Monday, February 01, 2010

Gays Are the New Blacks in Virginia

The Commonwealth of Virginia has a terrible history of how it has treated its black citizens - Loving v. Virginia, for example was needed to end bans on interracial marriage. Now, Virginia's new Attorney General, Ken Cuccinelli, has undertaken his first step to implement his extreme homophobic views on gay Virginians. Cuccinelli, who is merely a more polished version of Fred Phelps, but equally crazy, has killed a state regulatory change to allow government employees to add same-sex partners to their state health benefits. Sadly, under the new GOP administration at the top of the state government in Virginia, I very much fear that LGBT Virginians will face a modern day equivalent of the Jim Crow laws whenever and wherever Cuccinelli can do so. The man is utterly incapable of separating his own personal 13th century religious beliefs from the concept of secular civil laws. It's going to be a long four years with Cuccinelli in the AG's office and Taliban Bob as Governor. Here are some highlights from the Virginian Pilot:
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On the advice of Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, a proposed state regulatory change to allow government employees to add same-sex partners to their state health benefits has been withdrawn from consideration. The suggested policy change from Democratic former Gov. Timothy M. Kaine became public in December in the waning days of his term, eliciting support from gay groups and condemnation from social conservatives.
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If adopted, it would have permitted insured state workers to include "other qualified adults" living in their households - such as domestic partners, adult children and other relatives - to the state's health coverage system. Kaine administration officials claimed that wouldn't increase state expenses because employees adding a person would pick up all the extra costs.
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Republican Gov. Bob McDonnell has not given his thoughts on the proposal in response to reporters' questions. Yet according to a spokesman, McDonnell concurs with aspects of the legal rationale contained in a recent letter from Cuccinelli to the governor that concludes with a withdrawal recommendation.
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Lack of statutory authority by the state Department of Human Resource Management over the proposed regulation is among the reasons cited in the missive Cuccinelli penned to McDonnell as a "response to your request for advice." When reached by telephone Sunday, Cuccinelli, a Republican, said his objections are based on law, not his personal conservative beliefs.
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When it was revealed in December, Kaine's proposed change drew plaudits from the state's Log Cabin Republicans, a gay and lesbian political group, and groans from Virginia's Family Foundation, a social conservative group. At the time, Family Foundation President Victoria Cobb called it a partisan shot from the outgoing Kaine. On Sunday, group spokesman Chris Freund expressed satisfaction that what he deemed an attempt to circumvent the legislative process had been thwarted.
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Even if the proposed regulation hadn't been withdrawn, at least one lawmaker was seeking to prevent the change through the legislative process. Conservative Del. Bob Marshall, R-Prince William, has submitted a budget amendment to define only children and blood relatives as eligible for health benefits through a state employee, thus excluding domestic partners.
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Virginia is definitely entering a dark phase where most social policy will be decided by Pat Robertson and Daddy Dobson's affiliate, The Family Foundation.

1 comment:

rosmar said...

Thank you for this--I hadn't heard this yet.

I think, though, that gays-as-blacks is a dangerous analogy, as various political theorists have pointed out. It simultaneously implies (though of course I know you didn't mean to imply) that there are no gay black people, and that homobigotry and heteronormativity act just like racism does, and that "normal" is straight and white.