advocate magazine covers-up the democratic label for anti-gay politician

The powerful anti-gay Democratic State Senator from New York, Carl Kruger, was outed this month by the New York Post for allegedly taking bribes that were used to partially pay for his gay lover’s water front mansion.  In its front page March 11 story, the Post outed the Democrat as a hypocrite because of his 2009 vote to deny equal marriage rights to gays despite having an alleged romantic relationship with a man.  The Post labeled the politician’s partisan affiliation prominently in the first sentence of the article.  The same day, New York Magazine used the label “Democratic” as the third word in its first sentence to describe Kruger in its’ breaking news story.  New York Magazine even finished their piece by admonishing, “if true, it serves as a helpful reminder that the phenomenon of hypocritical politicians who live gay lives in secret, but vote against gay issues in public, is not reserved for only one side of the aisle.”  But The Advocate magazine, the supposed promoter of gay rights and reason, only sits on the left side of the aisle.  It dropped Kruger’s political affiliation from its story’s headline and lead paragraph when it announced the influential Democrat’s troubles.  In fact, the editors of The Advocate only alluded to Kruger’s political affiliation in the last sentence of the last paragraph of their story by saying Kruger was “one of eight New York Democrats to vote against the state’s marriage equality bill, which failed to pass the senate.” 

Was it a mistake or was it deliberate? A look at the facts suggests it is part of The Advocate’s ongoing partisan bias – a bias permeating the gay media, but not always part of the left’s media playbook.  The Advocate’s cover-up and obvious strategic move is steeped in history.  Earlier this year on January 3, The Advocate writer Julie Bolcer wrote an article titled: “Iowa Republican Obsessed With Marriage Issue?”  Note the partisan affiliation announced in the title.  The lead sentence in Bolcer’s story also messaged the anti-gay candidate’s political relationship, “A friend and former campaign adviser to Iowa gubernatorial candidate Bob Vander Plaats says the Republican who led the recall effort against three state supreme court justices, is “obsessed with the gay-marriage issue.”” The word “Republican” is used consecutively throughout Bolcer’s piece and in gratuitous ways.

But it wasn’t the first or last time The Advocate tried its’ partisan tactic.  In November 2010, Bolcer also wrote an article titled: “Iowa Republican Predicts Removal of More Judges”.  Note the title announcement of the politician’s political affiliation again.  The lead sentence of Bolcer’s piece also once again messages the anti-gay politician’s political party connection, “Following a voter recall of three Iowa supreme court justices who voted for marriage equality, state senate Republican leader Paul McKinley said the four remaining justices would be at risk of losing their jobs unless lawmakers give Iowans a chance to vote on a constitutional amendment to outlaw same-sex marriages.”

And in October of 2010, Bolcer writes yet another article for The Advocate about an anti-gay candidate titled: “N.Y. Republican: Gays Are “Dysfunctional”.  The hopeful politician’s political attachment was also described in Bolcer’s first sentence, “Carl Paladino, the Republican candidate for governor in New York.”  It’s a pattern consistently repeated throughout The Advocate’s online archive.

The Advocate’s obvious double standard in describing politicians’ political affiliations is glaringly partisan.  When a Republican is anti-gay, the political relationship will be announced in the title of the article, messaged in the lead sentence and repeated throughout the piece.  But when a Democrat is anti-gay, the political membership will not be mentioned in the article’s title or even lead sentence.  In the case of Kruger, The Advocate only took a passing shot by referring to the politician’s colleagues’ political association.

