News
Far Right Elects Another Lesbian Candidate
Candidate on Ruzicka: 'Get A Leash on Her'
Patty Henetz, The Salt Lake Tribune
November 4, 1998
Bryan Irving has few illusions that he might have won his race for House
District 30. But he is angry that Gayle Ruzicka injected herself into the
campaign, and called on the Republican Party to repudiate her tactics.
"With people like Gayle Ruzicka involved, it almost makes me want to be a
Democrat," Irving said Wednesday. "I don't think I would have won. But she
cost me about 10 points. Somehow the party has got to get a leash on her."
Democrat Jackie Biskupski on Tuesday defeated Irving, a Republican, by a
2-1 margin, becoming Utah's first openly gay legislator.
Ruzicka, who lives in Utah County and heads the extreme right-wing Utah
Eagle Forum, in September announced she would work to defeat Biskupski on
moral grounds.
Irving said he tried to make it clear he wanted no help from Ruzicka, who
he said never even paid him the courtesy of a phone call. She did, however,
raise $3,000 to pay for a homophobic flier mailed over the weekend to 6,000
District 30 residents.
The flier claimed that homosexuals subvert fidelity in marriage, lure
young people, scorn traditional morals and openly break the laws they find
irrelevant.
As a tactic it backfired, said district resident Doug Duncan. "It
sickened me," said Duncan, a registered Republican who voted for Biskupski.
"You want to say, 'Oh, just shut up.' "
Irving said he took heat for the letter. "Everybody thinks it was me,"
he said. "I don't need that... It's not the legacy I want to leave."
Joe Hatch, Salt Lake County Democratic Party chairman, said the mailing
only cemented Biskupski's likely victory in the solidly Democratic district
that includes Sugar House, part of South Salt Lake and portions of Murray and
unincorporated Salt Lake County. "I knew she was going to win. It was just
nice it was a landslide," Hatch said.
Utah Republican Party Executive Director Spencer Stokes said "there is no
doubt [the flier] may have hurt" Irving.
"I'm sure Jackie will represent the constituents of her district well,"
Stokes added. "The concern we have and others have is that she will be
pressured by special-interest groups."
Throughout her campaign, Biskupski has steadily maintained she has no
such agenda. But fighting perception is part of being a gay candidate, said
Kathleen DeBold, spokeswoman for the Victory Fund, a national gay political
organization.
"Someone like Jackie has two campaigns: one against the opponent and one
against the stereotype," DeBold said. "It was the race against the stereotype
that was harder for her to fight."
Anti-gay tactics were employed in campaigns around the country, said
Rebecca Isaacs, political director for the National Gay and Lesbian Task
Force.
Of the 50 candidates endorsed by the Victory Fund, 36 won despite anti-
gay campaigning. In Wisconsin, Democrat Tammy Baldwin became the first non-
incumbent openly gay person to win a seat in Congress.
Isaacs said political gay-baiting started over the summer, when a spate
of newspaper ads and stories appeared featuring people who claimed to have
returned to heterosexuality after being gay.
Biskupski saw parallels between the anti-gay tactics and the Republicans'
$10 million anti-Clinton campaign widely credited with helping Democrats in
national races.
"People in general are tired of hatred, tired of people trying to divide
the communities rather than unite them and make them strong," she said.
Biskupski and Irving acknowledge there is work to be done to heal
division in District 30 brought on by a campaign neither of them wanted. "It's
a sunny day out and I'm doing fine," Irving said. "If Jackie needs my help,
I'm glad to give it."