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Dan Savage: Was Obama a One-Night Stand?

It wasn’t love at first sight, but author Dan Savage warmed up to Barack Obama. Now he’s wondering if all the promises the candidate whispered in his ear were just to get him into the electoral sack.



 Illustration by Gluekit

COMMENTARY: We could start with the betrayals and the slights -- the Reverend Rick Warren, 265 (and counting) gay men and lesbians kicked out of the military since Barack Obama was sworn in, the now-infamous DOMA brief that compared gay marriage to incest and pedophilia -- but maybe we should start by remembering the good times.

Hey, remember when Barack Obama couldn’t get his tongue any further up our butts?

Remember when he practically spooned Melissa Etheridge during the Logo–Human Rights Campaign debate? Remember when he positioned himself to the left of Hillary Clinton on the Defense of Marriage Act? While Clinton came out in favor of a partial repeal, Obama said he favored -- and would fight for -- a complete repeal, and described DOMA as “abhorrent.”

That was pretty sweet.

Then there was Barack Obama’s open letter to the gay community. “Equality is a moral imperative,” candidate Obama wrote, before reiterating his promise to repeal DOMA. He also promised to end “don’t ask, don’t tell,” to pressure Congress to pass the Matthew Shepard hate-crimes act, and to lift the HIV travel ban. And then this line in particular jumped out at me, as it must have for other gay parents: “As your President, I will use the bully pulpit to urge states to treat same-sex couples with full equality in their family and adoption laws.”

But the highlight of the campaign for me came during the vice-presidential debate. An Obama-Biden administration would support civil unions for same-sex couples, Joe Biden said, adding that there should be “no distinction from a constitutional standpoint or a legal standpoint” between same-sex and opposite-sex couples (except for the “marriage/civil unions” distinction). When Sarah Palin said that she didn’t support same-sex marriage either and that she agreed with Biden that the federal government shouldn’t “do anything to prohibit” visitation or other rights, Biden moved in for the kill: “I take her at her word, obviously, that she thinks there should be no civil rights distinction, none whatsoever, between a committed gay couple and a committed heterosexual couple.”

Ah, those were good times.

But then Obama was sworn in under Rick Warren’s porcine gaze and the “fierce urgency of now” quickly morphed, in Andrew Sullivan’s damning turn of phrase, into the “fierce urgency of whenever.” Never mind that gay people are being turned away from their partners’ bedsides during medical emergencies now. Never mind that people are being kicked out of the military now. Never mind that Arkansas banned adoptions by same-sex couples on the very same day that Obama was elected. (Gosh, where’s that bully pulpit when you need it?) The man who wasn’t afraid to appeal directly to us for our votes as a candidate -- and certainly wasn’t shy about asking us for our dollars -- couldn’t be bothered to acknowledge the promises he had made to us and seemed to greatly resent being asked to actually honor them.

The difference between candidate Obama and President Obama crystallized for me when NBC’s Brian Williams asked the president if “gay and lesbian couples who wish to marry ... have a friend in the White House?” The comfort candidate Obama demonstrated with gay people and issues was gone. I don’t remember exactly what the president said, but I will never forget the look on his face. Judging from his pained and slightly annoyed expression, you would have thought that Williams put the question to him in a suppository form.

Have you ever been introduced to someone with whom you’d had a torrid one-night stand and he acted like he didn’t know you? “Don’t know me?” you’re tempted to say in a loud voice. “Honey, you ate my ass.

Could Barack Obama be that one-night stand?

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Reader Comments
  • Name: Peregrine
    Date posted: 8/21/2009 7:16:00 PM
    Hometown: Memphis, TN

    Comment:

    Forget "Signed, Sealed, Delivered." Obama's new theme song is "A Breathtaking Guy" (Supremes.)

  • Name: Ari
    Date posted: 8/20/2009 4:18:00 PM
    Hometown: Oakland, CA

    Comment:

    The pussywhipped nonsense about your boyfriend is tedious and irrelevant. Who cares that your boyfriend wanted to vote for Hillary Clinton. You can't possibly be retarded enough to believe the Clintons -- the veritable king and queen of political expedience -- would be any more progressive than the current compromising chump. You're doing nobody a service pretending to such a cutesy political impossibility. It makes a lot more sense to come clean and understand that no politician on their scale hasn't been utterly bought & sold.

  • Name: Case
    Date posted: 8/16/2009 5:47:00 AM
    Hometown: Montgomery,AL

    Comment:

    Yes,I love Hillary(it's pure Diva Worship). However,I voted for former U.S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney. In a Green Party run parallel universe ,DOMA would have been declared unconstitutional in January. I'm still mystified as to why NOW,HRC and GLAAD backed Obama over McKinney.

