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Mike Huckabee Calls Children Of Gay Parents "Little Guinea Pigs" In His 2011 Book

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“Essentially, these are experiments to see how well children will fare in such same-sex households.”

PAUL J. RICHARDS / Getty Images

Republican presidential candidate and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee called the children of gay parents "little guinea pigs" in his 2011 book, A Simple Government.

Huckabee used the phrase in his chapter on gay parents titled, "Gay Parenthood: A Social Experiment."

"Still, I believe that we're in denial about potential problems as we see more and more homosexual couples raising families," writes Huckabee.

"Essentially, these are experiments to see how well children will fare in such same-sex households. It will be years before we know whether or not our little guinea pigs turn out to be good at marriage and parenthood."

Here's the full section:

I have often been criticized for my outspoken views on gay marriage and homosexuality, so let me be clear. I have no doubt at all that homosexual men and women love their children deeply. Just as deeply as heterosexuals love theirs. But love alone cannot always provide what children need. If that sounds harsh, bear with me for a moment. My main concern here is that the children, most of whom are heterosexual, will not, and really cannot, get critical early-life lessons in how a heterosexual family functions successfully. In general, men and women bring different outlooks and temperaments to the task of parenting. Those male/female dynamics that make themselves evident in parenting—including even the conflicts and inconsistencies that are likely to arise—teach a child about how men and women relate to each other. In the home with two gay parents, where is that learning going to come from? It's already challenging enough to grow up, even when the parents are more conventional role models. Of course, I'm certainly not saying that all heterosexual parents provide, or are even able to provide, a good example to their children. I know that very well from years of conversations in my pastoral study, if not from just walking through a mall. Still, I believe that we're in denial about potential problems as we see more and more homosexual couples raising families. Essentially, these are experiments to see how well children will fare in such same-sex households. It will be years before we know whether or not our little guinea pigs turn out to be good at marriage and parenthood.


Sen. Mark Kirk On Iran Deal: Obama "Wants To Get Nukes To Iran," Predicts Nuclear War In Middle East

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“…tens of thousands of people in the Middle East are gonna lose their lives because of this decision by Barack Hussein Obama.”

Mark Wilson / Getty Images

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Senator Mark Kirk, a Republican from Illinois, says the nuclear agreement with Iran "condemns the next generation to cleaning up a nuclear war in the Persian Gulf."

Kirk, who has consistently spoken out against the deal with Iran, told WRKO's Financial Exchange radio program on Tuesday that he believes "tens of thousands of people in the Middle East are gonna lose their lives because of this decision by Barack Hussein Obama."

"This agreement condemns the next generation to cleaning up a nuclear war in the Persian Gulf," Kirk said. "It condemns our Israel allies to further conflict with Iran."

Kirk added that he thought the agreement will yield "more nukes, and more terrorists, and more irresponsibility by the Iranians," saying he thought Iran will now increase their influence in Iraq and Yemen.

"This is the greatest appeasement since Chamberlain gave Czechoslovakia to Hitler," Kirk continued, saying he believed Obama only went through with the deal because he has a poor understanding of history and did not realize appeasement made war more likely. Kirk said he thought the deal meant that Israel would now have to take "military action against Iran."

Kirk added that he believed the president would make this a "viciously partisan issue," making it hard to get the votes to stop the deal from going forward.

"The president will make this a viciously partisan issue, leading most Democrats to standing with the Iranians and hopefully losing the next election on this point," Kirk said. "He will ask the Democrats all to stand with Iran and make sure that we can't get two-thirds majorities in the House and Senate."

Asked if any Democrats disagreed with the president, Kirk pointed to New York Sen. Chuck Schumer and New Jersey Democrat Bob Menendez, who he believed "has just been indicted maybe on the crime of being against the Iran deal."

Kirk said he believed the only reason the president supported legislation from Republican Sen. Bob Corker, the chair of the Foreign Relations Committee, that allowed Congress to review the deal was because he "wants...to get nukes to Iran."

"Under the Bob Corker legislation that recently passed Congress can do a resolution of disapproval and the president can veto it. The only reason that the president supported Corker legislation is because it allows him to get what he wants on Iran which is to get nukes to Iran."

Kirk added he thought deal was "unremitted garbage." He said that he thought Iran would have nuclear weapons within "a couple years" and that the United States had "sold out" Israel, who will now be preparing for military action against Iran.

Kirk concluded that "tens of thousands of people in the Middle East are gonna lose their lives because of this decision by Barack Hussein Obama."

Bill Clinton: I Was Wrong About Longer Prison Sentences

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“I signed a bill that made the problem worse. And I want to admit it,” Clinton said at the NAACP national convention in Philadelphia.

Mike Stone / Reuters

PHILADELPHIA — Former President Bill Clinton on Wednesday said the tough on crime bill he signed as president put too many people in jail whose punishment did not fit their crimes.

"I signed a bill that made the problem worse. And I want to admit it," he said.

"Most of these people are in prison under state law, but the federal law set a trend," Clinton said. "And that was overdone. We were wrong about that. That percentage of it, we were wrong about."

Clinton's comments came on the heels of President Obama's address here Tuesday at the NAACP's annual national convention in which he laid out a series of proposals to change the criminal justice system. Clinton acknowledged Obama's address. "I appreciate what he's done."

Clinton sought to justify why he acted the way he did. "Here's what happened," he said.

"When I took office we had had a roaring decade of rising crime," Clinton said. "We had gang warfare on the streets. We had little children being shot dead on the streets who were just innocent bystanders standing in their own place. We had kids in Los Angeles doing drills in their schools to learn how to drop down and get under their desk," because of drive-by shootings."

Violent crime had risen over the past three decades, Clinton said, and police forces around the country did not rise with it. To him, it justified putting another 100,000 officers on the streets.

Clinton closed his speech noting the number of college programs offered to incarcerated individuals dropped dramatically.

"There is almost a zero recidivism rate for people who get college degrees" inside prison, Clinton said.

LINK: Three Areas Where Hillary Clinton Is Running Against Her Husband’s Legacy

Clinton In 2011: Iran Only Has Right To Enrich After Nuclear Weapons Program "Irreversibly Shut Down"

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The Democratic presidential candidate endorsed the deal reached on Tuesday, which restricts Iran’s nuclear fuel for 15 years.

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Hillary Clinton said in 2011 that it was her and the Obama administration's position that Iran would not have a right to enrich uranium until it had "irreversibly shut down its nuclear weapons program."

On Tuesday, as a Democratic presidential candidate, Clinton endorsed a deal that would restrict Iran's nuclear fuel for 15 years, while allowing it to continue to enrich uranium at levels well below bomb-grade, in exchange for the removal of economic sanctions.

At a hearing of the House Committee of Foreign Affairs on March 1, 2011, Ohio Congressman Steve Chabot asked then-Secretary of State Clinton whether the administration believed that "the current regime should be allowed to enrich or reprocess domestically."

