(Washington, DC) – In
response to President Barack Obama’s State of the Union
Address, Log Cabin Republicans, the nation’s oldest and
largest conservative LGBT organization, issued the following
statement:
“President Obama’s
address to the nation tonight provides a stark contrast to the
reality that all Americans – not just gays and
lesbians – are living,” comments Terry W. Hamilton.
“The increasingly dominant role of government in the daily
life of gays and lesbians under President Obama’s
leadership has done nothing but put our community in jeopardy
– from his support of the Estate Tax, instructing his
Administration to defend the failed ‘Don’t Ask,
Don’t Tell’ policy in court, to stifling small
business development across the nation, all Americans should
take heed to his overarching promises that are long on rhetoric
and short on action.”
Log Cabin Republicans national
spokesperson Charles T. Moran, comments: “President Obama
is more concerned about protecting the rights of terrorists than
he is about the rights of gay and lesbian Americans who are
putting their lives on the line every day fighting to preserve
peace and democracy in Iraq and Afghanistan, and who operate
small businesses that are the backbone of the American
economy.”
President Obama in his address
Wednesday night specifically advocated for a repeal of the
discriminatory ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’
policy, which he has reiterated on several occasions both as a
candidate and as the President. In an alarming contradiction to
his stated public policy position, President Obama has
instructed his Justice Department to fight the only lawsuit in
modern times challenging ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t
Tell,’ of which Log Cabin Republicans is the sole
plaintiff.
“Again, President Obama calls
on Congress to do one thing, yet he instructs his Administration
and his Justice Department to take the opposite action. Which
way is it, President Obama?” comments
Moran.
The case in question, Log Cabin Republicans vs. the
United States of America, is the first direct challenge to the
‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ law filed in the
wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in Lawrence v. Texas.
It is also the only contemporary legal challenge to this law to
succeed at the district court level. One of the injured parties
named in the case, Alexander Nicholson, is a former U.S. Army
Human Intelligence Collector who speaks multiple languages,
including Arabic, and who was fired because of the
‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ law just six
months after 9/11. Another injured party in the case, listed
simply as ‘John Doe,’ currently serves in the Armed
Forces and would face a discharge if his identity were
revealed.