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Wayne Besen

Wayne Besen

Posted: August 26, 2010 09:35 PM

Let's analyze the Atlantic magazine story about the coming out of former Republican National Committee Chairman, Ken Mehlman and discuss what steps he must take to redeem himself with the gay community:

It's taken me 43 years to get comfortable with this part of my life," said Mehlman, now an executive vice-president with the New York City-based private equity firm, KKR. "Everybody has their own path to travel, their own journey, and for me, over the past few months, I've told my family, friends, former colleagues, and current colleagues, and they've been wonderful and supportive. The process has been something that's made me a happier and better person. It's something I wish I had done years ago."

Perhaps, if he had not worked for a party that used LGBT people as a wedge issue, he would have accepted himself 10 or 20 years earlier. In a sense, he helped construct his own stifling closet. I can respect that he had his own path, but Mehlman cannot deny that his abhorrent actions negatively affected the paths of so many other people. His odious work led to broken families, gay teenagers commuting suicide, LGBT couples who were not able to marry, broken people joining silly "ex-gay" programs and individuals who lost their jobs or were hate crime victims. Mehlman should own up to his hideous mistake and offer a heartfelt apology. Yes, he will be forgiven, but first he must make amends. So far, his coming out has been all about himself, without acknowledging the extent of his toxic legacy.

He insisted, too, that President Bush "was no homophobe."

It is probably true that George W. Bush was not homophobic, and he always seemed somewhat comfortable around gay people. However, this is not comforting, because it means that the former president's anti-gay policies were nothing more than a cynical and amoral attempt to divide America for the sake of political power. Mehlman played along with this tragic game. He willingly demonized marriage equality. He orchestrated some of the most vile anti-gay campaigns in history and profited handsomely from the wreckage. Did Mehlman intervene or speak up in 2006 when Bush brought so-called "ex-gay" activists from Exodus International to the White House to lobby for the Federal Marriage Amendment?

"He often wondered why gay voters never formed common cause with Republican opponents of Islamic jihad, which he called "the greatest anti-gay force in the world right now."

Like most people, the vast majority of LGBT individuals oppose Islamic jihad. However, the GOP proposed replacing Islamic fundamentalism with a form of Christian fundamentalism. Quite frankly, neither vision is particularly appealing. Living in America, a Republican-led theocracy was always a much greater threat than Islamic jihad. Furthermore, most LGBT voters were rightfully skeptical of the cooked-up "intelligence" that railroaded us into the quagmire of Iraq. The policies of the Bush administration made us less safe, not more secure.

Mehlman's leadership positions in the GOP came at a time when the party was stepping up its anti-gay activities -- such as the distribution in West Virginia in 2006 of literature linking homosexuality to atheism, or the less-than-subtle, coded language in the party's platform ("Attempts to redefine marriage in a single state or city could have serious consequences throughout the country... "). Mehlman said at the time that he could not, as an individual Republican, go against the party consensus. He was aware that Karl Rove, President Bush's chief strategic adviser, had been working with Republicans to make sure that anti-gay initiatives and referenda would appear on November ballots in 2004 and 2006 to help Republicans. Mehlman acknowledges that if he had publicly declared his sexuality sooner, he might have played a role in keeping the party from pushing an anti-gay agenda.

Mehlman was an adult and a very powerful man in Washington. He had a clear choice to make, and he elected to embrace unadulterated greed over integrity. He willfully abandoned the LGBT community (including suicidal teens) for the sake of privilege, power and money. His choice was one of cowardice and self-interest. As a direct result of his decision, he became famous, well-connected and earned enough money to buy a multimillion dollar condo in New York's gay Chelsea district. Many people are faced with such choices every day and act with dignity and good character. What Mehlman should have done was demand that the GOP not use LGBT people as a wedge issue. If Karl Rove refused, Mehlman should have resigned.

"It's a legitimate question and one I understand," Mehlman said. "I can't change the fact that I wasn't in this place personally when I was in politics, and I genuinely regret that. It was very hard, personally." He asks of those who doubt his sincerity: "If they can't offer support, at least offer understanding."