Clinton did not specifically answer the question with regard to the regime of the time, which, below Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, was led by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who was widely seen as less open to compromise than current President Hassan Rouhani. Clinton did, however, say that Iran would have such a right "sometime in the future," if it met certain conditions, such as the irreversible shutdown of its nuclear weapons program.

"Well, Congressman, it has been our position that, under very strict conditions, Iran would sometime in the future, having responded to the international community's concerns and irreversibly shut down its nuclear weapons program, have such a right under IAEA inspection," she said. "I think that is the position of the international community, along with the United States."

Months before, in December 2010, Clinton said to the BBC that the administration had told Iran "that they are entitled to the peaceful use of civil nuclear energy," once they had "restored the confidence of the international community," but did not mention an irreversible shutdown of their weapons program as a prerequisite for that.

On the other hand, in a story published in August 2014, Clinton told Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic that "I've always been in the camp that held that they did not have a right to enrichment" and that the assertion of such a right was "absolutely unfounded."

Of the deal reached on Tuesday, which is now awaiting Congressional action, Clinton said, "I support this agreement because I believe it is the most effective path of all the alternatives available to the U.S. and our partners to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon."

That Time In 1988 Trump Told Oprah What Was Wrong With America's Foreign Policy

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“I really am tired of seeing what’s happening with this country.”

Frederic J. Brown / Getty Images

In the final months of Ronald Reagan's presidency, Donald Trump appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show to discuss the advertisement criticizing U.S. foreign policy that he spent nearly $100,000 to place in three major newspapers the previous fall — and the possibility that he might run for president himself.

Trump told Winfrey in April 1988 that he was "tired of seeing what's happening with this country," and said that America was supporting its foreign allies at the expense of its own citizens' well-being.

Winfrey began by asking Trump about the "open letter" to the American public that he had paid to place in the New York Times, Washington Post, and Boston Globe a few months earlier, at a time when some were speculating that Trump was planning to enter the race for the Republican nomination to succeed Reagan in 1988.

Trump's advertisement was a sharp critique of American foreign policy, including the claim that "the world is laughing at America's politicians as we protect ships we don't own, carrying oil we don't need, destined for allies who won't help."

After Winfrey pointed to the advertisement to ask what Trump would "do differently," the tycoon reiterated many of the arguments contained in the letter, telling Winfrey that he would "make our allies pay their fair share."

"We're a debtor nation," Trump said. "Something's going to happen over the next number of years with this country, 'cause you can't keep going on losing 200 billion."

Trump argued that the Japanese "are beating the hell out of this country," because "they come over here, they sell their cars, their VCRs, they knock the hell out of our companies" — all while taking advantage of American largesse.

The solution, he suggested, was to require countries like Japan and Kuwait to pay the United States for its ongoing support.

When Winfrey asked Trump if he would consider a run for the White House, the billionaire said he "probably" wouldn't do it.

"I just probably wouldn't do it, Oprah," said Trump, "I just don't think I really have the inclination to do it. I love what I'm doing, I really like it."

"But I do get tired of seeing what's happening with this country," Trump continued. "And if it got so bad, I would never want to rule it out totally, because I really am tired of seeing what's happening with this country — how we're really making other people live like kings, and we're not."

Trump offered praise for all three of the major candidates in the race.

"I think that probably George Bush has an advantage, in terms of the election," said Trump. "But I think Jesse Jackson's done himself very proud, I think Michael Dukakis has done one hell of a job. ... I think people that are around all three of those candidates can be very proud of the jobs they've done."

Asked by Winfrey if he believed he could win, Trump said he "would have a hell of a chance."

"I would say that I would have a hell of a chance of winning, because I think people — I don't know how your audience feels — but I think people are tired of seeing the United States ripped off," Trump argued, promising that if he were in charge, "[t]his country would make one hell of a lot of money from those people that for 25 years have taken advantage" of the United States.

Trump concluded by insisting that he would abandon an unacceptable status quo.

In Donald Trump's America, "it wouldn't be the way it's been," Trump declared. "Believe me."

Here's the video:

youtube.com

Oklahoma Republicans Apologize For Comparing Poor People To Animals

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“Thus ends today’s lesson in irony.”

The Oklahoma Republican Party apologized Tuesday for a post from the group's official Facebook account which compared poor people who receive food stamps to animals.

The Oklahoma Republican Party apologized Tuesday for a post from the group's official Facebook account which compared poor people who receive food stamps to animals.

Facebook: OKGOP

The Food Stamp Program, administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, is proud to be distributing this year the greatest number of free Meals and Food Stamps ever, to 46 million people.

Meanwhile, the National Park Service, administered by the U.S. Department of the Interior, asks us "Please Do Not Feed The Animals." Their stated reason for the policy is because "The animals will grow dependent on handouts and will not learn to take care of themselves."

Thus ends today's lesson in irony #OKGOP

Facebook: OKGOP

On Tuesday, the state Republican Party Chairman Randy Brogdon, the author of the post, apologized "to those who were offended."

On Tuesday, the state Republican Party Chairman Randy Brogdon, the author of the post, apologized "to those who were offended."

Facebook: RandyBrogdon


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After Conviction, Ohio Republican Consultant Apologizes For "Immature Choices"

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Facing up to 12 months in prison, Nick Everhart seeks forgiveness but tells BuzzFeed News his former boss is filled with “irrational resentment.”

A Republican strategist locked in a bitter two-year feud with Rand Paul's top media consultant told BuzzFeed News he is sorry for his "immature choices" after being found guilty last week in criminal court.

Nick Everhart was convicted of one count of unauthorized use of cable or telecommunications property for enlisting a colleague to illegally retrieve materials from a company computer after being fired. He was found not guilty on a second count, and could get as much as 12 months in prison when he is sentenced in Delaware County, Ohio.

Everhart was fired from the Republican advertising firm Strategy Group in 2013 after engineering a dramatic religious intervention with CEO Rex Elass. In a statement to BuzzFeed News he maintained that he didn't mean to commit any crimes, and only wanted to retrieve family photos from his work computer. The company says he was trying to steal files.

"My intent was not to break the law. If I thought retrieving photos of my kids would lead to any of this, I would have let those memories go," Everhart said in the statement, apologizing for the way his "immature choices" have hurt his loved ones.

Everhart, who still faces two counts each of perjury and evidence tampering, also blamed his former boss and mentor for allowing "irrational resentment" to fuel a vendetta against him.

Reached by BuzzFeed News, Elsass, who works for Paul's presidential campaign, said, "I maintain a compassion for Nick Everhart but justice is necessary for my heart, my family, faith, life's work, and the employees and families who suffered. May God have mercy and grace on all of us."

Elsass added, "I cooperated with prosecutors and justice was served. My prayer is that Nick will be able to repair his heart and go on with life. The conviction and pending charges speak for themselves."

