News
Democrats Fear a Major Gay Group Will Endorse D'Amato
By James Dao, New York Times
(WASHINGTON, DC) – White House officials and gay Democrats, concerned that the
nation's largest gay and lesbian political organization is about to endorse
Senator Alfonse M. D'Amato for re-election, are intensely lobbying the group
to try to shift its support to the Democratic challenger, Representative
Charles E. Schumer.
Publicly, officials in the organization, the Human Rights Campaign, said
they were still deliberating their position in the closely watched race,
considered among the tightest in the nation. They said they would probably
make an endorsement by Friday.
But privately, organization officials and gay activists from both parties
who have been monitoring the debate say the group is most likely to endorse
D'Amato, a Republican seeking his fourth term. They also raised the
possibility that the group would endorse both candidates, or remain neutral.
If the group endorses D'Amato, said officials who spoke on the condition
of anonymity, the endorsement would be based on three major factors: the group
tends to favor incumbents, has been searching for allies among the Senate
Republican majority and considers D'Amato's recent record on gay issues to be
quite strong.
An endorsement by the group, which is held in high regard by many gay and
lesbian voters, could prove important in swinging voters to D'Amato in a tight
race. It would also be a major symbolic victory for the Senator, who has
sought to recast himself as a centrist in recent years and could use the
endorsement to build his standing among moderate swing voters.
A D'Amato endorsement would also weaken Schumer's efforts to portray the
incumbent as a right-wing extremist and would signify to many voters a fraying
of the traditional Democratic coalition that has included black and gay
voters, women and labor unions.
The intensity of the debate surrounding the endorsement underscores the
importance of the New York Senate race to Democrats across the nation, who see
defeating D'Amato as one of their best opportunities to prevent the
Republicans from gaining 60 seats in the Senate – enough to stop a Democratic
filibuster. The Republicans currently hold a 55-to-45 majority.
"There is sentiment in the community that if the Republicans get 60
votes, that Trent Lott will basically be in charge politically for the next
two years," said David B. Mixner, a close friend of President Clinton's who is
gay. He was referring to the Senate majority leader, who has called
homosexuality a sin and likened it to kleptomania.
Saturday, Schumer picked up his own endorsement from New York's largest
gay and lesbian political organization, the Empire State Pride Agenda.
Although the Human Rights Campaign is bipartisan, it has been very close
to the Clinton Administration, has many Democrats on its board and receives
much of its money from Democratic contributors.
Largely because of the group's strong Democratic ties, gay Democrats, New
York liberals and White House officials are infuriated that it is even
considering endorsing D'Amato, who also runs on the Right to Life and
Conservative Party lines and often receives high ratings from the Christian
Coalition, which typically oppose legislation on civil rights for gay people.
Although the organization has been thought to be inching toward a D'Amato
endorsement for months, the lobbying campaign for Schumer has picked up
intensity in the last two weeks, driven partly by a growing sense that the
race is now closer than ever.
Democrats and advocates in both parties who support rights for gay people
said that Vice President Al Gore, Hillary Rodham Clinton and Donna E. Shalala,
the Secretary for Health and Human Services, have made personal appeals to
Human Rights Campaign officials urging them not to endorse D'Amato. White
House officials said they did not know whether the three had made such
appeals, and Human Rights Campaign officials declined to comment.
Schumer met privately with the group's top officials last week to make
one last pitch for the endorsement.
Clinton Administration officials have also been buttonholing the group's
board members at every opportunity, from cocktail parties to fund-raisers,
raising concerns about a D'Amato endorsement. Some New York advocates of civil
rights for gay people have flooded the organization with phone calls, E-mail
messages and letters. Democratic officials have been encouraging the group's
major donors to express their opposition to D'Amato.
People involved in the lobbying efforts said that at best, they are
hoping the group will endorse both candidates, or make no endorsement at all.
"Chuck Schumer has been a strong supporter of issues that are important
to gay communities," said a senior White House official who spoke on the
condition of anonymity. "The last thing that they should want to do is hurt
the candidacy of someone who has been so supportive of their agenda."
The Human Rights Campaign is considered the most influential gay and
lesbian organization in Washington, with a national membership of 250,000 and
an annual budget of more than $13 million. The group was created in the early
1980's in large part to counter the rise of the Christian right and Ronald
Reagan. Paradoxically, D'Amato was first elected in the Reagan landslide of
1980 and remained a strong supporter of President Reagan.
For D'Amato, who has aggressively courted the gay voters, the endorsement
would represent a crowning achievement in his efforts to reposition himself as
a moderate. Since 1993, the Senator has backed the right of gay citizens to
serve in the military, sponsored legislation to prevent job discrimination
against gay workers and opposed his own leadership's attempts to block the
nominations of two openly gay men to positions in the Clinton Administration.
To gay supporters of D'Amato, an endorsement by the Human Rights Campaign
would signify the political maturation of the gay electorate and help the
organization insulate itself from accusations that it is too close to the
Democratic Party.
Those who support a D'Amato endorsement, including top officials within
the Human Rights Campaign, contend that in the current political climate,
where Congress is almost certain to remain under Republican control after
November, gay people must build alliances with moderate Republicans.
Human Rights Campaign officials also say their standing policy is to
support friendly incumbents, even when their challengers have better voting
records on gay issues. That is the case in New York, where Schumer's rating by
the Human Rights Campaign has been consistently better than D'Amato's. Both
men, however, have angered advocates of rights for gay people by voting for
legislation that allows states to not recognize gay marriages.
In a precedent widely cited by D'Amato supporters, the organization
endorsed Senator John F. Kerry, a Democrat, over the Republican challenger,
William Weld, in the 1996 Massachusetts Senate race, even though Weld's record
on gay rights was considered stronger. The move angered gay Republicans, who
now contend that snubbing D'Amato would prove that the group is biased toward
Democrats.
But there is clearly a large number of Human Rights Campaign contributors
and board members who strongly feel that endorsing D'Amato will permanently
damage the group, particularly among women. They fear that abortion rights
supporters will quit the group in droves because D'Amato has never wavered in
his opposition to abortion during 18 years in Congress.
Many New York gay activists would also be deeply upset if the group
endorses D'Amato, whom they blame for installing the State Senate majority
leader, Joseph L. Bruno, whom they consider to be strongly anti-gay.
Matt Foreman, executive director of the Empire State Pride Agenda, cited
D'Amato's role as "the architect" of the state Republican Party Saturday as a
major reason the group endorsed Schumer.
"While he has criticized fellow Republicans in Washington for their
intolerance, here at home, his own party's blatant discrimination is still the
order of the day," Foreman said.
For that reason, some White House officials say they think a Human Rights
Campaign endorsement of D'Amato will be almost meaningless among gay voters.
They contend that it might even hurt the Senator among his conservative base.
"I don't think anybody will vote for Al D'Amato because of an H.R.C.
endorsement," said a White House aide who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
"But I think some people in the Right to Life Party and some upstate people
are going to say, 'Who is this guy and why should we vote for him?' "