Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Prop 8 trial!

Hey everyone!  

So if you are a political junkie like me, you probably have heard that the US district court of Northern California is hearing a case that is asking the court to invalidate Proposition 8 and legalize same sex marriage effectively.  The trial has been extremely high profile in the legal and academic circles across the country, mainly because of the composition of the legal team. Ted Olsen and David Boies are the leading lawyers fighting Proposition 8 in the court.  Olsen and Boies were on opposing sides in the infamous 2000 Bush v. Gore recount.  Olsen, was a former Solicitor General under George H.W. Bush.  Either way, the ruling from this court is expected to go to the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals and eventually the US Supreme Court.  

Check out this video clip that was in the local Fresno ABC news: http://abclocal.go.com/kfsn/story?section=news/politics&id=7500614


Monday, June 14, 2010

National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Power Summit and the Mary Salas Campaign in San Diego!

Above is EQCA Team San Diego!
Me with EQCA organizers Jennie from Sacramento and Toni from San Diego
More EQCA interns and organizers!

What a week!  As I said in my last post, I was headed to the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force’s Annual Power Summit in Los Angeles.  The summit was truly amazing and challenged all who attended to become better activists and leaders in the LGBT equality movement.  The first workshop that I attended trained us to have strong conversations to voters in order to explore their hesitation to support marriage for same sex couples.  What I have learned is that the most powerful tool in helping influence a person’s opinion of marriage equality is to tell your own personal story as to why this human rights issue is important to you.  So I guess I will share to you how I became to work on this civil rights struggle.  As a gay man I want my parents to be able to enjoy being able to see me marry the person that I love.  I’m fighting for this no just for my rights, but for my parents’ rights as well.  It is my hope that my story is something that many parents can identify with and I hope it makes them think how they would feel if their child was not allowed to marry the person they love. 

 

After this training, we had the opportunity to put what we used to work.  We canvassed the neighborhood of Maywood, which is in East Los Angeles.  We canvassed for 3 hours and I had the opportunity to talk to 6 voters, all who supported marriage equality.  While this may seem really nice, I was a little disappointed that I was not able to talk to any Yes on 8 supporter and try to move them from opposed to supportive. Overall the canvass was really inspirational and gave me hope that the work that we are doing is really changing the hearts and minds of whole communities who have in the past been unsupportive of marriage equality.  The other part of the power summit focused on fundraising and how to make strong asks of people that we know and need to help invest financially in our campaign to win marriage back.  We have grown up in a culture that frowns upon asking for help and money.  However, once we are able to get over this initial fear of asking for help we tend to have a strong response from those around us.   Another tool that I learned is to personalize the money ask as much as possible by making the donation amounts significant.  For example, the first ask that I make is for $173 which symbolizes the number of days that marriage equality was legal in the Golden state, then I use $80 which is how old Harvey Milk would have been if he was still alive today, I then move on to $51 for the percent that we need to win marriage back in 2012.  This method has proven to be extremely successful for me and is something that I will definitely continue with future fundraising and money asks that I do for this campaign and more.

 

I also had the opportunity to meet a lot of amazing and inspiring people who not just work Equality California but for other LGBT rights groups across California including The Gay and Lesbian Task Force, the Courage Campaign, and Marriage Equality USA.  In total there were over 250 people who attended the conference.  I had the opportunity to meet an amazing Stanford grad named Laura who co-founded an organization based out of San Francisco called the National Marriage Boycott.  The goal of the organization is to rally straight allies together to boycott the institution of marriage until all people can get married no matter who they are.  To learn more about her organization visit marriageboycott.ning.com. 

 

Following the Power Summit, Equality California sent me to work in San Diego leading up to the primary to support Democrat Mary Salas who was in a tough race for the State Senate.  A fierce supporter of the LGBT community, Salas was facing an anti-gay politician for the Democratic nomination for the Senate.  It was a long day checking the polls in the various precincts and knocking on doors reminding people to vote.  After the close of the polls, we all headed to a small Italian restaurant in Chula Vista, CA (just 7 miles from the American-Mexican border).  The feeling in the room was tense as we awaited the election returns.  Unfortunately, the vote was going to be too close to call and we would not learn the results until the next morning.  I then stayed overnight at my friend JP’s house in San Diego and the next morning when we woke up we learned that Mary Salas had won the election!  It felt amazing to see all of Equality California’s hard work pay off. 

 

After working the election and attending the Power Summit, I was exhausted and needed a few days to relax and spend time with my family and friends in LA.  I hung out in Hollywood and some of my favorite places on the West side and in Santa Monica.

I have learned so much and am realizing how lucky I am to have been given this opportunity to work for California’s largest LGBT rights organizations.  I look forward to the rest of the summer and everything else that I will learn!   

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Harvey Milk Day!

It has been quite the week at my internship with Equality California.  Perhaps most notably, on May 22nd, California celebrated the first ever Harvey Milk Day.  Last year Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger declared Harvey’s birthday, May 22nd, to be a state holiday to commemorate the life and accomplishments of the slain gay rights leader.  For those of you who have not seen the movie “Milk” or simply do not know about Harvey Milk, he was the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in the United States as Supervisor from San Francisco.  Known for his commitment to safe and productive neighborhoods in San Francisco, Milk successfully championed one of the first LGBT non-discrimination ordinances in the country in San Francisco.  He also was successful at helping defeat Proposition 6 or the Briggs Initiative, which threatened to fire any out LGBT teachers in California public schools.  Harvey Milk stressed the importance of being able to humanize the issue of LGBT rights in order to win the support of public opinion. 

For our Harvey Milk Day celebrations, Equality California: Fresno had 23 coalition partners including Planned Parenthood, the Trevor Project, and Marriage Equality USA.  Approximately 100 people came out to the event and participated in one of our numerous activities which included a canvass in a local Fresno neighborhood that voted “Yes on 8”.  I was a pod leader, which meant that I was responsible for helping 3-5 other people be able to go out and talk about why marriage equality for same sex couples is important to them.  At first this can be very intimidating if you are new to canvassing but overall the experience tends to be a very positive one.  What I found to be very unique about canvassing for Equality California is that the way that we form conversations with voters is very different than a typical voter ID canvass that I have experienced with other organizations before.  We keep an open-minded approach to every door that we knock on by first asking “Do you remember how you voted on Proposition 8?”  If they say that they voted Yes on 8, then we try to ask what factors led them to support Proposition 8.  For the most part, we hear a lot about tradition and religious factors that have contributed to their opposition to same sex marriage.  The Saturday of the canvass was a gorgeous day so a lot of people were not home, however I knocked on 40+ doors and I talked to about a dozen voters.  Approximately half voted for Prop 8 and half opposed it.  I had one really amazing experience in which a family said they voted “Yes on 8” to only regret it later.  The woman that I talked to said, “I don’t know why I did it, it just didn’t seem right after I voted”.  It is stories like this that give me hope that we will win marriage back at the polls. 

On Thursday, I am headed to Los Angeles for an Equality California Field training in which I will learn how to be a more effective activist in the LGBT community.  I am really excited to meet people from all over California who feel just as passionate about LGBT equality as I do during the conference.  That’s about all for now, oh and until I get the pictures up from Harvey Milk Day, check out this Youtube video via Equality California: 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pvfexvihri8&feature=player_embedded