Had Marti and Ethan in attendance at this year's LGBT reception, and I'm interested in discovering whether the trans contingent was once again African American free for the third straight year.
I'll complain about that later if it was. In the meantime here's what the POTUS had to say at the LGBT reception.
6:00 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Hello, everybody! (Applause.) Welcome to the White House. (Applause.)
Nothing ruins a good party like a long speech from a
politician. (Laughter.) So I'm going to make a short set of remarks
here. I appreciate all of you being here. I have learned a lesson:
Don't follow Potomac Fever -- (laughter) -- because they sounded pretty
good.
We’ve got community leaders here. We've got grassroots
organizers. We've got some incredible young people who are just doing
great work all across the country -– folks who are standing up against
discrimination, and for the rights of parents and children and partners
and students --
AUDIENCE MEMBER: And spouses.
THE PRESIDENT: -- and spouses. (Applause.) You’re
fighting for the idea that everyone ought to be treated equally and
everybody deserves to be able to live and love as they see fit.
(Applause.)
Now, I don’t have to tell the people in this room we've got a
ways to go in the struggle, how many people are still denied their
basic rights as Americans, who are still in particular circumstances
treated as second-class citizens, or still fearful when they walk down
the street or down the hall at school. Many of you have devoted your
lives to the cause of equality. So you all know that we've got more
work to do.
But I think it's important for us to note the progress
that's been made just in the last two and a half years. I just want
everybody to think about this. (Applause.) It was here, in the East
Room, at our first Pride reception, on the 40th anniversary of the
Stonewall riots, a few months after I took office, that I made a pledge,
I made a commitment. I said that I would never counsel patience; it
wasn’t right for me to tell you to be patient any more than it was right
for folks to tell African Americans to be patient in terms of their
freedoms. I said it might take time to get everything we wanted done.
But I also expected to be judged not by the promises I made, but the
promises I kept.
Now, let's just think about it. I met with Judy Shepard. I
promised her we'd pass an inclusive hate crimes law, named after her
son, Matthew. And with the help of Ted Kennedy and others, we got it
done and I signed the bill. (Applause.)
I met Janice Lang-ben, who was barred from the bedside of
the woman she loved as she lay dying, and I told her we were going to
put a stop to that discrimination. And I issued an order so that any
hospital in America that accepts Medicare or Medicaid –- and that means
just about every hospital in America -– has to treat gay partners just
as they have to treat straight partners. Nobody in America should have
to produce a legal contract. (Applause.)
I said we'd lift the HIV travel ban. We got that done.
(Applause.) We put in place the first national strategy to fight
HIV/AIDS. (Applause.)
A lot of people said we weren’t going to be able to get
"don't ask, don't tell" done, including a bunch of people in this room.
(Laughter.) And I just met Sue Fulton, who was part of the first class
of women at West Point, and is an outstanding advocate for gay service
members. It took two years through Congress -– working with Admiral
Mullen and Secretary Gates and the Pentagon. We had to hold together a
fragile coalition. We had to keep up the pressure. But the bottom line
is we got it done. And in a matter of weeks, not months, I expect to
certify the change in policy –- and we will end "don't ask, don't tell"
once and for all. (Applause.)
I told you I was against the Defense -- so-called Defense of
Marriage Act. I've long supported efforts to pass a repeal through
Congress. And until we reach that day, my administration is no longer
defending DOMA in the courts. The law is discriminatory. It violates
the Constitution. It’s time for us to bring it to an end. (Applause.)
So bottom line is, I’ve met my commitments to the LGBT
community. I have delivered on what I promised. Now, that doesn’t mean
our work is done. There are going to be times where you’re still
frustrated with me. (Laughter.) I know there are going to be times
where you’re still frustrated at the pace of change. I understand
that. I know I can count on you to let me know. (Laughter and
applause.) This is not a shy group. (Laughter.)
But what I also know is that I will continue to fight
alongside you. And I don’t just mean as an advocate. You are moms and
dads who care about the schools that your children go to. You’re
students who are trying to figure out how to pay for going to college.
You’re folks who are looking for good jobs to pay the bills. You’re
Americans who want this country to prosper. So those are your fights,
too. And the fact is these are hard days for America. So we’ve got a
lot of work to do to, not only on ending discrimination; we’ve got a lot
of work to do to live up to the ideals on which we were founded, and to
preserve the American Dream in our time -– for everybody, whether
they're gay or straight or lesbian or transgender.
But the bottom line is, I am hopeful. I’m hopeful because
of the changes we’ve achieved just in these past two years. Think about
it. It’s astonishing. Progress that just a few years ago people would
have thought were impossible. And more than that, what gives me hope
is the deeper shift that we’re seeing that’s a transformation not just
in our laws but in the hearts and minds of people -- the progress led
not by Washington but by ordinary citizens.
It’s propelled not by politics but by love and friendship
and a sense of mutual regard and mutual respect. It’s playing out in
legislatures like New York. (Applause.) It’s playing out in
courtrooms. It’s playing out in the ballot box, as people argue and
debate over how to bring about the changes where we are creating a more
perfect union. But it’s also happening around water coolers. It’s
happening at Thanksgiving tables. It’s happening on Facebook and
Twitter, and at PTA meetings and potluck dinners, and church halls and
VFW Halls.
It happens when a father realizes he doesn’t just love his
daughter, but also her partner. (Applause.) It happens when a soldier
tells his unit that he’s gay, and they say, well, yeah, we knew that –-
(laughter) -- but, you know, you’re a good soldier. It happens when a
video sparks a movement to let every single young person out there know
that they’re not alone. (Applause.) It happens when people look past
their differences to understand our common humanity.
And that’s not just the story of the gay rights movement.
It is the story of America, and the slow, inexorable march towards a
more perfect union.
I want thank you for your contribution to that story. I’m confident we’re going to keep on writing more chapters.
Thank you very much, everybody. (Applause.)
END 6:10 P.M. EDT
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