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By Scott Wiener
Chair of the San Francisco Democratic Party
My first political memory, at 10 years old, is Ronald Reagan's
election in 1980. I remember my parents being depressed about
the Democrats losing control of the federal government. Although
I knew that the 1980 election was a disaster for the country,
I really didn't know why. So, I asked my father "Why
are we Democrats?" and my father responded with words
that I'll never forget: "Because we believe in treating
people fairly and with dignity."
Then and now, this is why I am a Democrat and why LGBT
people should be Democrats. While the party is certainly
imperfect, it is by far the most effective vehicle to advance
a progressive agenda that prioritizes individual dignity,
responsible government, and economic fairness. And it is
the only vehicle for the LGBT community to achieve equality.
It is critical that the LGBT community, and other progressive-minded
people participate in the party to ensure that it stays true
to its roots.
Since the 1930s, essentially all progressive legislative
reforms in this country have come from the Democratic Party.
Back in the 1930s, the Democrats gave us Social Security,
a minimum wage, regulation of the financial industry, occupational
and food safety laws, labor union protections, and many other
progressive measures that changed the way Americans live.
Since then, the Democrats have given us health care for seniors
(Medicare), health care for poor people (Medicaid), the Endangered
Species Act, the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act, the
Earned Income Tax Credit, liberal Supreme Court justices,
and many other progressive advances.
Of course, Washington has been a bleak place for left-of-center
politics over the past dozen years, so the Democratic Party
has achieved significant goals on the state level. For example,
in California, a progressive Democratic majority in the Legislature
has passed significant labor/worker protections, affordable
prescription-drug legislation, mandatory health insurance
for employees (which the voters then repealed after a misleading
campaign by right-wing interests), an increase in the minimum
wage, limits on greenhouse gases, and universal health care
(which our Republican governor likely will veto). Democratic
state legislatures across the country are considering and
passing legislation to expand access to health care, including
expanded health coverage for children and laws requiring
large corporations like Wal-Mart to provide adequate health
insurance.
The Democratic Party also has managed to kill legislation
that would have severely undermined our ideals, including
Republican efforts to privatize Social Security, to ban abortion,
to ban marriage equality, to drill in the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge, and to repeal the estate tax, which is probably
the most progressive tax on the books.
The Democratic Party, moreover, has delivered every single
legislative victory for the LGBT community. On the federal
level, the Democrats killed the Federal Marriage Amendment
and came close to passing the Employment Non-Discrimination
Act and hate crimes legislation. In California, the Democrats
have passed a marriage-equality bill, created a strong domestic
partnership registry, passed transgender job and health-care
protections, enacted protections for LGBT students, etc.,
etc. These bills have passed almost exclusively with Democratic
votes.
I do not mean to suggest that the Democratic Party is perfect.
At the federal level, the party has been far too timid on
our issues. It was a disgrace when so many Democrats voted
in favor of the Defense of Marriage Act and a disgrace that
a Democratic president signed the bill into law. Many of
us were unhappy when a number of Democrats voted for the
bankruptcy "reform" bill last year, the most anti-consumer
piece of legislation in recent memory. And we have all been
disappointed with Democrats' response to the war in Iraq
and the support of many Democrats for awful legislation like
the Patriot Act. The Democratic Party, nationally, must be
bolder and more aggressive in pursuing a progressive agenda.
Yet, despite the Democrats' missteps, it is hard to dispute
that for the past 75 years, the Democratic Party, at the
state and federal levels, has provided just about every progressive
legislative victory that we have obtained. I am confident
that the party will provide more of these victories in the
future.
Our community must participate and have a seat at the table.
We need to be there to ensure that the party is true to its
roots and that it is set straight when it strays from those
roots. That is why I am a Democrat, and that is why you should
be one as well.
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