Even New York Magazine, known for being a left-wing operation, describes Kruger as a Democrat.  So why would The Advocate cover it up?  Continuing to shill for the Democratic party after its’ disastrous two years of Washington control is foolish and naive.  And pretending that anti-gay elements exist in just the Republican party alone is one of the erroneous assumptions that led to Prop 8’s passage in California.  Readers deserve better from a publication calling itself their advocate.  As for the editors, for whom do they think they are advocating?

hillary’s advocate

The Advocate’s cover story by Kerry Eleveld on Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is riddled with inaccuracies, hype and spin.  Eleveld’s piece and The Advocate’s continuous partisan political coverage contributes to the erroneous and dangerous assumption that all Democrats are good and all Republicans are bad on LGBT issues.  Eleveld failed to quote one single dissenting opinion from the spin Clinton staffers spun her.  While there is no question that Clinton has built on the changes made by Secretary Condi Rice for LGBT staffers at State (and should be applauded for that progress), the premise that the Bush State Department team was hostile and the Clinton team has done all it can do is flat wrong.  A more nuanced and balanced piece would have given it greater credibility.   

Here are a few of the facts you didn’t get from Eleveld.  I feel compelled to correct the record:

- Clinton has the same stance on gay marriage as Rice and Dick Cheney.  Eleveld’s excuse-making for Clinton’s stance by saying “she wasn’t taking any political bait” or was trying not to cross her boss is ironic given that Bush Administration officials were not allowed the same courtesy or treatment for their differing views.

- Changes to passport regulations for transgendered people were designed and begun under Bush and Rice.  DAS Brenda Sprague says it but Eleveld gives Clinton the credit.  Eleveld’s use of the word “apparently” to refer to this fact is offensive to those of us who worked at State under Bush and made progress on LGBT issues.  Give credit where credit is due.

- Mark Bromley is a Democrat who worked for liberal Senator Russ Feingold.  His characterization of his conversation with an unnamed Bush Administration official three years ago is presented without evidence because it isn’t true.  Eleveld failed to check the facts on his assertions.

- Pat Kennedy is a friend of mine whom I have worked closely with for several years.  While I fought to make changes at State during the Bush years to extend certain rights and privileges for my partner, Kennedy was part of the team that stonewalled and ultimately denied my repeated demands and ignored my follow–up requests.  It’s also important to note that neither Bromley nor any other LGBT activist helped my cause at the time.

- Eleveld’s characterization of Clinton’s weak Ugandan response is laughable and defies logic.  Clinton’s State Department handled the Ugandan situation as Rice’s State Department handled most every LGBT issue that arose in Africa – through quiet diplomacy as not to offend another government.  To subscribe pure motives to Clinton’s hushed strategy but not to Rice’s is fantasy and beguiles decades of State Department practices.  Cheryl Mills may think back-channeling is something new but I can assure you it is not.

- Highlighting the fact that Clinton knew a staffer’s name carrying her bags for a week hardly seems remarkable or note worthy.  The story was gratuitous.

- Claiming that the highest ranking openly gay official under Clinton is a deputy assistant secretary level employee is embarrassing given the premise of the article and the excuse making Eleveld does for Clinton’s failed promise to appoint one person to her senior team to cover LGBT issues.  Rice’s State Department had higher ranking openly gay officials than this State Department has.  They were just never highlighted by The Advocate.

Over the last months, conservatives have complained to The Advocate for its inaccurate and glowing coverage of Obama Administration official Susan Rice, its lack of coverage of John Bolton’s support for DADT and gay marriage, and it’s whitewashing of Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid’s failed 2 years of dominance.  The Advocate has never responded to the questions raised. 

This past week, singer/songwriter Sophie B. Hawkins three times reached out to The Advocate to highlight the gay conservative group GOProud’s event in Washington, DC where Hawkins performed.  All phone calls and emails from Hawkins and her team were systematically and completely ignored.  This disregard for conservative activism by Advocate staffers has sadly been the norm and only further distorts the political problems LGBT people face.  It’s time The Advocate stop painting Democrats with a perfect brush and start highlighting the efforts of gay conservatives working to limit government’s involvement in LGBT people’s lives.  Haven’t the last 2 years of total Democratic domination in Washington proven that the recycled stories and tired headlines of how wonderful Democrats have been on LGBT issues are wrong?