What can reasonably be offered, given the circumstances, is a pragmatic acceptance of Mehlman. It is important to include him in order to make it easier for the next 10, 20 or 100 Mehlman's to come out of the closet, so we can end anti-gay prejudice for future generations. This is about the greater good and the future -- rather than wallowing in the sordid past. But, Mehlman would be wise not to attempt to whitewash history. The LGBT community is not as gullible as the rubes he used to trick with divisive social issues.

"What I do regret, and think a lot about, is that one of the things I talked a lot about in politics was how I tried to expand the party into neighborhoods where the message wasn't always heard. I didn't do this in the gay community at all."

Come on, Ken. Stop the spin. The GOP was not going to be able to walk through Chelsea or San Francisco's Castro district knocking on doors to promote the Federal Marriage Amendment. If Mehlman wants to be accepted, honesty will be his greatest ally.

"I wish I was where I am today 20 years ago. The process of not being able to say who I am in public life was very difficult. No one else knew this except me. My family didn't know. My friends didn't know. Anyone who watched me knew I was a guy who was clearly uncomfortable with the topic," he said.

Would it truly have made a difference? Would Mehlman really have traded his access to power, wealth and fame just to live out and proud? Only he can answer this question. But, one point is undeniable. If he had come out 20 years ago, he never would have become the chairman of the GOP or a key player on the Bush team, because the Republican Party had long cast its lot with religious extremists.

Ed Gillespie, a former RNC chairman and long-time friend of Mehlman acknowledged that the party had been inhospitable to gays in the past, and said that he hopes Mehlman's decision to come out leads the party to be "more respectful and civil in our discourse" when it comes to gays.

For openly LGBT people to have a place of influence and distinction in the Republican Party, the GOP must decide it will no longer be hostage to social conservatives. This party's alleged "big tent" is simply is not large enough to hold both the Family Research Council's Tony Perkins and Ken Mehlman. The agendas of these two men are incongruous. Who is the GOP going to choose? (If the lineup of Republican backed Tea Bagger candidates is any indication, they are still on-board with anti-gay activists)

Mehlman said that his formal coming-out process began earlier this year.
Formal coming out process? Huh? Did he buy a tuxedo for the occasion? I don't care what Mehlman says. He is 43-years-old and must have known he was gay for decades before he started professionally gay bashing for the GOP. What he was really trying to say was, now that he is rich, successful, lives in Chelsea and no longer shills for the Republican Party, he felt safe enough to come out of the closet.
Chad Griffin, the California-based political strategist who organized opposition to Proposition 8, said that Mehlman's quiet contributions to the American Foundation for Equal Rights are "tremendous," adding that "when we achieve equal equality, he will be one of the people to thank for it."

Dustin Lance Black, the Academy Award winning writer of "Milk," said, "Ken represents an incredible coup for the American Foundation for Equal Rights. We believe that our mission of equal rights under the law is one that should resonate with every American. As a victorious former presidential campaign manager and head of the Republican Party, Ken has the proven experience and expertise to help us communicate with people across each of the 50 states."

Let's cut Griffin and Black a little slack. They are trying to strategically move forward with LGBT equality as a bipartisan issue. If their opportunistic use of Mehlman leads to more Republicans openly backing our efforts, we will be much better off. To do so would further relegate anti-gay activists to the fringe and make our uphill struggle a downhill victory march.

To summarize, Mehlman has three steps to take before he is warmly welcomed:
1) Repent for past sins
2) Be honest with the LGBT community
3) Work tirelessly to undo the damage and propel the LGBT towards equality

 

Follow Wayne Besen on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Truthwinout

 
 
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Jdaddy1951
09:18 AM on 08/28/2010
"It is probably true that George W. Bush was not homophobic, and he always seemed somewhat comfortable around gay people. However, this is not comforting, because it means that the former president's anti-gay policies were nothing more than a cynical and amoral attempt to divide America for the sake of political power. Mehlman played along with this tragic game. He willingly demonized marriage equality. He orchestrated some of the most vile anti-gay campaigns in history and profited handsomely from the wreckage. Did Mehlman intervene or speak up in 2006 when Bush brought so-called "ex-gay" activists from Exodus International to the White House to lobby for the Federal Marriage Amendment?"