Alex Tornero, a Strategy Group creative director who worked with Everhart for six years, also called BuzzFeed News to say his former colleague had been determined in his final weeks at the firm "to destroy Rex and take the company for himself."

"He thought a lot of the success the company had was due to him, and it made him do a lot of crazy stuff and dishonest things," Tornero said.

But in his statement to BuzzFeed News, Everhart said his confrontation with Elsass in 2013 was born out of concern for "the personal well-being of Rex and the long-term stability of the firm."

Two years ago, I took part in a management meeting involving Rex Elsass, the CEO of my former employer, The Strategy Group for Media. As president of the company, I was concerned there were serious problems – problems that threatened the personal well-being of Rex and the long-term stability of the firm.

But Rex was more than my employer and colleague. He had been a mentor and close friend for over a decade. In retrospect, I should have been more respectful and met him one-on-one. If we could not find a way to address these areas of concern properly, the proper pathway would have been resignation. Instead, I chose confrontation.

Why? Candidly, I lacked the courage to do this on my own. Pride impaired judgment.

That was the first of several mistakes I've made over the last twenty-seven months, in trying to deal with this situation. Failing to properly anticipate the irrational resentment Rex would harbor after humiliating him in a group setting would have grave consequences for me and my family.

In hindsight, Rex's reaction was predictable. I had hoped for something different, but it did not happen that way. Termination was just the beginning. He also initiated foreclosure litigation on my home, filed a civil action to prevent me from working in campaign politics, and then used the civil case that was mutually resolved by settlement to kick-start criminal proceedings.

Those proceedings brought to light a second mistake that I will regret the rest of my life. After Rex fired me, I asked my assistant and friend to retrieve family photos and videos off company computers. I arrogantly thought they were my property and I could do with them as I saw fit. I should have just asked my lawyer to get them.

On Friday, June 10th a jury in Delaware County found me guilty of one count of unauthorized use of cable or telecommunications property, a fifth degree felony.

My intent was not to break the law. If I thought retrieving photos of my kids would lead to any of this, I would have let those memories go. I now understand these actions put my assistant in harm's way. I take full responsibility for my poor decisions.

Although I seek forgiveness, I don't deserve sympathy. I've embarrassed myself and my family. Immature choices put innocent people in the middle of a feud between two colleagues and friends that should have known better.

I'm paid to advise candidates and elected officials on how best to present themselves to the public. I didn't meet the standard I set for others. It's going to take a long time to regain that trust. Taking ownership of my mistakes and humbly asking for absolution is the first step on the road to redemption.

Several Hours Of Ted Cruz B-Roll And Interviews With Family Members Just Went Online

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Hours of b-roll reveal Ted Cruz dressed up as a bald eagle for July 4th and was once bitten by an octopus.

Several hours of b-roll was uploaded to YouTube Wednesday morning featuring long interviews with family members of Republican presidential candidate Sen. Ted Cruz.

The hours of interviews uploaded by "Ted Cruz for Senate" feature interviews with Cruz's wife Heidi, his mother, his father, his aunt, and several nieces and nephews.

The interviews feature some interesting tidbits about Cruz: His family dressed him as a bald eagle one 4th of July. Cruz's cousin made him play with Barbie dolls. His dad says Cruz was once bit by an octopus at the beach.

It is unclear why the videos were uploaded.

Campaigns legally can't coordinate with PACs but often avoid the law by posting hours of b-roll of interviews and soundless footage of the candidate doing things like walking around and meeting with voters to get around the law.

Check out the video:

Here's his wife, Heidi Cruz:

youtube.com

Here is a clip with Cruz's mother, Eleanor Darragh, and his wife:

youtube.com

Here Cruz's mother again:

youtube.com


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Via youtube.com


Former President George H. W. Bush Hospitalized After Fall

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Former President George H.W. Bush and his wife Barbara Bush.

David J. Phillip / AP

Former President George H. W. Bush was hospitalized Wednesday after falling and suffering a broken bone at his home in Maine, his spokesman said.

Bush fractured a bone in his neck and was in stable condition, Matt Paul, a spokesman for Maine Medical Center, told BuzzFeed News.

He "is fine," Bush's spokesman Jim McGrath said on Twitter.

Bush, the country's oldest living former president, celebrated his 91st birthday in June.

Bush suffers from a form of Parkinson's disease and can no longer walk on his own. He was last hospitalized in December after experiencing shortness of breath, and released days later.

Huckabee On Planned Parenthood Video: "Only Since The Nazis" Have We Seen Such Indifference To Human Life

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“…I just found myself chilled and thinking, only since the Nazis have we seen such coldblooded indifference to human life.”

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

Republican presidential candidate and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee said Planned Parenthood's national medical director discussing the sale of fetal body parts harvested from abortions in an undercover video is one the worst things we've seen since the Nazis.

"What's maybe the most the disturbing part of it is to watch this women talk about selling baby parts, specifically the lungs, the heart, the livers, the lower extremities, and how to use the forceps as to not to crush them and damage the parts -- when the baby has already been murdered," Huckabee told radio host Eric Metaxas on Wednesday.

"And for her to do all of this conversation and to talk about how much each of those parts brings, with a fork in her hand as she sits and enjoys a casual lunch. It is bad enough that someone would be so devoid of any sense of decency and civilized behavior that they would treat a human being and the various elements of that human being as commodities to be traded and sold on the market place. But to do it over lunch, I just found myself chilled and thinking, only since the Nazis have we seen such coldblooded indifference to human life."

An undercover video recorded a year ago and released Tuesday morning by the Center for Medical Progress shows Dr. Deborah Nucatola, the senior director of medical services at Planned Parenthood, speaking in detail about fetal body parts, how they are harvested from abortions, and the costs associated with that procedure, with activists pretending to be from a fetal tissue procurement company. Planned Parenthood said Tuesday the video misrepresents their participation in tissue donation programs.

Huckabee, who called Planned Parenthood "a kill for hire organization," said that as president he would have the attorney general investigate Planned Parenthood and "it needs to happen now."

"If I were president I would order the attorney general to fully investigate and prosecute to the fullest extend of the law any instances in which human parts are being sold and traded as a community because it violates federal law and we would be also immediately suspending all funding to Planned Parenthood," stated Huckabee.

"I would love to see a Congressional investigation but we need something more urgent than that. That's going to take months, an attorney general needs prosecution and that needs to get immediately -- not later, not months, it needs to happen now."

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Fundraisers For Bush, Clinton Registered To Lobby For Middle Eastern Governments

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The men, who work for DLA Piper, have lobbied on behalf of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Bundlers for the campaigns of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush are registered to lobby for foreign governments.

