Los Angeles Times

Gay milestone overshadow­ed

Buttigieg makes history amid Iowa chaos.

- By Michael Finnegan

In the upheaval of the botched Iowa caucuses Monday night, it was easy to miss the moment when Pete Buttigieg called on cheering supporters at his Des Moines victory party to applaud his husband, “the future first gentleman of the United States.”

Yet Buttigieg’s virtual tie with Sen. Bernie Sanders for first place in the opening contest of the Democratic presidenti­al race marked a milestone, many gay rights activists said. For the first time, an openly gay candidate for president won delegates to a major party’s national convention.

“It’s an incredible leap forward from where we were a few decades ago,” said Ethan Geto, a New Yorker who has been at the vanguard of the gay rights movement since the 1970s. “It has enormous symbolic significan­ce.”

In a CNN town hall on Thursday, Buttigieg said he was not running to be the first gay president, but hoped to inspire young people who question whether they fit in with their families or communitie­s.

“We’ve got a long way to go when it comes to LGBTQ equality right now,” he said. “But I think the fact that I’m standing here, the fact that my husband is in the audience watching right now, is just an amazing example of that belief that, yes, yes — you belong. And this country has a place for you.”

Without mentioning his sexual orientatio­n, Buttigieg is using the same theme of belonging in a television ad airing in New Hampshire in the days before the state’s presidenti­al primary on Tuesday.

“If you are ready to build an American life defined by belonging,” he says, “this is our chance.”

Charlotte Clymer, press secretary at the Human Rights Campaign, an LGBTQ civil rights group that is neutral in the Democratic race, said Buttigieg’s rise to the top tier reflected the country’s rapid cultural change toward broader acceptance of LGBTQ Americans.

“This is a seismic shift,” she said.

Anti-gay bias has hardly disappeare­d. Hate crimes against LGBTQ people remain a serious problem: Of the 7,120 bias-crime incidents reported in 2018, nearly 1,200 were based on gender or sexual orientatio­n, according to the FBI. And several dozen transgende­r people, many of them women of color, have been killed over the last two years.

At the same time, however, public opinion on LGBTQ issues has shifted quickly. In 2004, just 31% of American adults approved of same-sex marriage, but by last year, 61% did, according to the nonpartisa­n Pew Research Center.

The shift in public opinion is among the fastest on a major public issue that pollsters have measured. By contrast, a majority of Americans did not support interracia­l marriage until the 1990s — a generation after the Supreme Court invalidate­d state laws that banned it.

The Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage in 2015. Buttigieg married his husband, Chasten Glezman, three years later.

Should Buttigieg win the Democratic nomination, his sexual orientatio­n could pose a challenge with some voters in the general election. In a Pew Research Center survey last March, just 29% of white evangelica­l Protestant­s favored samesex marriage, although that was roughly double the 15% support from a decade earlier.

There’s also a sharp partisan divide. Only 44% of Republican-leaning voters approved of same-sex marriage last year, while 75% of those who lean Democratic were in favor of it.

Former Rep. Barney Frank of Massachuse­tts, who came out in 1987, said he believed a fairly small number of voters would reject Buttigieg for president based solely on his sexual orientatio­n.

“The bad news is that ‘fairly small’ could be fairly significan­t in this election,” he said, noting the razorthin margins of President Trump’s wins in the handful of states that sealed his electoral college victory in 2016.

LGBTQ voters are not necessaril­y supporting Buttigieg. An AP VoteCast survey of likely Iowa Democratic caucusgoer­s taken in the days before the contest found that 44% of LGBTQ voters backed Sanders, followed by 20% for Sen. Elizabeth Warren and 16% for Buttigieg.

Some gay elected officials who don’t support Buttigieg nonetheles­s welcomed his breakthrou­gh in Iowa.

Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia is a gay supporter of former Vice President Joe Biden for the Democratic nomination. Nonetheles­s, he said, “There’s no question that all of us have a lot of pride in the moment and think it’s a great moment for the country.”

 ?? Jae C. Hong Associated Press ?? PETE BUTTIGIEG is the first openly gay candidate to win delegates.
Jae C. Hong Associated Press PETE BUTTIGIEG is the first openly gay candidate to win delegates.

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