Saying he needed to “lead with his heart,” San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders, a Republican, announced in an emotional press conference last night that he was going to sign a city council resolution expressing his support for gay marriage.
Previously Sanders had said he would veto it.
But his heart has changed—his lesbian daughter and members of his personal staff are much of the reason. The video is moving; watch it below:





"He did not rush into a burning building and risk his own life to save a child or anything remotely equivalent."
I disagree. The 'burning building' is the Republican Party's shameful stance on this issue and its vile anti-gay, UN-Constitutional treatment of GLBT American citizens.
And the 'child' he saved was his own daughter. Perhaps even yours.
Then, he could visit the Cheneys and tell them to do likewise. (Dick Cheney's abandonment of his daughter to the vicissitudes of the Rethuglican party brings shame on the party and on himself.)
Then he could visit Larry Craig and tell him to get over himself.
Etc.
I think she's right, that it is moving. You made good comments about if hes a hero, but she doesn't say that.
But I think we need to be clear on why he is a hero if, in fact, he is one. He did not rush into a burning building and risk his own life to save a child or anything remotely equivalent. He did what he thought was right. Is that such a rarity that we should treat it like an extraordinary human accomplishment?
Has he imperiled his political future by doing it? If so, ok, then this may be a profile in courage: standing up to a public that wants him to do what's wrong, jeopardizing his career for his daughter. But I don't know how much San Diegans care about the difference between marriage and civil unions. San Diego has repeatedly elected even openly gay politicians. I honestly don't know whether there's much political risk here.
But here's what I absolutely refuse to do: laud a politician for taking a pro-gay position merely because he is a Republican. Jennifer Vanasco, author of this little piece, is a well-known lesbian conservative. Her trumpeting of this guy as a hero has a little stench of Log Cabin Republican desperation to me. From a gay perspective, this guy should be judged by the exact same standards as a Democrat, a Green, or an Independent.
The most cynical view of this is that Vanasco would have us laud this guy because he has finally stopped mistreating his daughter or putting his career ahead of her welfare. After all, he's been bashing gay marriage for years apparently. It's wonderful that he's now seen the light and we should obviously welcome that. But put him on a pedestal as a hero? I don't know about that.
Assessing whether he's a hero is more complicated than Vanasco suggests.
-Jeremy Love
"gay is not an insult."
myspace.com/gayisnot
Thank you