Ignacio Sanchez, a former trade official and Treasury official for President George W. Bush, works for the law firm DLA Piper. Foreign Agent Registration Act registration filings from March of this year show him registered to lobby for the Embassy of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

"The registrant will assist the Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia in strengthening the ability of the United States and Saudi Arabia to advance mutual national security interests," the FARA papers read.

Sanchez has raised $32,400 for Bush, according to reports filed by the campaign. Sanchez's papers also note he donated $5,000 to Bush's Right to Rise PAC. He also donated $2,700 to Bush's presidential campaign himself.

A Bush spokeswoman told BuzzFeed News that "Gov. Bush is focused on his own agenda and isn't influenced by special interests."

Two of Clinton's bundlers, Matthew Bernstein who bundled more than $45,000 and John Merrigan, who bundled more than $24,000, also work for DLA Piper and are registered to lobby for foreign interests.

Bernstein's FARA registration lists him as having lobbied for the United Arab Emirates and German State of Rheinland-Pfalz.

Merrigan's FARA registration lists him as having lobbied for the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.

Both Merrigan and Bernstein were identified in a 2008 Center for Investigative Reporting and ABCNews.com story as having bundled for Clinton, and arranged a meeting with her and other senators while lobbying for Dubai.

From the 2008 investigation:

Two of Clinton's top moneymen, John Merrigan and Matthew "Mac" Bernstein, are part of a lobbying team hired by the rulers of Dubai to defend against a U.S.-based lawsuit alleging that the rulers had enslaved young boys to race camels. The lobbyists' firm, DLA Piper, arranged a meeting with Clinton and three other senators last year on behalf of Dubai, according to filings. Dubai paid the firm $3.7 million for a year's work.

Merrigan and Bernstein also signed, on behalf of the firm, a $100,000-per-month contract with the Turkish government last March to prevent "the introduction, debate and passage of legislation and other U.S. government action that harms Turkey's interests or image." The lobbying effort opposed a resolution, co-sponsored by Clinton, that would call the World War I era massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turks a genocide.

The firm scored dozens of meetings with members of Congress and their staffs over the course of six months, including an August conference with Clinton's Senate staff regarding "U.S.-Turkey relations," according to filings. Two months later, Clinton acknowledged to the Boston Globe editorial board that she had concerns about the resolution, saying "the adamant expression of real dismay and outrage by this Turkish government has to be factored into this."

The Clinton campaign declined to comment. Merrigan and Bernstein did not immediately return a request for comment.

In Arizona, Black And White Progressives Jolted By The Harsh Lives And Stories Of Undocumented Immigrants

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Courtesy Yash Mori

PHOENIX — Inside, away from the 105-degree heat, the scene was intense: progressive activists, crying and expressing anger and disbelief, as undocumented immigrants and activists described in personal terms the grim realities of the border — skeletal remains in the desert, days without food and water, and deportation.

This was the plan.

The leadership behind Netroots Nation and immigration activists in Arizona wanted to acquaint the committed progressive activists who attend the annual Netroots gathering with the border-focused work the immigration activists do.

There in the offices of Puente Arizona, a local immigration advocacy group led by longtime activist Carlos Garcia, a group of committed progressive activists were bombarded with personal accounts by undocumented immigrants of harsh conditions.

Videos, created by Puente, were played of undocumented and mixed-status families talking about loved ones taken on their way home from work, or on their way to events requiring them to cross state lines. One video, by the family of Bertha Avila, was punctuated by her standing up in front of the room to tell the story of her six-month detention, after she was stopped at a checkpoint in California while traveling to a baptism.

In a black pantsuit, with her daughter by her side, Avila said she almost died in detention because of complications from asthma. The first five days were the hardest, because she was given no water, food, or asthma medication, she claimed. When she hit an emergency button, Avila said detention officers would yell, "What the fuck do you want?"

"I felt my life slipping away," she said, through tears.

Garcia, the group’s executive director, argued these kind of conditions ultimately stem from NAFTA, the expansive free trade agreement signed in the 1990s that broadened U.S. trade with Mexico that has seen renewed progressive ire this year as President Obama has tried to advance a new Pacific-based trade agreement. NAFTA spurred an influx of undocumented immigrants across the border — a development that produced increasingly strict immigration enforcement laws in the state of Arizona, culminating in SB1070.

It wasn't only Avila who became emotional, however.

Courtesy Yash Mori

Patrick O'Heffernan, the chairman of the Netroots Foundation, which helps fund liberal organizations, had tears in his eyes as he watched the videos and heard Avila speak. On a bus from Phoenix to Tucson after the event, he said he felt outraged that this could happen in America. "They're suffering and all they want is what everyone else in America wants, to have a better life," he said.

The bus stopped at the Global Justice Center in Tucson for a meeting with Coalición de Derechos Humanos (Human Rights Coalition), which serves as a liaison between medical examiner's offices and families, whose relatives have either died in the desert or lost contact.

Flanked by a rainbow-colored "We Are The 99%" banner, Isabel Garcia and her bare-bones, volunteer-driven organization said they receive 100 calls a month from families, and sometimes even calls from people lost in the desert.

Garcia, who debated Arizona Sen. John McCain on television 20 years ago about the effects NAFTA was having on Mexicans, painted a haunting picture of the realities for families who are faced with a death in the desert.

"Bodies become skeletal in two weeks," Garcia said. She told the story of a distraught father who couldn't believe the badly decomposed body he was looking at was that of his daughter. "He said it couldn't be her, then he turned her hand and saw the ring he had given her as a gift.”

Garcia discussed Operation Streamline, which was supposed to be part of the border tour but was cancelled last minute by the court, along with a visit to the medical examiner.

She talked about how immigrants who have reentered the country illegally are counseled to plead guilty by public defenders, and then brought in front of the judge in groups, where they are sentenced to detention and eventual deportation.

Courtesy Yash Mori

This was all too much for Lizz Brown, a criminal lawyer from Ferguson, and former special public defender. She said that lawyers violate their own ethics by telling their clients to all plead guilty and by not having 1-on-1 meetings with them.

For Brown, she was now on the other side of something that typically angers her — the oft-repeated refrain that "I didn't know" this was a problem.

"And now I'm there," she said. "I didn't know all of this stuff was going on."

She addressed the issue of blacks taking up the issues of Latinos or immigrants.

"As an African-American person there is a concern that our history is not used as a stepping stone for another movement," she said. "People are protective of their culture and history."

Garcia said everyone — from people of faith, to members of both political parties, to those with documents and those without — must do something about what is happening in the desert.

The bodies, she said, "they remind us of our inhumanity."

Courtesy Yash Mori

The border tour rumbled on to Eloy detention center, where undocumented women took turns speaking. Some had been in detention, and others had family members currently in the imposing sand-colored structure.

Claudia Amaro told the story of self-deporting with her husband when he was ordered to leave because they had never been apart. But in Mexico, she said, they were also undocumented and treated badly. She brought her son to a therapist where she was blamed for how she was handling the transition.

