only
seven years ago President Barack Obama reversed his position and
decided to support same-sex marriage.
"There are millions of Americans who today are not proud of what
they believed yesterday about us, but we ought to make them proud of
the fact they came on to the right side of history," he said.
Americans who have experienced the pain of discrimination over
gender identity and sexuality were in a unique position to lead the
fight for a more inclusive society, Buttigieg said.
"We in the LGBTQ community know when we hear phrases like 'Make
America Great Again' that that American past was never quite as
great as advertised," Buttigieg said, referencing Trump's campaign
slogan.
(Editing by Leslie Adler)
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