Elephants, who reportedly never forget, are symbols of The Party of No. Perhaps the GOP, which is now the TeaOP, will understand if gay people never forget the cynicism and amorality of George Bush's apathy toward and Ken Mehlman's betrayal of homosexual men and women ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
harmonikasavingsbonds
Standard?Nonsense! I DEMAND an automatic poodle!
09:15 AM on 08/28/2010
Well; at least we now know at least one of the republican closet cases Jeff Gannon was servicing for GOP dollars.
10:34 PM on 08/27/2010
Melhman is a mercenary. Who knows why he's now on another side? After, he helped George Bush win the presidency. He was his campaign manager! Think of him as a man greatly responsible that administration and ALL its ills. 8 years and decades. And what about the people of Iraq? And their destroyed nation? All the people who died? Gay and straight?

So what if he's gay? Clarence Thomas is black. Sarah Palin is a woman. Big effing deal.

We're all human beings. Have any of those 3 examples noticed yet?
05:36 PM on 08/27/2010
"He often wondered why gay voters never formed common cause with Republican opponents of Islamic jihad, which he called "the greatest anti-gay force in the world right now."

Oh really, Kenny? So I guess if you're not allied with Republicans, that must mean you're a *fan* of Islamic jihad... Just because you're being honest about your sexual orientation now, that doesn't make all the OTHER lies you peddle instantly true.
10:48 PM on 08/27/2010
A normal population distribution figures about 10% GLBT, as I understand. So, if 1,000,000. million people have died in Iraq as a result of George Bush's policies, which Ken Mehlman can take a lot of credit for, as well, since he helped him get reelected -- how many of those who randomly died, as a result of war, were gay? I would suppose, about 100,000 gay deaths. That Ken Mehlman supported.

Much worse than any imagined "Islamic jihad."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Matt Herren
"Human action is purposeful behavior."
04:28 PM on 08/27/2010
There are a huge number of individuals on the right who fully support gay rights and could care less about homosexuality. Social conservatives tend to be weak on fiscal policy. The grass roots movement the Right is experiencing right now is about individual freedom and limited government... an attitude that translates to less government involvement in both our fiscal lives as well as our social ones.
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05:53 AM on 08/28/2010
Not true. The Right still can't prevail without "Bible-believing Christians" (i.e. homophobic bigots). Homophobia is not only tolerated but NEEDED by fiscal-conservative, social-moderate Republicans.
04:14 PM on 08/27/2010
I'm still having trouble buying this "40-Year-Old Virgin" stuff.

The fact that he was repeatedly having sex with men while he was in the Bush Administration didn't clue him in to the fact that he was homosexual?

Right.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
07:17 PM on 08/27/2010
READ HIS STATEMENT
He does not say he never had sex -- but that he is now comfortable.
(especially financially, I would venture)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dapperd72
04:02 PM on 08/27/2010
Ken Mehlman's "coming out" revelation is unfortunately too little, too late, hearkening back to Rock Hudson's ardent support for Ronald Reagan's anti-GLBT policies while hundreds of thousands of AIDS patients died in vain. Hudson's advocacy for right-wing politics and homophobia in particular ultimately cost him his life from the same disease his favorite President denounced as punishment for homosexuality. The chickens may not come home to roost for Mehlman to the same degree, but I'm very skeptical of his motives. Homosexuals who remain in the proverbial closet while actively working to destroy their compatriots' interests are tragically self-hating homosexuals who need years of therapy and introspection before they expect us to believe they now plan to advocate in the opposite progressive direction. The GOP is surprised or horrified that he's admitting his true orientation now, but if they'd listened to the eminent Bill Maher on "Larry King Live" or his show, "Real Time," this wouldn't be such a a rude awakening. Some of their strategists claim they don't care if he's homosexual, as long as he doesn't advocate gay marriage. As far as I'm concerned, he may as well become a man without a country politically, unless he resolves to join the ranks of David Brock, who expressed genuine regret for his attacks against Anita Hill when he came out as homosexual, then started the superb media watchdog, Media Matters. Otherwise I have no sympathy for hypocrites of Mehlman's ilk.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
07:31 PM on 08/27/2010
HOLD OFF ON CRITICISING ROCK HUDSON
.... who was over 40 when Ken was born & died when Ken was in high school
(and of whom anyone who met him speaks very kindly)
Rock was one of those "nice gay boys" who will go along with what is being said, never make waves, never have controversial opinions, etc etc, so your hate seems way overboard

And may I politely suggest you journey straight to HELL (do not pass Go) for blaming Rock's death on any of his views, which is not only homophobic and tasteless, but STUPID, as he acquired HIV before anyone knew what it was.