"Your son won't adapt to Mexico because you and your husband won't adapt," the therapist chastised. Amaro came to the U.S. as part of the DREAM 9 group who asked for asylum. Her case is still pending and she was released, but her husband Hector has been detained for 21 months while his asylum case is being processed.

Like many undocumented immigrants who have successfully worked with activist groups, Amaro is trying to leverage social media to get the word out about her husband. She held up a piece of paper with the words, "Yamil needs his dad," written in green marker, the name of her new Facebook page for him — and then everyone returned to the bus for the rest of the speeches. It’d only been 15 minutes, but it was too hot.

Humane Borders

Back where the tour started, Robin Reineke of the Colibri Center for Human Rights talked about her work comparing missing person's reports to remains that have been found in the desert.

There were 2,269 bodies recovered from 1999 to 2012, with many concentrated in the Arizona desert. Not all bodies are recovered. There are currently 2,500 missing persons reports along the entire border with remains of 900 people in Arizona alone. "This is what happens," Reineke said, "when you put walls between families."

And then, in the air conditioning inside, after a nine-hour tour of the day, the progressives that Netroots had bused in for the event took turns saying what they had learned from this experience before the annual conference, which is meant to coordinate progressives. Several tied the experience to the issues they see in the criminal justice system.

"It sounds basic, but I didn't know it was so bad," one white activist said.

"Coming out of a year since Michael Brown, maybe we're living in a time where all of this that's going on is going to become inescapable for all of us," said Brown, the Ferguson lawyer.

"Everything is pushing towards some kind of firestorm. It's inescapable that we all have to do something."

Courtesy Yash Mori







Boehner Backs Bill That Would Change Sentencing For Non-Violent Drug Crimes

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“We’ve got a lot of people in prison, frankly, that don’t really in my view need to be there,” House Speaker John Boehner said Tuesday.

Win McNamee / Getty Images

House Speaker John Boehner said Thursday he supports a bipartisan bill currently making its way through the House that would, among other things, lower mandatory minimum sentences for non-violent drug offenders.

The move surprised many long-time reform advocates and provides a sudden path forward for the legislation.

Responding to a question at a press conference, Boehner said he'd "absolutely" like to see the he Safe, Accountable, Fair, and Effective (SAFE) Justice Act, a bipartisan bill introduced by Reps. Jim Sensenbrenner and Bobby Scott, make it to the House floor for a vote.

"I've long believed there needed to be reform of our criminal justice system [...] I'd like to see it on the floor," Boehner said.

"We've got a lot of people in prison, frankly, that don't really in my view need to be there," Boehner continued. "It's expensive to house. Some of these people are in there for what I'll call flimsy reasons."

The unexpected endorsement thrilled criminal justice advocates, who have watched several similar bills get introduced in Congress in recent years, only to see them languish in legislative purgatory.

Van Jones, a co-founder of the bipartisan criminal justice advocacy group #Cut50, said he wasn't aware of anyone in the movement getting a heads up about Boehner's support for the bill.

"John Boehner just said he's going to support criminal justice reform with a vote in the House, which was unthinkable, unthinkable, six months ago. That is unbelievable," Jones said in a phone interview with BuzzFeed News. "The president of the United States leading on criminal justice and John Boehner has call and response for him from the White House to the House. That is the best news, that is bigger news for the black community than 2008. I'm feeling pretty daggum good."

A top conservative criminal justice advocate was just as pleasantly surprised by the news Boehner had backed the bipartisan criminal justice bill.

"Luke Russert tweeting that Speaker Boehner is in favor of the Safe Justice act," the advocate wrote during an email exchange on a separate topic. "That is huge."

See Boehner's comments on criminal justice reform below, starting at 18:26.

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Bernie Sanders Despised Democrats In 1980s, Said A JFK Speech Once Made Him Sick

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“Kennedy was young and appealing and ostensibly liberal, but I think at that point, seeing through Kennedy, and what liberalism was, was probably a significant step for me to understand that conventional politics or liberalism was not what was relevant.”

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Vermont senator and Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders once said that he was "physically nauseated" by a speech made by President John F. Kennedy when Sanders was a young man, because Kennedy's "hatred for the Cuban Revolution [...] was so strong."

"Kennedy was young and appealing and ostensibly liberal," Sanders reminisced in a 1987 interview with The Gadfly, a student newspaper at the University of Vermont. "But I think at that point, seeing through Kennedy, and what liberalism was, was probably a significant step for me to understand that conventional politics or liberalism was not what was relevant."

In the same interview, he also criticized Jesse Jackson's decision to try and affect change by "working within the Democratic party" and offered some pointed remarks about Walter Mondale.

Sanders told The Gadfly that endorsing the Democratic ticket in 1984 and "campaigning for Mondale [...] was a very difficult thing to do."

"When I'd go around talking about Walter Mondale I would say that if elected president, I felt, Walter Mondale was going to be a pretty bad president," explained Sanders. "Now sometimes you may have to make painful decisions."

"If you go around saying that Mondale would be a great president, you would be a liar and a hypocrite," concluded Sanders. "That is not what I was saying."

Sanders's remarks about Kennedy, Jackson, and Mondale are in keeping with the Independent senator's long history of criticizing the Democratic Party.

In a Rutland Herald article published the following year, Sanders explained the crucial difference between himself and Jesse Jackson: "'Jesse believes that serious social change is possible within the Democratic Party. I don't.'"

And in a 1989 op-ed in the Burlington Free Press, Sanders lambasted "the corporate-controlled Democratic and Republican parties," and praised the National Organization of Women "for supporting the need for a progressive third party in this country."

"Like millions of other Americans, NOW understands that the Democratic and Republican parties are intellectually and morally bankrupt," Sanders wrote.

"We do not have an effective national political movement which is prepared to fight for power," argued Sanders, "and which challenges the basic assumptions and priorities of the corporate-controlled Democratic and Republican parties – two political parties which have no substantive ideological differences and are, in reality, one party – the party of the ruling class."

Here's Sanders's Burlington Free Press op-ed:

Here's Sanders's Burlington Free Press op-ed:

The Burlington Free Press

Here's the Rutland Herald story:

Here's the Rutland Herald story:

The Rutland Herald


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Has Jeb Bush Flip-Flopped On The Segway And Blackberry? We Report, You Decide


Hillary Clinton Declines To Support A National $15 Minimum Wage

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Clinton says she supports raising the national minimum wage, but adds that “what you can do in L.A. or in New York may not work in other places.”

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Hillary Clinton on Thursday wouldn't commit to supporting a $15 national minimum wage but said she is working with Democrats in Congress who are determining how high it can be set.

"I support the local efforts that are going on that are making it possible for people working in certain localities to actually earn 15," Clinton said in a response to a question from BuzzFeed News during a press availability in New Hampshire on Thursday.

