By Justin Snow on May 1, 2014 @JustinCSnow
Does President Obama agree with Vice President Biden that there would be “no downside” to signing an executive order prohibiting federal contractors from LGBT workplace discrimination?
That was the question posed to White House press secretary Jay Carney today after Biden appeared to contradict the president’s position on such an executive order during an interview published Wednesday by The Huffington Post.
“I don’t see any downside,” Biden told The Huffington Post when asked about an executive order that would prohibit federal contractors from discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. “The way to do this is to pass ENDA. That ends it everywhere.”
Carney responded to Biden’s remarks in typical White House fashion, building upon two years of non-answers on an issue that increasingly contradicts the administration’s leadership on LGBT issues and strategy for federal policy.
“I don’t have any updates on suggested or proposed executive orders,” Carney told reporters. “What I can tell you is we still call on Congress — the House — to follow the Senate’s lead and pass the Employment Non-Discrimination Act.”
Carney went on to reiterate the administration’s support for LGBT-rights and criticize those opposed to ENDA on Capitol Hill as standing on the wrong side of history.
“Those who oppose it, I hope at least their children, will regret the reasons they put forward for opposing it because they sound a lot like the reasons opponents argued against civil rights legislation in the past. They were wrong then and they’re wrong now,” Carney said. “I think this is an incredibly important issue. I think it is remarkable how much progress has been made and remarkable that there is still resistance to the progress that remains to be made. And that’s certainly the president’s view.”
Carney did not address whether Obama agrees with Biden’s assessment that there would be “no downside” to signing an executive order.
This isn’t the first time Biden has seemingly contradicted the president on an issue of LGBT rights. Most notably, Biden has been credited with pushing the president’s hand on endorsing marriage equality after he voiced his support for same-sex marriage during a May 6, 2012, appearance on NBC’s Meet the Press. Three days after Biden said he was “absolutely comfortable” with same-sex couples marrying, Obama endorsed marriage equality.
It remains to be seen if Biden’s perceived lack of opposition of an executive order will again force the White House to act, but it certainly adds yet another foil to the administration’s intransigence on an issue that has frustrated advocates for years.
After indicating as a candidate for president in 2008 that he would sign such an executive order, it was in April 2012 that White House senior adviser Valerie Jarrett told leaders from some of the nation’s largest LGBT-rights organizations that Obama would not take executive action. Since that meeting, the White House has sought to defend its decision by telling supporters and the press that Obama supports passage of comprehensive federal legislation — ENDA — that will protect all workers, rather than just employees of federal contractors. That argument hasn’t sat well with LGBT activists, who have been some of the president’s most passionate defenders. They too support ENDA, but argue signing an executive order is necessary and a tangible step forward the president could take now.
Moreover, at the beginning of this year Obama announced a shifting strategy to use his pen to take executive action when Congress won’t act. With that strategy applied to minimum wage and the gender income gap, while still pushing for federal legislation on both those fronts, the White House has found itself in a contradictory position on the executive order for LGBT federal contractors. Asked in February by Metro Weekly why sign an executive order raising the minimum wage for federal contractors if the strategy is comprehensive federal legislation, White House press secretary Jay Carney responded simply, “I take your point.”
Earlier this year, a total of 220 lawmakers — 168 members from the House of Representatives and 52 senators – urged Obama “to act now to prevent irrational, taxpayer-funded workplace discrimination against LGBT Americans” while they continue to work toward passage of ENDA in the House.
“An executive order on this topic would be very helpful and consequential to the employees who would be affected by it,” Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) told Metro Weekly when asked about Biden’s remarks. “And I believe that we can still keep the pressure on the House of Representatives to pass ENDA, even if the president were to do this. These safeguards, these protections are meaningful in peoples’ lives.”
Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), ENDA’s lead sponsor in the Senate, took to Twitter after Biden’s remarks, stating, “Joe Biden’s right, there’s no downside to ENDA executive order. In fact, there’s a huge upside — fairness and equality for #LGBT Americans.”
But even as Biden voiced no opposition to an executive order, he, much like the rest of the Obama administration, appeared to lack an understanding for the need for an executive order and ENDA. Just last month Carney said ENDA would make an executive order “redundant” and stated today that “executive orders aren’t necessarily completely overlapping with what would be achieved by legislation.”