I MEAN DID YOU REALLY WRITE, IF IN A CONVOLUTED WAY, THAT MEHLMAN MIGHT ESCAPE DYING OF AIDS FOR BEING SUCH A BAD PERSON?

Your anger is as unbecoming as your paragraph-less rant is hard to read.
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BartRoberts
Vita canis, tum mors.
05:10 PM on 08/29/2010
But for his grandmother, there are few who'll ever mistake Kenny-boy Mehlman for a nice guy.

A man this sociopathic didn't become that way over night and without some real serious therapy isn't going to change his behaviour any time soon.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dapperd72
03:57 PM on 08/30/2010
FYI, Rock Hudson unfortunately made a film & professional career by pretending to be a lady's man, the basis for his celebrity reputation, when in reality he was precisely the opposite. If he had been true himself, he wouldn't have proven to be such a hypocrite. His death from AIDS was as much a tragedy as that of anyone else, but he witnessed firsthand what Pres. Reagan did to AIDS patients for the first 5 years of his administration by ignoring this epidemic due to his own homophobia. I shed plenty of tears when I watched the HBO film, "And the Band Played On" in which I learned of this particular scandal committed by Reagan's criminal gang, and many more when I read Randy Shilts' tome in its entirety. Contrary to your own ignorant assumptions, I have absolutely no hatred for homosexuals, in fact if you knew me at all, you'd reach the exact opposite conclusion, especially given how extensively I've commented on this website in favor of GLBT rights across the board. I have no sympathy for hypocrites who engender their own destruction. We reap what we sow, so if we deny who we are, then the truth comes back to bite us in the rearend & we shouldn't expect the public to have much sympathy for us. Hypocrisy is the greatest luxury, as the hip-hop band Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy sang, particularly for those on the right political wing of American society.
01:01 PM on 08/27/2010
All the recriminations just waste everybody's time. Try a little Christian charity.
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BartRoberts
Vita canis, tum mors.
05:11 PM on 08/29/2010
Pity Mehlman or his "Christian" allies didn't think of that when they decided to garner political advantage by making gay people their whipping-boys.
12:35 PM on 08/27/2010
"So far, his coming out has been all about himself, without acknowledging the extent of his toxic legacy."

You've got it right. It stinks even more when you read how the Bush Administration / Campaign went to lengths to lobby the media to keep Mehlman's gay identity in the closet.

This is no last hour conversion. It is calculated, trying to buy grace without walking the path to one's salvation. Sorry for the religious tone (I am NOT religious).

I do agree with the author's three steps, though I don't think he should then be warmly welcomed. Ues this horrible person to help change the cultural meme, and then kick him to his multi-million dollar Chelsea district curb.
12:14 PM on 08/27/2010
Just because someone is gay does not mean that they support gay marriage.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jason N
Proud Firebagger Lefty
12:34 PM on 08/27/2010
You need to re-read. Mehlman supports gay marriage, and says he wanted to say something back than but couldn't. Furthermore, this doesn't eliminate anything anyone's said about Mehlman. He was and remains a hypocrite of the highest form. Guess what, I can find black people that oppose interracial marriage. That doesn't make him, or a white person holding the same opinion, right.
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Decorina
Hypocrisy means your karma ran over your dogma
12:12 PM on 08/27/2010
What he was really trying to say was, now that he is rich, successful, lives in Chelsea and no longer shills for the Republican Party, he felt safe enough to come out of the closet.

