Los Angeles Times

Old allies forgive AIDS gaffe

Clinton bounces back with apology after she angers LGBT groups by giving Nancy Reagan undue credit.

- By Chris Megerian chris. megerian @ latimes. com

When Hillary Clinton praised Nancy Reagan’s response to AIDS shortly before Reagan’s funeral, Dominic Lowell’s phone blew up.

The day had started well for Lowell, the Clinton campaign’s director of outreach to the gay community. His boss, campaign manager Robby Mook, the first openly gay man to run a major presidenti­al campaign, had just spoken to the Human Rights Campaign, the country’s largest gay rights organizati­on, to announce a big fundraiser and fire up an audience of activists.

Then, news broke that Clinton had commended the late f irst lady for her “lowkey advocacy” on f ighting AIDS — and Lowell and the rest of the campaign were plunged into controvers­y.

For many gay men and women who remember the Reagan administra­tion as a time of tragic indifferen­ce to a growing and deadly plague, those comments provoked old feelings of anger and frustratio­n.

The reaction threatened to swamp Clinton’s campaign just as she was beginning to look past Sen. Bernie Sanders, her rival for the Democratic nomination, and toward a potential general election battle with Republican front- runner Donald Trump.

The story of how the Clinton camp responded offers insights into what served as a stress test for an operation that has been far more suc- cessful than Clinton’s last presidenti­al bid in 2008. The effort demonstrat­ed the campaign’s ability to react quickly as well as the value of her deep ties with key parts of the Democratic base.

“I can’t think of a single moment that was as quick and effective as [ how] they dealt with the statement surroundin­g Nancy Reagan,” said Bill Burton, who went toe- to- toe with Clinton’s campaign in 2008 as a spokesman for then-Sen. Barack Obama.

The incident showed that while Clinton’s long history in the spotlight can be a liability among voters looking for fresh voices, it has also provided her with guardrails that have kept the campaign from spinning off the road when things go wrong.

The campaign was able to take advantage of long- standing relationsh­ips within the gay community. The president of the Human Rights Campaign, Chad Griffin, for example, got his start in politics as an 18- yearold volunteer for Bill Clinton in his first presidenti­al campaign. Old ties like that allowed Hillary Clinton aides to quickly reach leading activists and craft a response designed to tamp down a growing furor.

“You forgive your friends,” said Elizabeth Birch, a former leader of the Human Rights Campaign.

The controvers­y started when Clinton sat down for an interview with MSNBC before Reagan’s funeral in Simi Valley to talk about the late former first lady. In a decision that would perplex and infuriate supporters, Clinton raised the AIDS issue on her own.

“Because of both President and Mrs. Reagan — in particular Mrs. Reagan — we started a national conversati­on, when before nobody would talk about it, nobody wanted to do anything about it, and that, too, is something I really appreciate with her very effective low- key advocacy,” she said.

Christine Quinn, the f irst openly gay speaker of the New York City Council, was among the early callers to Lowell, wondering what the campaign was going to do.

“I’m on a call figuring this out; I’ll be back in touch,” Lowell told her.

“It was all hands on deck,” said campaign spokeswoma­n Xochitl Hinojosa.

The response involved some of the campaign’s highest- ranking staff. Maya Harris, a senior policy advisor to Clinton, pitched in. Mook quickly got back in touch with the Human Rights Campaign’s leaders.

Even while Clinton was still at the funeral, campaign aides were gearing up for some sort of correction, said Olivia Dalton, a spokeswoma­n for the Human Rights Campaign.

“It was very clear to me from the f irst moment we talked that they knew how serious this was,” she said.

The f irst response came in a statement posted on Twitter that afternoon, in which Clinton called her interview comments a mistake.

“While the Reagans were strong advocates for stem cell research and f inding a cure for Alzheimer’s disease, I misspoke about their record on HIV and AIDS,” she said. “For that, I’m sorry.”

The next day, Clinton expanded on her apology in an essay posted online.

“To be clear, the Reagans did not start a national conversati­on about HIV and AIDS,” she wrote. “That distinctio­n belongs to generation­s of brave lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgende­r people, along with straight allies, who started not just a conversati­on but a movement that continues to this day.”

Clinton went on to detail her plans for fighting the disease, including more money for research and efforts to limit the cost of life- saving drugs.

Dana Perlman, a Los Angeles lawyer who is raising money for Clinton, forwarded a link to a donor who had been dissatisfi­ed with Clinton’s initial apology on Twitter. The donor responded, “That’s exactly what I needed to see.”

The statement also pleased Larry Kramer, the prominent gay activist who had helped start ACT UP, the protest movement that drew attention to the AIDS crisis.

After Clinton’s initial comments, he told the online magazine Slate that he was considerin­g a vote for Sanders. When she apologized on Twitter, he called it “an insult” in a Facebook post and said, “Hillary’s boo boo is not going to go away.”

The next day, Kramer posted a link to Clinton’s essay.

“I almost can’t believe she wrote this, but am so happy that she did,” he said. “Boy did she work fast to react to the pressure that so many of us immediatel­y commenced. Onward!”

 ?? Brian van der Brug
Los Angeles Times ?? HILLARY CLINTON pays her respects at Nancy Reagan’s casket March 11 in Simi Valley. Her campaign’s phone lines blew up after Clinton said that the Reagans had helped start “a national conversati­on” on AIDS.
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times HILLARY CLINTON pays her respects at Nancy Reagan’s casket March 11 in Simi Valley. Her campaign’s phone lines blew up after Clinton said that the Reagans had helped start “a national conversati­on” on AIDS.

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