"I think part of the reason that the Congress and very strong Democratic supporters of increasing the minimum wage are trying to debate and determine what's the national floor is because there are different economic environments. And what you can do in L.A. or in New York may not work in other places."

In June, Clinton spoke by phone to a gathering of "Fight for 15" organizers, a national movement to raise the minimum wage to $15.

"We need more cities and states to follow the lead of Los Angeles, St. Louis, and New York," Clinton said then, referring city legislatures that raised their local minimum wages to $15.

Next Wednesday, the New York wage board, convened by Governor Andrew Cuomo, is expected to make its recommendation for raising the state-wide minimum wage for fast food workers to $15.

Ruby Cramer and Cora Lewis contributed reporting.

Sexual Orientation Discrimination Is Barred By Existing Law, Federal Commission Rules

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“[A]llegations of discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation necessarily state a claim of discrimination on the basis of sex” barred by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ruled in a groundbreaking decision this week.

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WASHINGTON — The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has ruled that existing civil rights law bars sexual orientation-based employment discrimination — a groundbreaking decision to advance legal protections for gay, lesbian, and bisexual workers.

"[A]llegations of discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation necessarily state a claim of discrimination on the basis of sex," the commission concluded in a decision dated July 15.

The independent commission addressed the question of whether the ban on sex discrimination in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 bars anti-LGB discrimination in a complaint brought by a Florida-based air traffic control specialist against Transportation Sec. Anthony Foxx.

The ruling — approved by a 3-2 vote of the five-person commission — applies to federal employees' claims directly, but it also applies to the entire EEOC, which includes its offices across the nation that take and investigate claims of discrimination in private employment.

While only the Supreme Court could issue a definitive ruling on the interpretation, EEOC decisions are given significant deference by federal courts.

In 2012, the commission addressed a similar issue regarding whether transgender workers are protected under the sex discrimination ban from discrimination. There, in a case brought by Mia Macy against the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the commission ruled that gender identity-based discrimination is barred by the sex discrimination ban. In December 2014, the Justice Department announced a similar view of the law — stating that it would apply that interpretation in its cases.

While the EEOC had been pushing toward today's decision with cases and even field guidance addressing coverage under Title VII of specific types of discrimination faced by gay people, the July 15 decision states that "sexual orientation is inherently a 'sex-based consideration.'"

In reviewing courts' prior interpretation of the words of Title VII, the commission acknowledged plainly that sexual orientation itself is not listed as a type of discrimination barred in the 1964 law.

"[T]he question is not whether sexual orientation is explicitly listed in Title VII as a prohibited basis for employment actions. It is not," the commission found. Instead, the commission stated that the question is the same as in any other Title VII sex discrimination case: "whether the agency has 'relied on sex-based considerations' or 'take[n] gender into account' when taking the challenged employment action."

The commission found that sexual orientation discrimination is sex discrimination for several reasons. Among the reasons, the commission stated, is because sexual orientation discrimination "necessarily entails treating an employee less favorably because of the employee's sex" and "because it is associational discrimination on the basis of sex."

After a review of the case law regarding similar challenges to employment practices alleging a violation of Title VII where the initial understanding of the law would not have included that coverage, the commission stated, "The courts have gone where the principles of Title VII have directed."

"Our task is the same," the decision found. "We therefore conclude that Complainant's allegations of discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation state a claim of discrimination on the basis of sex. We further conclude that allegations of discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation necessarily state a claim of discrimination on the basis of sex."

Tico Almeida, the head of Freedom to Work, celebrated the decision — and urged LGBT groups to go to the courts to seek codification of the ruling.

"Freedom to Work applauds this historic decision by the EEOC, and we encourage gay men, lesbians, and bisexuals who face harassment or discrimination on the job to consult an attorney and file Title VII claims with the EEOC and eventually the federal courts," he said. "Our LGBT movement should take this strongly reasoned legal victory and run with it by returning to the federal courts to win workplace protections in all fifty states.

The Human Rights Campaign's president, Chad Griffin, pushed for legislative action to confirm the protections.

"This historic ruling by the EEOC makes clear they agree workplace discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, much like gender identity, is illegal," he said, adding, "While an important step, it also highlights the need for a comprehensive federal law permanently and clearly banning LGBT discrimination beyond employment to all areas of American life. Such a law would send a clear and permanent signal that discrimination against LGBT people will not be tolerated under any circumstances in this country, and we remain fully committed to making that happen."

Almeida, however, shot back, "I bet we can get LGBT workplace or housing cases to the U.S. Supreme Court sooner than the U.S. House of Representatives will allow an up-or-down vote on a comprehensive LGBT non-discrimination bill."


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Journalists Give Big To Hillary Clinton's Campaign

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The editor-in-chief of InStyle and the group publisher of the The Hollywood Reporter are among the donors.

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A number of journalists -- active, retired, and a couple big names -- were among the donors during the first three months of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton's campaign, according to recently released Federal Election Committee filings.

Ariel Foxman, who edits the fashion outlet InStyle gave $2700 and Lynne Segall, the executive vice president and group publisher at The Hollywood Reporter and Billboard, gave $2700.

More than 250,000 people donated to Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign with 94% of the donations being $250 or less. The average donation was $144.89 according to a report from MSNBC.

Ariel Foxman, the editor-in-chief of InStyle, gave $2700.

Ariel Foxman, the editor-in-chief of InStyle, gave $2700.

Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images


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The NAACP And Black Lives Matter Are Talking Past Each Other

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The NAACP’s national convention in Philadelphia highlighted a fundamental split between the old-guard of the civil rights movement and Black Lives Matter on the most important issue to black Americans.

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PHILADELPHIA — Black Lives Matter, the social media driven movement focused on police violence and ending white supremacy, was not far from anyone's mind — not even the leader of the free world — at the NAACP convention this week.

Whether it was in the likenesses of Trayvon Martin and Mike Brown on display outside the main convention hall, or the eyeballs on the few young people who wore t-shirts emblazoned with "Black Lives Matter" or "I love my blackness. And yours," the protest movement that sprang to life over the last year was hard to miss.

Also hard to miss was the underlying tension as the old-guard of a movement that had once championed an anti-lynching bill through Congress nearly a century ago confronted a new, digital-focused generation of protesters.

The activists say the NAACP is beholden to the mainstream corporations; the NAACP seems perplexed by the decentralized relevance of Black Lives Matter. They are not fighting. They both agree there is a crisis. But their crossing paths in Philadelphia underscored how both movements differ on the grassroots moment the country is in, and which steps are the right ones to bring about change.

During his speech to the convention Tuesday, President Barack Obama alluded to the fundamental differences between the two groups.

"Justice," he said, "is making sure every young person knows they are special and they are important and that their lives matter — not because they heard it in a hashtag, but because of the love they feel every single day not just love from their parents, not just love from their neighborhood, but love from police, love from politicians."

