Fighting for Our Rights: A Conversation with Wesley Bizzell, National LGBTQ+ Bar President
“Despite these enormous strides, our community — particularly those who are trans and people of color — continues to face crises even today. These critical issues are why the LGBTQ+ Bar must continue to exist. To borrow the lyrics of Tracy Chapman, the LGBTQ+ Bar continues to: “hunger for a taste of justice” and “hunger for a world of truth.”
We often forget about all the work that is required to gain and maintain the rights we have. One of the organizations leading this fight is the National LGBT Bar, soon to be the National LGBTQ+ Bar. I had the honor to virtually sit down with Wesley Bizzell, who is the current President of the National LGBTQ+ Bar, to discuss the Bar, its work on behalf of the community, and his role as president. While in college at Georgetown University, he joined the Bar after attending his first Lavender Law Conference and stayed connected after graduating. In his second year as an associate with the firm Winston & Strawn, he convinced them to sponsor Lavender Law and recruit at its job fair.
Wesley had served as treasurer for several years, and in 2020 he became president of the NLGBTQ+ Bar, serving a two-year term. In May, when his term ends, he will assume the Immediate Past President’s role for an additional year. Read the full interview at thegavoice.com.
What was the driving factor of the establishment of the Bar?
The LGBTQ+ Bar was founded at the height of the HIV/AIDS crisis by a small group of family law practitioners who provided pro bono legal services to those dying of AIDS, helping these young people create wills and get their legal affairs in order before their tragic deaths.
In October 1987, 750,000 people gathered at the U.S. Capitol for the Second National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights. By then, almost 50,000 of our LGBTQ+ brothers and sisters had died of AIDS. The majority of those being gay men in their 20s and 30s.
At the March in Washington, a group of lawyers came together and decided to form a national organization for LGBTQ+ attorneys to enable LGBTQ+ lawyers to advocate for societal change. From this moment of crisis, the National LGBTQ+ Bar Association was born. What was important is that the organization’s name had the words lesbian and gay in the title. While there were local bar organizations in existence, none unequivocally indicated they were organizations for LGBTQ+ lawyers. But we did.
What kind of work has the Bar been involved in since then?
In the last 30 plus years, the LGBTQ+ Bar has confronted a multitude of crises within our country. Our members have been instrumental in achieving many successes, including creating visible spaces for LGBTQ attorneys within law firms and corporate law departments, enacting a federal hate crimes statute, advocating for the Supreme Court’s ruling on marriage equality, and abolishing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” and the transgender military ban.
Despite these enormous strides, our community — particularly those who are trans and people of color — continues to face crises even today. These critical issues are why the LGBTQ+ Bar must continue to exist. To borrow the lyrics of Tracy Chapman, the LGBTQ+ Bar continues to: “hunger for a taste of justice” and “hunger for a world of truth.”
How has the Bar helped to shape and change things for the LGBTQ community? As a legislative and political law attorney, I’m incredibly proud of the LGBTQ+ Bar’s policy work. We are leading the effort to ban the LGBTQ+ “panic” defense across the U.S. This horrific defense is a legal strategy that asks a jury to find that a victim’s sexual orientation, gender identity, or gender expression is to blame for a defendant’s violent reaction, such as violent beatings, other assaults, and even murder.
In 2013, as a result of our efforts, the American Bar Association unanimously approved a resolution calling for an end to this heinous defense strategy. Since then, 12 states (California, Illinois, Rhode Island, Nevada, Connecticut, Maine, Hawaii, New York, New Jersey, Washington, Colorado, and Virginia) and the District of Columbia had banned such defenses.. Virginia is our first state to ban the defense in 2021, and it is also the first Southern state to do so.
I spent a substantial amount of time working closely with the sponsor, Delegate Danica Roem, on this effort and assembling a remarkable coalition of organizations that supported the bill. Delegate Roem was the first trans legislator elected to any state legislature, and she was an incredible and passionate advocate. We were blessed to have Matthew Shepard’s mother, Judy, testify before both the House and the Senate committees and be an active part of our coalition fighting to pass this bill.
