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“Yoo-hoo … It’s Congresswoman Gwen Moore”
Wisconsin’s First Black U.S. Rep. Knocks for Equality
by John-david Morgan
July 25, 2005
Gwen Moore
doesn’t need talking points. Not when the Wisconsin constitution
is threatened by an amendment that would deny all Wisconsin couples
the right form legal non-marriage partnerships in their romantic
relationships, and ban gay couples from any legal recognition
similar to marriage.
Moore simply
carries with her a pocket reader of the U.S. Constitution. She reads
from the civil rights sections of the Bill of Rights. She references
the section of the Declaration of Independence that outlines the
rights of “life liberty and the pursuit of happiness” that are
inalienable for all Americans.
She then takes her
message to the streets to talk to voters – her voters, black
voters on Milwaukee’s near north side. “This isn’t about gay
people – this is going to hurt all of us,” she tells them.
Describing herself
as a “Gally” – a friend of the gay and lesbian community –
Moore joined about 100 volunteers and organizers of Center Advocates
for a Sunday afternoon of knocking for equality in Milwaukee and
north Suburban neighborhoods. The
July 10 canvas targeted the Senate districts of North Shore
Republican Alberta Darling and Milwaukee Assembly Rep. Polly
Williams, two politicians who voted in favor of the amendment.
Amendments that
allow only marriages between men and women and ban “substantially
similar” arrangements such as civil unions and domestic
partnerships have been passed by 16 states, 11 of them by voters in
the 2004 elections.
In Wisconsin,
Democratic Gov. Jim Doyle vetoed the anti-gay marriage legislation,
but the GOP is taking the amendment to the voters as a referendum.
For it to make it that far, the legislation has to pass in two
consecutive legislative sessions. In the Round One vote, held last
year, the amendment was passed 20-13 in the state Senate and 68-27
in the Assembly. Moore, a former state Senator elected to Congress
last fall, voted “No.”
“The people who
would push this [amendment] through, all the way through, who are
out to defeat those of us concerned about quality of life for all in
Wisconsin, are sinister people,” Moore told volunteers in a speech
at Plymouth Church on the Upper East Side. “Insidious,”
“pernicious” and “poisonous” were other words she used to
describe the amendment.
“The constitution
says that ‘no state shall make or enforce any law that will
abridge the rights of the citizenry’ … and Congress shall
‘make no law infringing upon the life, liberty or pursuit of
happiness without due process under the law,’” she said, reading
from the text.
“This is about
the rights of American citizens to live out their lives without
interference from the government.”
For Moore, the
canvass was an opportunity to teach within the glow of her newfound
celebrity as the state’s first black representative in the U.S.
Congress. She is greatly admired, adored even, in the north
Brewer’s Hill neighborhood where she walked with Patrick Flaherty,
executive director of Center Advocates, an aide and two reporters in
tow. At one point, a young mother approached with a camera, asking
if Moore would pose with her young daughter.
At the doors, the
message is direct. “I need to talk to you about the
constitution,” she announced to one woman. “We like it just the
way it is,” the woman respon
“It’s important
for us to recruit non-gay people,” she told another woman who
spoke with Moore on her porch. “For us to look at this issue as a
gay issue, or [other civil rights issues] as black issues is wrong.
This affects all of us.” The woman said she hadn’t thought about
the amendment until Moore told her about it.
“Yoo hoo …
Hello … It’s Congresswoman Gwen Moore,” she called through a
porch screen door as a man in his 40s approached from his kitchen,
recognizing her.
“I’m out here
trying to get people to disagree with the discrimination
amendment,” she began. “I voted against the amendment to
discriminate against gay people, but it really hurts everybody.”
Moore read the amendment to him, explaining that it is “divisive
and discriminatory” and would prevent gay couples from caring for
their families and receiving health benefits.
“We can’t let
this gay bashing occur,” she urged, handing the man an Equality
Knocks petition to sign. “As black people we cannot allow this to
occur.”
No we can’t, he
said, taking the pen and clipboard.
“The
Constitution!” Moore called out, raising her fist to the air as he
wrote.
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