“When Mr. Carney previously called the executive order ‘redundant,’ he showed a surprising lack of knowledge about the Obama administration’s own successful record enforcing the existing executive order banning racial and sex discrimination at federal contractors,” said Tico Almeida, president of Freedom to Work. “In order to have full equality under the law, LGBT Americans need both the statute and the executive order because they have distinct enforcement procedures, and more discrimination can be prevented when both policies work in tandem.”
Indeed, the pushed-for executive order is based on Executive Order 11246, which was first signed by President Lyndon B. Johnson on Sept. 24, 1965, prohibiting federal contractors from discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex and national origin. That executive order was signed a year after Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibiting discrimination on the same basis.
Almeida says the Labor Department has secured a number of victories under the existing executive order, which has been expanded by several presidents. “LGBT Americans deserve these same workplace protections that the Obama Labor Department has been enforcing for other hardworking Americans,” Almeida said. “There’s no good reason to leave only the LGBT community out of the workplace protections that have been applied by the Labor Department to everyone else.”
[Photo: Joe Biden (left) and Barack Obama. Credit: Official White House Photo by Pete Souza.]
By Will O'Bryan on November 3, 2024
In the nearly inexhaustible catalog of D.C.-based mission-driven organizations, AsylumWorks is a noble entry for assisting asylum seekers and other "newcomers" in the D.C. metro area and beyond.
Their LGBTQ component, PRISM (Pride Refugee & Immigrant Support Meet-up), grew out of similar work being done by a group at The DC LGBTQ+ Community Center, Center Global. And atop PRISM's Facebook page is a photo from the 2022 Capital Pride Parade. There are many beaming faces, including Ali Saleem's, front and center.
Front and center suits Saleem perfectly. He's not merely at home in the spotlight. Arguably, he was born for it, 45 years ago in Pakistan. There, Saleem reached the most dazzling heights of celebrity, through a journey that began in his mother's closet.
By André Hereford on October 21, 2024 @here4andre
READ THIS STORY IN THE MAGAZINE
The word of the week at the 2024 HIV Research for Prevention Conference, held last week in Lima, Peru, was "choice."
As in PrEP choice, a driving concern for the more than 1,300 scientists, advocates, community representatives, and policymakers who gathered at the fifth annual HIVR4P conference, organized by the International AIDS Society.
"This is the only global scientific conference focused exclusively on the rapidly evolving field of HIV prevention research," said Dr. Beatriz Grinsztejn, the infectious diseases researcher serving as IAS president, addressing the event's opening press conference.
By Will O'Bryan on November 10, 2024
READ THIS STORY IN THE MAGAZINE
With the sun shining and a high of 78 degrees, about 10 degrees above normal, Election Day 2024 in D.C. is curiously warm, though pleasant. A byproduct of climate change? It's hard to appreciate the weather, knowing it may herald planetary peril.
There is a similar pleasant-yet-apprehensive mood at Little Gay Pub at the corner of 11th and P Streets NW in the city's Logan Circle neighborhood. Artist Lisa Marie Thalhammer's stylized British phone-box mural cheerfully hugs the corner of the building. Vice President Kamala Harris's smiling visage is equally cheery on posters at the entrance, coupled with various Harris cutouts looking out of windows. Previous postings were vandalized, but everything is looking stellar as patrons arrive for a night of election results.
These are challenging times for news organizations. And yet it’s crucial we stay active and provide vital resources and information to both our local readers and the world. So won’t you please take a moment and consider supporting Metro Weekly with a membership? For as little as $5 a month, you can help ensure Metro Weekly magazine and MetroWeekly.com remain free, viable resources as we provide the best, most diverse, culturally-resonant LGBTQ coverage in both the D.C. region and around the world. Memberships come with exclusive perks and discounts, your own personal digital delivery of each week’s magazine (and an archive), access to our Member's Lounge when it launches this fall, and exclusive members-only items like Metro Weekly Membership Mugs and Tote Bags! Check out all our membership levels here and please join us today!
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