EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Outed!: Documentary Purports to Rip GOP's Closet Doors
SAN FRANCISCO -- California GOP Rep. David Dreier and a number of other politicians are the unwilling stars of a controversial new documentary with an explosive premise - it's time to blow open the closet door on prominent politicians who have hidden their homosexuality while actively working against gay causes.
http://www.outragethemovie.com/ The film "Outrage," which opens today at the Embarcadero Center Cinema in San Francisco, presents interviews and documentation charging that a number of prominent legislators - including Dreier, the U.S. representative from San Dimas (Los Angeles County), GOPFlorida Gov. Charlie Crist and former Democratic New York Mayor Ed Koch - have remained closeted while publicly opposing legislation on issues such as same-sex marriage, HIV/AIDS funding, and gays in the military.
Kirby Dick, the film's director, told The Chronicle on Thursday that "it's not only the right thing to do, it's the responsibility of journalists and filmmakers to report on hypocrisy wherever they see it.
"And just because it involves gay sexuality does not mean it should be off-limits."
The passage of Prop. 8 - the anti-same-sex-marriage initiative approved by voters in November, he said, has also fueled "a new urgency ... a wake-up call" on gay civil rights issues.
None of the lawmakers named in the film has publicly responded to the film's charges. But Dreir has in the past strongly dismissed such accusations as smear tactics.
Although the film notes Dreier has had just a 17 percent positive record on gay civil rights issues, the director says that even in the gay community, "there's a great deal of respect for him as a legislator."
Still, the purported outings that take center stage in "Outrage" have sparked a firestorm of controversy about the fairness and appropriateness of the tactic - and whether it signals a willingness of increasingly militant activists to make private lives fair game for political strategy.
"I don't see it as outing, I see it as equalizing," said Geoff Kors of Equality California, a gay civil rights organization that unveiled two new ads and a statewide grassroots mobilization campaign to support marriage equality this week. "When a member of Congress goes on vacation and is on the beach holding hands with his partner, they're out in public.
"And if they want to get married, we'd love them to be a part of our campaign," he said.
Terry Hamilton, chairman of the board of California's Log Cabin Republicans - the gay GOP group - said Thursday that his organization "recognizes the individual and very personal decision to come out - and does not support third-party outing."
Jo Kenney, a lesbian activist who heads Kenney Consulting, a San Jose organizational development business, also cautions that sensitivity is needed regarding the fear of outing that still exists among many in the gay community.
"Not too long ago, you could go to jail for congregating in a bar, and for some people it's still very real," she said. "I'm not going to condemn those people," she said, "unless they use their power as a public official to hurt their own community."
But Republican officials - noting that the film's targets are limited mostly to Republican politicians - question whether "Outrage" is merely a veiled partisan effort.
"When a (movie) like this only highlights Republicans, it causes you to immediately question the motives of the people putting it out," said Jon Fleischman, the conservative vice chairman of the state GOP and publisher of the Flashreport.com, a California Republican Web site.
"If people have made lifestyle decisions they've kept private, then the makers of this video are showing the utmost contempt for the people who have made the sacrifice of being in public office," he said. "This flies in the face of an American tradition - that is, that people's personal lives are supposed to be just that."
Fleischman noted that Dreier - who has headed the powerful House Rules Committee - was targeted in his last re-election campaign by a Hollywood-based PAC that sent tens of thousands of mailers to GOP primary voters "accusing Dreier of being gay."
Many Republicans considered that effort to be offensive and over the top, he said.
"I don't know about David Dreier's personal life, and I don't want to know," Fleischman said. "If he isn't breaking the law, it shouldn't be in the debate. ... This is not the 1920s, and I don't think being gay means you can't be elected and retained in public office."
Even some Democrats agree that "Outrage" may appear to the general public to be spiteful, not helpful to their cause.
"We will win the same-sex-marriage issue - and other issues that deal with civil rights for gays and lesbians - not by pointing out Republicans who may be gay and may be hypocrites, but by talking about the issues themselves and winning people over," said Democratic strategist Garry South.
