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Queer Voices Editor-at-Large, The Huffington Post
09-14-2016
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There was some surprise when Donald Trump’s running mate Mike Pence refused to call David Duke “deplorable” on CNN, viewed as a gaffe he would soon correct. Pence instead doubled down
yesterday in a press conference on Capitol Hill, continuing his line
that he wouldn’t engage in “name-calling,” even about a former KKK grand
wizard.
Even Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway, on CNN,
said the Indiana governor should’ve called Duke deplorable, though she
made an embarrassing, telling mistake and substituted Donald Trump’s
name for David Duke: “He should — sure. So that — so that he doesn’t
get headlines saying Mike Pence will not say Donald Trump is
deplorable.”
Dana Milbank at The Washington Post, in a column
today headlined, “The Trumpifciation of Mike Pence,” notes not only
Pence’s refusal to call Duke deplorable, but several other positions —
such as Trump’s romancing of Russia’s authoritarian and certainly
bigoted leader Vladimir Putin — about which Pence now agrees with Trump:
I’ve always thought him an honorable and amiable man, and I accept his friends’ assessment that he took the job in hopes of changing Trump. Instead, it seems that Trump has changed him.
But in fact,
Mike Pence hasn’t changed one bit. He’s always been a bigot, backing
positions and ideas that displayed animus for classes of people. It may
sometimes have been different groups than those Trump is most vocal
about right now, but that doesn’t change the definition of bigotry.
In 1996, Pence wrote a column (dug up
by Ari Rabin-Havt) for the Indiana Policy Review, the magazine of a
think tank (by the same name) Pence once ran. In it, Pence lamented the
Republican Party’s ‘96 convention and its softer approach, by
comparison, toward minorities.
Pence pined for the days of the infamous ‘92 “culture war” convention, where virulent homophobe and nativist Pat Buchanan delivered a fire and brimstone jeremiad in prime time that sent a jolt through the electorate and, some believe, helped sink George H.W. Bush’s re-election that year.
Pence pined for the days of the infamous ‘92 “culture war” convention, where virulent homophobe and nativist Pat Buchanan delivered a fire and brimstone jeremiad in prime time that sent a jolt through the electorate and, some believe, helped sink George H.W. Bush’s re-election that year.
Pence lamented
that the ‘96 convention supposedly spotlighted “an endless line of
pro-choice women, AIDS activists and proponents of affirmative action” —
not-so-subtle code for feminists, gays and blacks — which was textbook
hyperbole, since there was hardly an “endless line” of such people. Mary
Fischer, for example, a Republican woman with AIDS, was the first and
only AIDS activist to speak that year at the Republican National
Convention. But that was clearly one too many for Pence.
Pence also
complained in the column about what he called the “systemic exclusion
from prime time of social conservatives,” noting that “whether the
elites in the media or the GOP like it or not, traditional pro-family
conservatives make up the bedrock of the modern Republican electoral
success.”
In 2000, as a member of Congress, Pence proposed
cutting off funds for HIV prevention, and instead diverting the money
to “ex-gay” therapy programs. This, he said, would ensure that “federal
dollars were no longer being given to organizations that celebrate and
encourage the types of behaviors that facilitate the spreading of the
HIV virus.” Instead, “resources should be directed toward those
institutions which provide assistance to those seeking to change their
sexual behavior.”
He also said,
“Congress should oppose any effort to recognize homosexuals as a
‘discreet and insular minority’ entitled to the protection of
anti-discrimination laws similar to those extended to women and ethnic
minorities.”
In 2006, Pence said in a speech that
marriage equality would lead to “societal collapse,” and called
homosexuality “a choice.” Stopping gays from marrying wasn’t
discrimination, he said, but was rather the enforcement of “God’s idea.”
These are just a
few among a long list of positions and actions Pence has taken against
LGBT people, minorities and women. Most remembered in recent times has
been Pence’s signing of an extreme anti-LGBT “religious liberty” bill in
Indiana last year, which was met with an intense backlash from business
leaders across Indiana and around the country. It became a high-profile
story and Pence made a fool of himself, standing his ground on the law on national television, though unable to defend against its bigotry.
Faced with
boycotts by companies threatening to move out of Indiana, Pence and
GOPers in the legislature were forced to soften the law somewhat. Since
being named Trump’s running mate, Pence has tried to put that episode
behind him. And the Trump campaign has, outrageously, tried to cast the
mild-mannered governor as the campaign’s face of gentility — and,
compared to Trump, it’s hard for anyone not to come off that way.
But sending
Pence out to attack Hillary Clinton for her “deplorables” comment was a
misstep because underneath, and in the past, Pence is the very kind of
bigot to which Hillary Clinton was pointing in taking on the “racist,
sexist, homophobic” and other elements among Trump’s supporters. And
that’s why it’s not shocking that he wouldn’t call David Duke
deplorable.
Read more articles from the Huffington, here.
Follow Michelangelo Signorile on Twitter:
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Read more articles from the Huffington, here.
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