Victory in the News


Colorado gay officials seeing more-tolerant attitudes

Tue, Nov 15th 2011, 09:16

Colorado residents want their city councils and county commissioners to solve zoning woes and code-enforcement headaches and deliver reliable trash pickup.

 

What they don't seem to care about is whether the people offering the solutions are gay, lesbian or transgender.

 

The national Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund endorsed 75 candidates in the most recent election cycle, and 53 won seats on city councils and county commissions, said the group's spokesman, Denis Dison.

 

In Denver, the group endorsed lesbian Robin Kniech, who won a seat on the City Council in July.

http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_19336637


Cincy's first openly gay councilman shows change

Mon, Nov 14th 2011, 17:37

The election of Cincinnati's first openly gay councilman represents a shift for an Ohio city that for years had a charter amendment that was unfavorable to gays. 

 

Chris Seelbach's election last week is a milestone for the area's gays and lesbians. Seelbach had worked for the successful repeal in 2004 of an 11-year-old city charter amendment that banned local ordinances protecting gay people from discrimination. 

 

Having an openly gay person in public office helps other people feel that they can show who they really are and participate in government, said Denis Dison, a spokesman for the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund, a Washington-based group that supports lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender political candidates.

 

"If some gay or lesbian kid in Cincinnati walks into school with their head a little higher after this, that's the important thing," Dison said.


http://www.realclearpolitics.com/news/ap/politics/2011/Nov/14/cincy_s_first_openly_gay_councilman_shows_change.html


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