"We Democrats constantly criticize right-wing, moralistic Republicans for trying to legislate what goes on in the bedroom," South said. "You can't say (sexual orientation) doesn't matter with Democrats but it matters with Republicans."
State Sen. Mark Leno, D-San Francisco, one of four openly gay California legislators, said he doesn't personally participate in outing, but added that it's no secret why Republicans have been outed in "Outrage."
"The Republican Party has historically and consistently fought every and any advances to LGBT civil rights," said Leno, who has sponsored legislation twice to make same-sex marriage legal in California, only to see it vetoed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.
"All my Republican colleagues in Sacramento - every one - voted against a domestic partner registry ... against giving same-sex couples hospital visitation rights, against adding sexual orientation to the Fair Employment Housing Act," said Leno, who is sponsoring a law to establish Harvey Milk Day in California to recognize the slain gay civil rights leader.
"They have, without exception, been on the wrong side of history regarding our civil rights."
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...

10 Comments so far
Show AllAppropriately named director.
If it had been the case that a few fervent segregationist Dixiecrats were actually of mixed race, and were keeping their African-American heritage secret, would it be wrong and immoral to "out" them and expose the hypocrisy underpinning their bigoted and oppressive public stance?
· Yr Obd't Servant
Outing has been, and will continue to be a fair and justified strategy in the fight against divisive, homophobic policies that spring from internalized homophobia. Internalized fear of ones own sexuality is dangerous enough, even when one's negative actions only affect one person (though this rarely is the case) - but in the case of political figures whose decision-making power affects the lives of tens of thousands or more, outing is the best way to help them see how their actions are arising out of their own inability to accept who they are. It's always a first step towards helping them to accept themselves. I think it's time we start busting the doors open on closets in Hollywood as well.
There people are well aware of who they are. My question is, how was Cheney left out?
What about condi rice?
"The only means of strengthening one's intellect is to make up one's mind about nothing, to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts." - John Keats
My guess is that she is incapable of loving anyone. But I could be wrong. People are complicated.
Joe
"If people have made lifestyle decisions they've kept private, then the makers of this video are showing the utmost contempt for the people who have made the sacrifice of being in public office," he said. "This flies in the face of an American tradition - that is, that people's personal lives are supposed to be just that."
I'm really tired of hearing the BS about sacrificing to be in public office; as if no one else on the planet sacrifices to earn a living. These people are pathetic with their repetative BS about sacrifice. As history will confirm, most public officials over the last 30 years haven't been sacrificing for "We the People".
Secondly, if peoples' personal lives are supposed to be just that, how the hell did Bill Clinton get into so much trouble?
Wasn't it some Jack-Ass Republican who said the Democrats should "stop whining"?
Outing is fair game if elected officials &/or their aides cast hypocritical votes and enact policies counter to their private lives.
ditch the tacky overwrought score.
show us their cox.
So more repubes get outed... Whoop-di-doo...
The news cycle will show the press conference where the rep either claims it as slander or a misunderstanding while his faithful wife pretends to be supportive... Then everyone will forget about it once the next sex scandal breaks...
I could care less if they are gay, closeted or open, since so many straight lawmakers are voting against gay rights and cheating on their spouses as well...
We need people to focus on more important issues, like outing the pedaphiles in congress, executive, and judicial branches, military, churches, and corporate America...
Whatever happened to Hastert & Foley... Since the boy was sixteen, the legal age in DC for consentual sex, it was treated as a "gay" issue instead of a child molester issue...
Whatever happened to the "BoysTown" scandal in Omaha Nebraska where politicians were raping the foster kids, one of whom grew up to become a male prostitute and WH press corps, Jeff Gannon, who had overnites at the whitehouse during "W"s reign...
Or the "limosine service" that would bring small children for late night parties at the white house under Poppy Bush's era...
Or the sex tourism junkets of Limbaugh to the DR...? And US congressmen and businessmen being provided with child prostitutes when visiting SEAsian countries...?
Or the tens of thousands of children who end up homeless in the streets of the US each year due to poverty and turn to turning tricks to survive...?
Or the tens of thousands of kids who get abducted in the US each year...?
This is a much bigger issue than hypocritical gay republicans...