  • Name: Brian
    Date posted: 8/15/2009 10:30:00 PM
    Hometown: Anaheim

    Comment:

    Please my fellow community members, if you love Obama, that is fine. I hope he improves the country. I doubt it but lets "hope". But please be honest with yourselves, he is not going to do anything for gay rights. What bothers me most about him is his complete silence while this minority group was in shock and grief after losing rights in several states after the election. He was also in Los Angeles when we lost in front of the CA supreme court. I find his silence very sad for a group that supported him. I doubt he would be silent if this happened to any other minority. He also continues the homophobic office of faith based programs that was started by Bush and has openly homophobic people in the white house that he appointed who believe in reparative therapy for homosexuals, something even Bush didn't have. You may be his fan, but he is not a "fierce advocate" for this community.

  • Name: janitt dott
    Date posted: 8/15/2009 5:04:00 AM
    Hometown: red wing, minnesota

    Comment:

    Old boomer chick here: 40 year liberal democrat, tear gassed for McGovern, journalism major during Watergate, engaged to pretty objectorboy during 'Nam who bravely came out back when gay was still considered...a mental lillness. I FOUGHT for CHOICE in the 70s, we LOST on the Equal Rights Amendment for ALL women (30 YEARS AND STILL WAITING!) You, Dan, sipped koolaid in the rarified air of TVland, with a safe gig at The Advocate. If you'd been down HERE with ME (and MANY fierce gays AND moderate republicans!) in the bloody trenches of the Hillary pages at MySpace, you'd KNOW that at least a half dozen of these replies were made by Ocrat hitbloggers PAID to swoop in and intimidate your posters and trivialize anti barack sentiment in your comment section. (Obama's "dirty tricks for change" make Nixon look well...silly)

  • Name: Steven
    Date posted: 8/14/2009 5:12:00 AM
    Hometown: Miami, FL

    Comment:

    It's time for us to demand action from our politicians. Although I would not like to make compare these issues directly, one maybe learn a trick or two from the Jewish community. Before WWII most American Jews were afraid of speaking out for fellow Jews in Europe. Many "Jewish leaders" fought "too hard" to become so succussful. Thus they did not want to endanger their status by supporting Jews in Europe. After the Holocaust, many Jews where so shocked that they united around Israel. The problem is that they were divided on most other issues. If we can unite gays (out or not) as well as our friends and relatives to focus on one issue, we can influence politics. Especially if (as I expect) we have crucial numbers in key states such as NY, Florida or (yes) California. If we can unite our vote and go to the election we can make a difference. We ought to also demand more for our donations...

  • Name: Patricia Gardner
    Date posted: 8/13/2009 8:05:00 PM
    Hometown: Mount Olive, NJ

    Comment:

    Can we all get our L-G-B sexual heads together and refocus from marriage and other non-issues. Obama as president has set the stage for ENDA to be brought to the floor of the US Senate !!! It is Sexual Orientation AND Gender Identity inclusive for the fifty states and is brought up in an atmosphere of OBAMA-esque appreciation across the country and aisles. It will broaden all of our rights like it was Obama's family in 1964 !!! Lets alll take a breath and blow this across the aisle and border with our anniversary celebration of Stonewall at the Whitehouse Party Horns. PULeeezzzzze The cover question is just SILLY

  • Name: Shawn Johnson
    Date posted: 8/13/2009 1:44:00 PM
    Hometown: Salt Lake City

    Comment:

    The most important thing President Obama has done, and will do, in my opinion, is appoint liberal members to our Supreme Court. It will be the Supreme Court who gives us equal marriage rights in the end. The coarse language used in this article only gives ammunition to our enemies and offends potential allies.

  • Name: TAM
    Date posted: 8/12/2009 10:11:00 PM
    Hometown: New York

    Comment:

    BO lost me at Rick Warren. That sort of pandering is never a good sign.

  • Name: Sofia
    Date posted: 8/12/2009 8:10:00 PM
    Hometown: Mexico City

    Comment:

    I think that nothing - not economic crisis, not health care reform or energy reform - nothing excuses delay in dealing, effectively and exhaustively - with basic civil and human rights. It really has to be NOW. The world will never stop going through upheavals, the United States won't ever be completely at peace and perfectly happy and a the exactly right moment to deal with all these issues - they must be dealt with as soon as possible, now, and the promises must be kept. It may seem idealistic, and it is, sure, but nothing was ever won by waiting. Obama and his administration have to be reminded every day that these issues are pivotal and of the utmost importance, and that the promises made on the campaing trail have to be acknowledged.

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