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The Glass Is Half Full
The Glass Is Half Full

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The Glass Is Half Full
My friend Richard Socarides has assumed the valuable role of Half Empty, pressuring the president to be our "fierce advocate," as advertised. It's an important role to play. He deserves our thanks for playing it. But to the extent he and others inadvertently demoralize our community into not coming out to vote this November ... or not supporting the party's massive get-out-the-vote effort ... it will HURT -- not help -- our drive for equality.
We need to push AND support.
So let me play the role of Half Full.
Richard's most recent Wall Street Journal op-ed characterizes the president's efforts to repeal "don't ask, don't tell" as "lackluster"-- and many in our community would call that charitable. If you or I had been president, the feeling seems to be, we'd have gotten this thing done long ago. Like Harry Truman, we'd have just issued the order, told the generals to salute, and moved on.
But how many in our community realize that Truman actually waited more than three years to issue his order? Or that it did NOT immediately integrate the military -- it directed the military to establish a committee to recommend how best to do it? Or that the process was not finally completed -- the last all-black unit not finally disbanded -- until 1954, more than nine years after Truman was sworn in?
So (says Mr. Half Full), if our troops can begin serving openly by next spring -- which is still not a given, but definitely in sight -- Obama will have completed the process in less time than it took Truman to start it.
This is not to take anything away from Truman. And it is certainly not to deny one obvious difference: A majority of the electorate today favors repeal, whereas a majority opposed integrating the military. But there are other differences as well: Truman had served in the military himself, and as president, dropped two very, VERY big bombs. That won him the kind of creds with the military a President John McCain might have had (the same John McCain who threatens to filibuster repeal), but that Barack Obama does not. Second, Truman issued the order in peacetime, when the military was not stressed. But third and most important, Truman did not have to repeal a law. Congress had not segregated the military, so an executive order was enough. "Ddon't ask, don't tell" IS the law. Presidents can't just overturn laws. Or force 60 Senators to vote for cloture. (Continued on following page)
Yes, the president might have done an end run around Congress and the military with a stop-loss order. But end runs have costs too. Reasonable advocates can disagree as to whether alienating the Congress and military brass would have been worth the cost, and what practical implications that might have had for our brave LGBT troops.
But while it has taken time and maneuvering -- and we've still not crossed the finish line -- it looks as though the law will be repealed this year, and the ban lifted not long afterward. Finally.
No one is saying the process has been perfect. But those who think the secretary of Defense and chairman of the Joint Chiefs would have gone up to the Hill to give the testimony they did without this president's leadership -- or that we would have won critical votes like Robert Byrd's and Ben Nelson's in the Senate Armed Services Committee without White House pressure --are simply wrong.
Similarly, no one is saying the pace of change -- on this and everything else -- is not immensely frustrating. But if you and I are frustrated, imagine how frustrated the president must be. The Republicans cheered when his Olympic bid failed ... vowed to make health care his "Waterloo" ... even nixed the bipartisan deficit commission, once he accepted it, that they themselves proposed.
So Mr. Half Empty keeps up the pressure -- as we all should. A successful conclusion to the repeal process can't come soon enough. Passage of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act and repeal of the Defense of Marriage Act can't come soon enough.
But in downplaying what HAS been done -- more than any president in history has EVER done, and in just the first 18 months of his presidency -- and in failing to acknowledge that the administration's support for our community is deeply felt -- which it is -- leaders like Richard (and our bloggers) run the risk of depressing the support we need to keep Nancy Pelosi from having to hand her gavel to John Boehner. (And Barney Frank from having to hand his gavel to Spencer Bachus of Alabama.)
That's not an idle fear. It happened in 1994 -- we lost the Congress for 12 years. Without all hands on deck, it could happen in 2010, just 16 weeks from now. (Continued on following page)