Attendees also took their cue from Roslyn Brock, chairwoman of the NAACP's board of directors, who said the shooting of unarmed blacks at the hands of blacks placed an indelible impression on the psyche of blacks in America and indeed that of the NAACP. "We will never forget their faces," she said.

"However," she asked, "how do we explain" the murders of young people in Milwaukee, Philadelphia and 55 people who were wounded in Chicago? "How do we give life to the narrative that Black Lives Matter when we are doing the killing?"

"Let me be crystal clear: Black-on-black crime must end in our community as we imbue new life and meaning into the often quoted hashtag Black Lives Matter," she said.

Activists working on police violence against unarmed civilians and, they say, combating white supremacy have something of a running joke (that has gotten stale): They can always tell when someone is about to say, "Well, what about black-on-black crime?"

Race-on-race crime, the activists say, is not unique to black people. The question also provokes skepticism with Black Lives Matter activists: Why do some leaders attempt to police members of their own community, the activists argue, and want to talk about anything other than white supremacy?

Activists often refer to this "policing" as engagement in the politics of respectability, or a preference by blacks to critique and to lay blame with black people, rather than address white supremacy "head on," as one activist said. In an informal poll, principal movement activists said they were not invited to the convention — but had been drawn to Obama's speech Tuesday.

"I think we are highly supportive of Black Lives Matter, but I do think what we also are focusing on is the number of black-on-black crimes in our community as well," said Brendien Mitchell, the 21-year-old Howard University student who sits on the NAACP board and spoke at the convention briefly before Obama told BuzzFeed News. "The need for us to say that black lives matter as it relates to black lives being taken non-people of color" is important, he said. "But I also do believe that we do kill ourselves in our communities."

Mitchell said no death of a black life is more significant than another, no matter how much attention the killing of unarmed black people killed by police gets on social media.

Jay Gaskin, 17, a young NAACP member from St. Louis who is the brother of John Gaskin, a national board member, said that the reaction of the death of Mike Brown in Ferguson shocked members of the NAACP in St. Louis, even as they struggled with exactly what they should do.

He told his brother young people were protesting his death. Before long they had organized a march. "But I think we can do more than marches," he said. "We're not in the 1960s anymore. Marches do help but this is a different generation and they're not going to be as effective as they were back then."

"But the organization has done everything that it can."

David Johns, the executive director of the White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for African Americans, praised the movement but exhorted young people at a luncheon to do more than just engage with a hashtag on social media.

That message stood out for Gaskins. He said for all of the talk about the movement over the course of the convention there was a sense that people did not know a whole lot about how it works, what it wants — and wondered if perhaps some of that responsibility could fall on Black Lives Matter.

Gaskins wouldn't really have a way to know what Black Lives Matter was doing. "Unless they like, looked it up on Google or something, you really don't know anything about it other than the hashtag. It's hard. Especially for the elders."

The Head Of The Nation's Largest LGBT Rights Group On What Comes Next

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Human Rights Campaign President Chad Griffin

Jack Plunkett / AP Images for Human Rights Campaign

WASHINGTON — This year, Chad Griffin spent his birthday in Alabama, for a series of meetings about the future of the LGBT movement.

The president of the Human Rights Campaign since the summer of 2012, Griffin is overseeing the nation’s largest LGBT organization at the time of the movement’s greatest successes. On several mornings this June, he showed up at the court early in the morning to stand at the front of the line with Jim Obergefell — the lead plaintiff in the marriage cases — for seats in the courtroom as the justices announced the court’s many end-of-term decisions.

The moment was historic for Obergefell, seeking recognition of his marriage to John Arthur on Arthur’s death certificate, as well as for thousands of activists and same-sex couples across the nation — some of whom had been fighting for the right to marry for decades.

It was also key moment for Griffin and the organization he now runs that was formed as a political action committee in 1980 — the year that Griffin turned seven.

“[I]t was a group of individuals who were frustrated because they had no political power,” Griffin said from his office in the nearly $10 million building bought by the Human Rights Campaign in 2003. “They got together and they said, ‘One of the most important things we can do is to get our elected officials to acknowledge we exist, privately first and then publicly, and then be there and stand up for us.’ That’s how it started.”

Thirty-five years later, Griffin has just completed his third year on the job — which followed his time starting and running the American Foundation for Equal Rights, the upstart organization that backed the federal lawsuit against California’s Proposition 8 marriage ban. As the country adapts to being one in which marriage equality is the law of the land, however, it is a very different world. Weeks after the Supreme Court’s landmark marriage ruling, Griffin went to Birmingham to start deciding what happens next.

This month marks a change. Marriage equality commanded the energy, attentions, and money of many in the LGBT advocacy world for a decade — and now it’s over, the battle’s been won. HRC — as the largest LGBT organization in the country, by far — has long faced criticism from smaller groups and individuals dissatisfied with the group’s priorities. Some of the key questions raised, and not at all unique to Griffin’s tenure, are about its effectiveness and about the group’s commitment to diversity. And for the larger LGBT advocacy movement, what will be the next issue? Will there even be a singular issue? And will a group like HRC lose support to fight remaining LGBT battles after marriage — a fight that was popular with big-money, big-city donors and, ultimately, corporate America?

“No,” Griffin said. “I think the unique position that we’re in is that this organization is 35 years old, it’s been a multi-issue advocacy organization... for a very long time, decades.”

Human Rights Campaign President Chad Griffin in Seattle on Sunday, October 28, 2012.

Kevin P. Casey / AP Images for Human Rights Campaign

Pointing to past battles over the Federal Marriage Amendment, the hate crimes prevention law, and the repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell” — fights that Griffin said took “all of the momentum, all of the energy” at those times — he said that a loss of donors or interest was “not evidenced in those places.” And he doesn’t see that happening now. “I think our supporters, our members and supporters all across the country, are as excited and as engaged as they ever have been, and I suspect that they will stay with us.”

That said, he did acknowledge that the group has work to do to keep people interested, “Now, everyone needs to hear the vision. We’ve reset the goalpost.”

HRC’s long-fought battle for passage of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act — first introduced in Congress in the mid-1990s — never resulted in passage by both chambers in the same session of Congress, and the group is now turning its focus to a bill that would address more than just employment protections: “It’s not marriage and ENDA when it comes to legal protections; it’s a comprehensive approach to nondiscrimination protections.”

Nondiscrimination provisions, Griffin noted, find higher support from the public in polling than marriage equality receives. But, in an implicit criticism of his organization’s work to advance ENDA over the past two decades, Griffin said, “The sense of urgency, I’m not convinced, was ever felt in Congress.”

“It is possible, and it’s going to take a ton of work,” Griffin said of passing a comprehensive LGBT rights bill that would include employment, housing, lending, education, and other protections. A bill like that has yet to be introduced, although there has been discussion that its introduction is expected as soon as next week — but it will be, he said, “probably the heaviest legislative lift we’ve ever had” in the LGBT movement.