We are working with several other state legislators on bills, and I know we’ll see several other states ban this defense in 2021.
The Bar doesn’t just focus on LGBTQ legislation and representation; can you talk a little about its work around minority diversity and legal issues? Within the legal community, we still have not achieved fulsome diversity and full inclusion. That is true for female attorneys, attorneys of color. It’s true for lesbians, gays, bisexuals, trans, and queer attorneys. Thus, addressing diversity and inclusion is necessary. The National LGBTQ+ Bar partners in this work with other affinity bars: the National Bar Association, the National Asian Pacific American Bar Association, the National Native American Bar Association, the Hispanic National Bar Association, the National Association of Blind Lawyers, the National Filipino American Lawyers Association, and the South Asian Bar Association of North America.
We know that by working together, we can better advance the cause of diversity and inclusion and be a unified voice to speak out against racial inequity and injustice wherever we see it. For example, the National LGBTQ+ Bar Association has joined NAPABA’s Stand Against Hate Campaign, recording a joint video with other national bar associations that denounced the antiAsian hate, violence, and racism related to the coronavirus. I’ve also joined the presidents of NBA, SABA, NAPABA, and HNBA in a Belonging Project webinar to discuss how the minority bar associations are working to advance diversity, equity, and inclusion as our country battles two pandemics—coronavirus and systemic racism. The affinity bars recognize that we must stand united against bigotry and hate and work together to make the legal profession more diverse and inclusive.
Despite significant advances in legal protections and rights, the LGBTQ community still faces many challenges related to discrimination in employment, housing, and having or adopting children. Does the Bar have a primary focus right now, and what do you think is the biggest challenge we face?
We are thrilled that our members have played significant roles in winning historic legal protections for the LGBTQ+ community, and that was also the recent Title VII cases. The National LGBT Bar Association submitted an amicus brief supporting the employees in these cases. In June 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Bostock v. Clayton County, Georgia, ruled that Title VII’s prohibition on discrimination on the basis of sex includes discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. But our journey to equality is not finished. We are committed to continuing to fight for equality for all.
Like the rest of the country, I think our LGBTQ+ community must address racism and racial inequity not only within our society but within our community itself. The sad fact is that racism still exists within our LGBTQ+ community, and we must call it out when we see it and work to eradicate it. Our community’s unfortunate reality has often only focused on issues of importance to white cisgender gay men. As a result, we have ignored what must be done to make our society better for those in our community who are trans, nonbinary, Black, Indigenous, or persons of color. We must do better. What makes our community beautiful and magnificent is our intersectionality, and we have often failed to understand that. Our LGBTQ+ community is comprised of individuals from every gender, race, and ethnicity. We need to do a better job celebrating this. We need to do a better job of amplifying the voices of diverse LGBTQ+ individuals and honoring those diverse LGBTQ+ individuals who have come before us.
For too long, we have whitewashed our history. We’ve ignored the contributions of people like Bayard Rustin, Sylvia Rivera,
Marsha P. Johnson, José Sarria, Miss Major, and the list goes on and on. Remember, the Stonewall riots were led by trans women of color and drag queens who united against the discrimination they were facing daily. We’re standing on their shoulders today, and we should not forget that. While we’re getting better and being more inclusive as an LGBTQ+ community, we still have a ways to go.
How can members of the community who are not in the legal profession help to support the Bar?
We welcome anyone to attend our Lavender Law Conference & Career Fair or join one of our Lavender Link webcasts. Additionally, for states where we are advocating to ban the LGBTQ “panic” defense, we always love to have constituents call their elected officials to support the issue.
To learn more about the National LGBTQ+ Bar, visit lgbtbar.org.
“Like the rest of the country, I think our LGBTQ+ community must address racism and racial inequity not only within our society but within our community itself. The sad fact is that racism still exists within our LGBTQ+ community, and we must call it out when we see it and work to eradicate it. Our community’s unfortunate reality has often only focused on issues of importance to white cisgender gay men.”