Imperial Valley Press

Lawmaker bows out to standing ovation

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MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Alabama’s first openly gay legislator received a standing ovation as she bid farewell to the House of Representa­tives ahead of the last day of the legislativ­e session Wednesday.

Democratic Rep. Patricia Todd of Birmingham will not seek re-election after serving 12 years. Todd said on the House floor Tuesday evening that her life had changed forever when she joined the Alabama legislatur­e as its first openly gay member in 2006.

“You are incredible, beautiful people, some people I thought I would never get along with or never like,” Todd told fellow lawmakers.

She said that when she speaks to gay political candidates around the country, they always ask how she’s received in Alabama. She answers that she’s treated like anyone else.

“You walked into this institutio­n that’s never had anybody like you. It’s Alabama. I was prepared for the worst. But you know, I’ve never heard anybody make any crude remark. Everybody’s always been very respectful,” Todd told the Associated Press.

Todd was married twice while a House member, first in Massachuse­tts in early 2015 and then, following a divorce, in Alabama in late 2016 after the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage nationwide. Her second marriage came two months after Roy Moore, then chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court, was suspended for ordering probate judges to refuse to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

Todd said Moore’s order didn’t affect her because judges in Jefferson County where she lived supported same-sex marriage. She said that although Moore had supporters in the Alabama legislatur­e, gay marriage was never a point of debate after the Supreme Court’s ruling.

Moore lost Alabama’s special U.S. Senate election in December 2017.

Todd, one of few white Democrats in the GOP-dominated House, helped pass a law to allow marijuana-derived medication for treating severe seizures and expanded its use to more patients two years later.

More often than not though, Todd’s bills failed. She unsuccessf­ully pushed her colleagues to decriminal­ize possession of small amounts of marijuana, legalize medical marijuana and add sexual orientatio­n as a protected category under the state’s hate crime law.

On the latter point, she said, “I’d hoped to make progress on that. But Alabama’s not ready.”

But she said she fought against what she called discrimina­tory bills that came through the chamber, adding, “I haven’t passed many bills, but I haven’t let things happen.”

She wished she could have stopped a 2017 law that allowed faith-based adoption organizati­ons to refuse to place children with gay parents or other households because of their religious beliefs.

Todd, whose background is in activism, said she’s taking away future lessons from her legislativ­e experience.

“What I learned is how to actively listen and try to understand their reasoning behind their positions and to be respectful and I think that makes me a better activist,” she said.

“I hope I opened up some hearts and minds,” Todd told her fellow lawmakers Tuesday evening. “I won’t be the last. There will be other openly gay folks that join this chamber.”

She is supporting two other openly gay candidates running for the Alabama Legislatur­e in 2018. Neil Rafferty, a gay former Marine who works with Birmingham AIDS Outreach, is one of three Democrats who are running for Todd’s seat. Todd is also supporting gay Democratic businesswo­man Felicia Stewart, who is running against incumbent Rep. David Faulkner, a Republican, in one of the state’s wealthiest suburbs.

A native of Kentucky, Todd has lived in Alabama since 1984. She said she has her eye on a few job opportunit­ies after the session including possibly as the executive director of an advocacy organizati­on formed in Orlando, Florida, after the Pulse gay nightclub shooting.

 ??  ?? State Rep. Patricia Todd, D-Je erson County, Alabama’s first and only openly gay legislator, speaks at the Madison County Democratic Headquarte­rs in Huntsville in this June 29, 2013, file photo. Todd, a Democrat from Birmingham, will not seek...
State Rep. Patricia Todd, D-Je erson County, Alabama’s first and only openly gay legislator, speaks at the Madison County Democratic Headquarte­rs in Huntsville in this June 29, 2013, file photo. Todd, a Democrat from Birmingham, will not seek...

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