“It’s necessary, it has to be done, and we will get it done,” he said. In fact, Griffin flipped the question of lost momentum:

“Being beyond marriage frees up resources.”

The issues facing HRC, though, aren’t only external. This spring, BuzzFeed News published the findings of a report commissioned by HRC to look into the group’s internal workings. The report called the organization a “White Men’s Club,” and noted that the group’s own employees found the atmosphere to be “judgmental,” “exclusionary,” and “sexist.”

Talking about the report — and the current atmosphere at HRC — Griffin said that, too often, nonprofits focus on their efforts “looking out,” but, “a lot of nonprofits do not spend enough time looking internally.” The surveys and focus groups that led to the report, Griffin said, were part of his effort to make taking such an internal look a priority. “That’s why we did the study that we did.”

In terms of how people should judge the group going forward, he said the questions to ask are: “How serious are you, and are you actually bringing about change?” The answer, he said, “is it’s #1 in top priority, and watch us change. I intend for this organization to be a model, not just in the progressive movement, but as a whole.”

When questioned, however, about ongoing criticism from employees who have told BuzzFeed News that change isn’t happening, as to racial and transgender issues in particular, Griffin bristled.

“That’s not true,” he said. “Things are changing, things have changed, we have a long ways to go, and I’m serious about the commitment at that. I would just say, ‘Watch us.’”

From data provided to BuzzFeed News, it is true that the organization has a marked increase in numbers of non-white employees and transgender or other gender-expansive employees since Griffin took the helm. Criticism, however, continues — particularly when data such as that provided by the internal report suggests that numbers alone don’t result in a significant change in the attitudes.

“I can’t say more than how committed I am and to watch the progress that we make,” Griffin said.

Vice President Joe Biden is welcomed to the stage by Human Right Campaign President Chad Griffin before speaking at the HRC Spring Equality Convention on Friday, March 6, 2015 in Washington.

Larry French / AP Images for Human Rights Campaign

In fact, when asked to name five accomplishments at HRC during his tenure, Griffin chose as one his September 2014 speech in Atlanta at the Southern Comfort conference — a conference billed as one of the largest transgender community gatherings in the world.

“HRC has done wrong by the transgender community in the past, and I am here to formally apologize,” he said in that speech, acknowledging the divide caused by the group’s early opposition to transgender inclusion and later support for a version of ENDA that would have barred sexual orientation, but not gender identity, discrimination. “I am sorry for the times when we stood apart when we should have been standing together.”

Asked 10 months after giving that speech whether trans people can trust HRC today, Griffin said, “I hope so. I understand the distrust that existed, historically, and I understand where it came from. That’s why I’ve worked to build the relationships that I’ve built with my partners in the movement.”

He added, however, that he doesn’t “expect everyone to change their minds overnight” and said he will keep working to improve the organization’s position within the trans community.

Among the other accomplishments Griffin pointed to were the group’s early support for fighting the Maryland marriage referendum effort in 2012; work in advancing LGBT rights in the South — specifically targeting Alabama, Arkansas, and Mississippi — under its Project One America; investment in figuring out how to talk to Southern Baptists about LGBT issues; and the expansion into global issues, both through support of activists in foreign countries and efforts at influencing the U.S. foreign policy agenda.

Even among those areas, though, Griffin acknowledged one key setback.

“[A]s a movement, we weren’t in front of our opposition in the forceful way we needed to be” to fight the dozens and dozens of state legislative initiatives opposed by HRC and other groups as being anti-LGBT. “In some places more so, in other places less so.”

HRC was criticized most significantly for a perceived failure to be out in front on an Arkansas bill that would preempt localities from passing nondiscrimination protections beyond those provided for in state law — a clear swipe at recently passed local LGBT protections in the state.

While Griffin pushed back at some of the criticism — across the states — as being a failure to account for strategic decisions that kept HRC officials from speaking out publicly in order to keep from alienating officials willing to have behind-the-scenes discussions about legislative proposals, Griffin did acknowledge, broadly, a lack of preparation for how quickly things would turn from marriage.

“I think what we as a movement weren’t as ready for is their quick shift to throw in the towel on marriage and to say, ‘We’re going to go after them in basically three categories of things,’” Griffin said, pointing to preemption bills like the Arkansas one — which Gov. Asa Hutchinson signed into law in February — as well as anti-transgender bills and the heavily covered religious liberty bills.

“We will be ready for those battles every time in the future,” Griffin said. “I know we at HRC, and I know our partners, and I know our business coalition [will].”

Jim Obergefell, the named plaintiff in the marriage cases, center, with HRC President Chad Griffin, left, talks on the phone to President Obama on the steps of the Supreme Court following the Court's decision on Friday, June 26, 2015 in Washington.

Kevin Wolf / AP Images for Human Rights Campaign

Griffin had particular praise to shower on the corporate support for LGBT rights that was shown this year from briefs at the Supreme Court in the marriage case to efforts to push officials on the state legislation — notably, Republican governors like Indiana’s Mike Pence and, on a second bill in Arkansas, Hutchinson.

“Business deserves a lot of credit for the success that we’ve have in many of these states,” Griffin said, noting that businesses had been accustomed to the slower pace of federal legislation and litigation and were asked by LGBT groups, all of a sudden, “We need you here, we need you here, we need you here, we need you there.” And, he said, in many cases they were.

Moving forward — and specifically looking to 2016 — Griffin made clear that the organization is preparing for a campaign strategy more aggressive than it has ever pursued previously.

“I don’t think, as a movement, we’ve ever fully realized our political power,” he said. “I think in this next election, we have got to do more, be smarter, and be more strategic and invest more heavily in how we engage and organize that base. The LGBT base, among our elected officials, needs to be more recognized, more sought after and feared.”

Griffin — despite his long past with the Clintons and the fact that his former business partner, Kristina Schake, has already joined Hillary Clinton’s campaign — aggressively pushed back against any idea that the group’s endorsement was hers or even hers to lose.

“I can assure you,” Griffin said, “we will not be endorsing Mike Huckabee for president.” He later added that Sen. Ted Cruz also was a non-starter for the group, saying of the two that they “have been the most anti-LGBT, to the point of [being] dangerous and harmful as young people see those hateful messages on TVs across the country.”

As to who the organization will endorse, however, he only would say, “I don’t know when we’ll make an endorsement in this presidential. It will be a pro-equality candidate, and we’ll have more to say about that in the coming months.” Rumors and gossip, Griffin made it clear, will be all there is for now.

As to another rumor circulating — that, with marriage done, Griffin is readying to leave the organization — he laughed.

“I did not come here to this organization for marriage,” Griffin said. “I have my dream job. I have never had a job that I’ve loved and enjoyed more than this one. And I have a lot more time and a long ways to go.”

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