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Dems to Revisit DADT in Congressional Hearing Wednesday

Democrats are convening the first congressional hearing on the military's ''don't ask, don't tell'' policy since its enactment 15 years ago. But they acknowledge there's no chance of repealing it this year.


Democrats are convening the first congressional hearing on the military's ''don't ask, don't tell'' policy since its enactment 15 years ago. But they acknowledge there's no chance of repealing it this year.

Indeed, their only hope of success in the near term, they say, is if Barack Obama is elected president.

''We need a new president in order to get this passed'' -- specifically, a President Obama, Rep. Ellen Tauscher, a California Democrat, told reporters Tuesday on a conference call convened by the Human Rights Campaign and the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network.

Obama wants to repeal ''don't ask, don't tell'' and will work with military leaders to get it done, his campaign website says. Republican opponent John McCain supports ''don't ask, don't tell.''

Tauscher's legislation to overturn the policy has 133 cosponsors. But key Democrats, including House Armed Services Committee chairman Ike Skelton of Missouri, support the status quo, and there are no plans to bring the bill to a vote this year.

Tauscher said she has no interest in a ''show vote'' before the political climate is right for repeal. "I'm not willing to take a House vote with no Senate companion bill," she said, adding that if the vote were taken today, "I actually believe that we could get to 218" -- the number of votes needed to pass the legislation in the House.

Instead, the hearing Wednesday in the Armed Services Committee's military personnel panel is meant to draw attention to the issue and to the growing public sentiment in favor of gay people serving openly in the military, Tauscher said.

In a Washington Post–ABC News poll over the weekend, 75% of respondents said openly gay people should be allowed to serve, up from 62% in early 2001, and 44% in 1993.

''We believe that this is a good first step to have this hearing, but we don't believe that this bill will come forward until we have a new president,'' Tauscher said.

Even if Obama wins, overturning ''don't ask, don't tell'' might not be his first order of business.

The policy was enacted shortly after Democrat Bill Clinton became president and sought to make good on a campaign pledge to open the military to gays. After a divisive debate that gave fuel to social conservatives and little political benefit to Clinton, ''don't ask, don't tell'' was the result. It was intended to keep the military from asking recruits their sexual orientation and to prevent service members from being openly gay.

If elected, Obama's key task would have to be trying to end the Iraq war while maintaining military and public support. Despite the seemingly strong promise on his campaign site, in a recent interview with The Advocate, Obama stopped short of promising to lead the way for change, saying only that he can ''reasonably see'' a repeal of the current ban if elected president.

Wednesday's hearing, convened by subcommittee chair Rep. Susan Davis, a Democrat from California, includes three former military officials who want to overturn ''don't ask, don't tell'' and two witnesses who oppose gays serving in the military.

No current Pentagon official or military officer was invited to testify, Tauscher said, because ''it's a waste of time.... They always have the same answer,'' which is that they'll follow the law. (Eric Werner, AP with additional reporting by The Advocate)

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Reader Comments
  • Name: Peter
    Date posted: 7/23/2008 10:40:00 AM
    Hometown: St. Paul, MN

    Comment:

    People don't have the same sense about gay issues as they did for other civil rights issues. We can get almost any job (outside the military) that we want, we can vote, and choose our schools as we see fit. Marriage and serving in the military largely don't make sense to the general pop. The prejudice that we face is more subtle and therefore harder to combat. If we go over the top of the trench singing "we shall over come" the straights will shoot us where we stand and leave us for dead. Better to wait for the right opportunity than waste the political collateral we have built up. In the mean time-serve in the military and get married. You don't need a state to decide if your relationship is worthy of turning it into a marriage. Act rather than wine.

  • Name: Scot Skidmore
    Date posted: 7/23/2008 10:22:00 AM
    Hometown: Lexington, KY

    Comment:

    Chris, I totally understand the need to be cautious, however I do not agree with being overly pragmatic either. At what point do we say to ourselves (as a community) that we deserve equal and fair laws and those that don't agree can be damned. As the walls of intolerance are being torn down we should move to expedite rather than hold back fairness. If someone in Kansas doesn't like that Mass is about to repeal it's unfair 1913 law bars us from getting married in Mass, all the better. Again, I understand being cautious but we shouldn't be overly cautious or we may miss a golden opportunity to move forward.

  • Name: Xavier Chapa
    Date posted: 7/23/2008 5:12:00 AM
    Hometown: Hamburg, Germany

    Comment:

    It's nice to dream isn't it?

  • Name: Chris Sullivan
    Date posted: 7/22/2008 4:38:00 PM
    Hometown: Chicago, IL

    Comment:

    Finally, an intelligent and pragmatic response to a major GLBT issue. No, the climate is NOT right now to force this issue. Lets get through the general election and then see where we are. We've waited this long, we can wait just a bit longer. We need to stop shooting ourselves in the foot by forcing things in a poorly thought our and impulsive fashion. Massachsetts opening up gay marriage to out of state people is actually going to do more harm than good RIGHT NOW - because people will go and get married there, return to their home states and attempt to sue to have their marriage recognized. All this will result in is a lot of negative media coverage in those states and when that coverage makes national headlines - people in CA who may have been indifferent on the issue may just decide to go out and vote to make sure the Proposition passes (and probably vote Republican in the process). We have to start addressing the big issues less impulsively and far more pragmaticaly.



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