Clark Garners Gay Support
If retired Gen. Wesley Clark gets into the White House, the gay
community will have significant ties to his administration.
The late-starting Clark has few of "the big players" among
politically active gays, according to one gay Democratic mover-and-shaker.
However, Clark’s campaign quickly attracted significant gay support.
Elise Harris, formerly an editor of Out magazine who has taught at
Harvey Milk High School in New York City, is helping spearhead the
GLBT-for-Clark effort. She says the group has not yet begun to line up
endorsements, because the Clark campaign is still "very
embryonic." Nevertheless, she notes there is considerable interest in
his candidacy within the gay community’s grassroots, and that her group
signed up between 250 and 275 volunteers within the first two weeks to
help with Clark’s campaign.
Tom Goodwin, a past co-chair of the bipartisan Gay and Lesbian Victory
Fund, is on Clark’s Washington finance committee. "In my calling
people," says Goodwin, "I’ve been really pleased with the
response from gays and lesbians."
Other prominent gay leaders supporting Clark include Steve Gorman, a
long-time gay Democratic activist; Charles Butler, an attorney with the
prestigious Washington law firm of Covington and Burling; and Scott Nadler,
a Defense Department official in the Clinton administration. In
Massachusetts, Steve Driscoll, a member of Stonewall Democrats’ national
board, was part of the Draft Clark organization and is expected to help
with the campaign’s gay component.
Clark’s popularity with a number of gay Democrats in part stems from
the belief that, as a former military man, he will have the credibility to
attack the Bush administration’s policies in Iraq and thus a greater
potential to defeat the president. Goodwin says gays and lesbians he’s
called are "really excited about Clark because he’s eminently
electable." Loyal Democrat Goodwin adds, "I want to win."
Another factor of particular interest to Clark’s gay partisans is
that his background should resonate positively with Middle America, thus
making it easier for him to implement gay-friendly policies. Although
Clark has no significant record on the plethora of issues of concern to
many in the gay community—because he has been in the military and not
held political office—he has expressed himself positively on a number of
issues. On gays in the military—the Clinton administration’s hot
potato—Clark said on Meet the Press, "We’ve got a lot of gay
people in the armed forces, always have had, always will have.
And I think that...we should welcome people that want to serve."
He also supports civil unions and has noted his approval of the Supreme
Court’s antisodomy ruling in Lawrence vs. Texas. All of these views are
noted on his campaign Web site on the GLBT link.
One Democratic fundraiser, a supporter of Howard Dean, voiced the
suspicion—based on some of Clark’s past public statements—that Clark
is less hostile to the Bush administration’s defense policies than his
current stands would suggest. Nevertheless, this source, who declined to
be identified, offered the opinion that "the more gay people are
involved in presidential campaigns, the better."
Hastings Wyman publishes Southern Political Report, a nonpartisan
biweekly political newsletter. He can be reached care of this publication
or at