Looks to me like he is still shilling for the Re.thugs. He can now afford to come out - and take advantage of any tolerance he is offered on the back of other gays who have worked for it and not against it. What a t.o.o.l.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kathleen Morse
01:09 PM on 08/27/2010
Decorina, Now let's be fundamentalist evangelical christian about this. Maybe he just decided to rethink his former straight life, saw how fantastic it is to be Gay, and Chose to become gay, a little later in life than most of us do, but "better late than never". That is on one of our recruitment posters. The one with the stunning naked guy in a top hat, winking, pointing out at the viewer, captioned, "We Want You, better to choose late than never!" I couldn't resist. Also it's going to be wicked hard for him to get a date. He might want to rethink his choice.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tbera
Citizen of Planet Earth
12:06 PM on 08/27/2010
I agree with the 3 steps. His sins are great against the gay community but not impossible. If he has a partner, it would help for his partner to help us understand him, unless is partner is frothingly antigay as well (or has been in the past). It is not an insurmountable problem, but my money is on his getting healed by mormons and then back to his antigayness... I notice RNC has not as yet commented on this. I want to hear what they have to say.
Eric4969
Type Today Post Tomorrow
11:57 AM on 08/27/2010
Yet Again it just goes to show you America the LAND OF ME-MYSELF AND I, Let me get Mine no matter who I run Over and Destroy. We are so Uneducated in this country it's very Scary, the Radicals are getting more Radical and the Dems are to Weak to do anything about it, and the American people are to DUMB to know better. Good luck with the Future Americans your going to need it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
11:52 AM on 08/27/2010
In the words of Ronald Reagan, "Here we go again." Yet another example how civil rights issues are defined as nothing more than Lefty uber-alles issues. The author's assertions are pure political hyperbole, cloaked as a morality tale. It's not news that the Feminists also became less about women than Lefty politics, no Conservative woman need apply. Same with Gay rights. It's all Left, all the way. No Conservative Gay need apply.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jason N
Proud Firebagger Lefty
12:37 PM on 08/27/2010
Please, the guy actively participated in a campaign that demonized gay people, comparing them often to pedophiles and connecting them with the "ungodly". You're pathetic attempt to make this about anything besides Mehlman's (and by extension Republican) hypocrisy is stunning.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kathleen Morse
02:11 PM on 08/27/2010
Milrepa,There are so many places to go with this.I'll just say that Feminism was and is about the rights of all Human beings.There was no application involved.The need was so great that all you had to do was show up and dig in.It was about money. It was about women being last hired,first fired.It was about women who had to work being denied benefits because they could get them through their husbands and if not married, why not? It was about women who had married, stayed home, raised the children and supported the husbands' climb up the ladder and after 30 years being divorced by the husbands, left with nothing.No SS, no rights to his pension. It was about women hired and being paid half what their male counterparts were paid. It was about educated women whose children were grown,wanting to work outside the home forbidden to by their husbands.It was about abused women on all socio-economic levels being helped to get away from their abusers.Many of those helped were your conservative sisters.We don't know how many,we never asked,we acted.We took no money from gov. because they wanted names of everyone helped&that wasn't happening.Last, There were many straight men Feminists and still are.There isn't a human in this country,like it or not,who has not benefited in some way by the Feminist movement. It is a humanitarian movement begun by women who knew Sisterhood is powerful.
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05:16 AM on 08/28/2010
Kathleen Morse, Amen to what you just said. I'm old enough to remember my mother, a teacher, finally getting equal pay with her male colleagues, even though she had worked the same hours each day..
I'm old enough to remember when women couldn't leave their abusive husbands because they hadn't been in any paid employment and the only alternative then was to rely on the charity of family or take in the washing, which in effect means, total economic and financial insecurity for yourself and possibly for your children if your husband was not interested in supporting his children..
I'm old enough to remember when a divorced woman was equal to a bad woman who couldn't hold her marriage together and just tolerate it. I'm old enough to remember when a divorce woman did NOT necessarily have rights to custody over her children. .
I'm old enough to know girls who were abandoned because they were second class citizens, and would always remain second class citizens compared with their brothers or their husbands..
I'm old enough to remember when women AND MEN, didn't have choices we take for granted today. I'm old enough to remember my father slogging out in a job he hated because staying at home was NOT an option. Not when your wife earned only half of what a man did for doing the same work..
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
JonBFertippton
11:19 AM on 08/27/2010
Wait for it: Republican propositions will begin to arise, financed by Koch et al., to prohibit the building of mosques in American cities. The GOP needs this to get the fundamentalist Christian vote out. Coming to your local election place soon. Hatred is going to increase in America until the mid-tern election is over. It will only get worse leading up to 2012. Imagine.