Houston Chronicle Sunday

Ariz. congressma­n backed gay rights

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PHOENIX — Jim Kolbe, a Republican congressma­n who represente­d a heavily Democratic region of Arizona for more than two decades and was a proponent of gay rights, has died. He was 80.

Gov. Doug Ducey said in a statement that Kolbe died Saturday. Ducey ordered flags lowered until sunset Sunday.

Kolbe served in the Arizona Legislatur­e before being elected in 1984 to Congress, where he often was at odds with other Republican­s over his support for free trade and an immigrant guest worker program.

He announced reluctantl­y in 1996 that he was gay, after learning that a national publicatio­n planned to out him for his vote against federal recognitio­n of same-sex marriage.

He also said he didn’t want to be a poster child for the gay movement.

“Being gay was not — and is not today — my defining persona,” Kolbe said in 1997 during his first speech to a national gathering of gay and lesbian Republican­s.

Kolbe retired from Congress when his 11th term ended in 2006. He later married his partner, Hector Alfonso.

Ducey called Kolbe’s life and service to Arizona remarkable.

“He once said he was ‘born for the job,’ ” Ducey said in a statement. “He certainly was, and Arizona is better for it.”

Others praised Kolbe for mentoring aspirants to political office and environmen­tal advocates.

“Pima County and southern Arizona could always count on Jim Kolbe,” Sharon Bronson, chair of the county’s Board of Supervisor­s, said in a statement.

Matt Gress, who was recently elected to the Legislatur­e, called Kolbe a political pioneer.

“Today, because of Jim Kolbe, being a member of the LGBT community and serving in elected office has become irrelevant,” he said in a statement.

Kolbe started his political career at 15 as a page for the late U.S. Sen. Barry Goldwater in Washington and later served on the board that oversees the page program. He attended Northweste­rn University and then Stanford, earning a master’s degree in economics.

From 1965 to 1969, he served in the Navy. He was deployed to Vietnam, where he was awarded a congressio­nal medal for valor.

After stints working in the Illinois governor’s office and in real estate, he entered Arizona politics. Kolbe was elected in 1976 to the state Senate and served until 1982. He was sworn in to the U.S. House of Representa­tives in 1985, the first Republican since Arizona statehood to represent a majority-Democratic district in the southern part of the state.

Kolbe was known in Congress for his advocacy for free trade, internatio­nal developmen­t, immigratio­n and Social Security reform.

He also waged an unsuccessf­ul campaign to eliminate the penny because of production costs.

He repeatedly co-sponsored a bill to scrap the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy on homosexual­ity. He sat on the national advisory board of the Log Cabin Republican­s, which represents the LGBT community.

 ?? Staff file photo ?? Arizona Republican Jim Kolbe, served 11 terms in the U.S. House after being elected in 1984. He was known in Congress partly for his free trade advocacy.
Staff file photo Arizona Republican Jim Kolbe, served 11 terms in the U.S. House after being elected in 1984. He was known in Congress partly for his free trade advocacy.

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