Human Rights Campaign Names Alphonso David as New President

Human Rights Campaign Names Alphonso David as New President

Today, the Human Rights Campaign announced that Alphonso David, an accomplished and nationally-recognized LGBTQ civil rights lawyer and advocate, will lead the organization beginning in August. David will be the first civil rights lawyer and the first person of color to serve as President of HRC in the organization’s nearly 40-year history. 

David most recently made history as the first openly gay Counsel to the Governor of the State of New York and, before that, served as the first Deputy Secretary and Counsel for Civil Rights in New York. In these roles, he played an integral role in securing marriage equality in New York in 2011, banning the abusive practice of so-called “conversion therapy” on minors, establishing non-discrimination protections for transgender New Yorkers, expanding Medicaid coverage to cover transition-related care, making it easier to amend gender markers on birth certificates, and enacting policies and regulations to support people living with HIV and drive new diagnoses to an all-time low statewide. He has also helped lead efforts to expand access to reproductive healthcare, restore voting rights to New Yorkers, advance workplace protections for disadvantaged communities, and require access to free translation services in essential state services. Prior to his work for New York State, David served as a staff attorney at Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund. 

With more than three million members, the Human Rights Campaign is the largest LGBTQ civil rights organization in the United States and around the globe. Founded in 1980, HRC has grown into one of the most effective advocacy organizations in America, leading the way to expand LGBTQ protections at every level of government, elect pro-equality lawmakers, defend the fundamental civil rights of LGBTQ people, and work through groundbreaking Foundation programs to enhance the lived experiences of LGBTQ people at school, work and in every community. HRC has played a pivotal role in sweeping progress for LGBTQ people over the last several decades, from winning marriage equality and passing federal hate crimes legislation, to advancing comprehensive LGBTQ non-discrimination legislation through Congress, to working with thousands of companies to expand workplace protections, to repealing ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ and banning so-called ‘conversion therapy’ in a growing number of states.

In a new HRC video released today, Difference is Our Strength, incoming President Alphonso David shares how his life story and career as a civil rights attorney prepared him to lead HRC forward: “I believe that together, we can harness the strength that’s inherent in our differences, to stand together in the face of fear and division. And that’s exactly what the Human Rights Campaign was built for,” said David.

“If we want to win full equality, that’s going to require us to come together, to dig deep, to be resilient, to embrace our differences, to tenaciously defend the most vulnerable among us, to fight with every ounce of determination we have. I promise you this, I will fight for each and every one of us. All I ask is that you join me, that you join the Human Rights Campaign in our fight for true equality. In unity, we will fight back and we will win.” 

 

 

“Alphonso has devoted his career to expanding the civil rights of LGBTQ people across New York State and the nation,” said HRC Board Foundation Board Chair Deb Taft. “At a time when LGBTQ people, women, people of color, immigrants and refugees, and so many others are being confronted with daily attacks on our most basic rights, Alphonso is the fierce, compassionate, and strategic leader HRC and our broader movement for equality needs.”

“As we approach the Human Rights Campaign’s 40th year and the most important election cycle of our lives in 2020, HRC has never been stronger or better positioned to lead,” said HRC Board Chair John Ruffier. “When it comes to maximizing the electoral power of millions of LGBTQ voters and our allies, or to defending the fundamental rights of our community, or to protecting the most vulnerable among us, I know that Alphonso will ensure that HRC continues to lead the way.”

David will be the seventh president of the Human Rights Campaign, succeeding Chad Griffin, who has served since 2012. Below is David’s professional biography. 

Alphonso B. David

Click here for a headshot. 

Alphonso B. David is a civil rights attorney, policymaker, advocate, and law professor with significant litigation and management experience in the public, private and not-for-profit sectors. Mr. David has been at the forefront of the movement for LGBTQ equality for more than a decade and worked at both the state and national level.

In 2015, Mr. David was appointed by New York Governor Andrew Cuomo to serve as Counsel to the Governor. In this role, he has functioned as the Governor’s chief counsel and principal legal advisor, and managed all significant legal and policy deliberations affecting New York State, including evaluating proposed legislation; implementing laws and policies and formulating the State’s posture in both affirmative and defensive litigation.

Prior to his appointment as the Governor’s Chief Counsel, Mr. David served for four years in the Governor’s cabinet as the Deputy Secretary and Counsel for Civil Rights, the first position of its kind in New York State. In this capacity, he was responsible for a full range of legal, policy, legislative and operational matters affecting civil rights and labor throughout the State. Mr. David also previously served as Special Deputy Attorney General for Civil Rights for the Office of the New York State Attorney General, where he managed Assistant Attorneys General on a variety of civil rights investigations and affirmative litigation, including employment and housing discrimination, fair lending, immigration, reproductive rights and anti-bias claims. Further, he previously served as Deputy Commissioner and Special Counselor at the New York State Division of Human Rights.

Prior to working in the public sector, Mr. David served as a staff attorney at the Lambda Legal Defense and Educational Fund. At Lambda Legal, Mr. David litigated precedent-setting civil rights cases across the nation affecting lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer individuals as well as those living with HIV and AIDS. He handled both affirmative and defensive matters relating to marriage, parenting rights, discrimination in schools and access to health care. In addition, Mr. David served as a litigation associate at the law firm Blank Rome LLP. He began his legal career as a judicial clerk to the Honorable Clifford Scott Green in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

For the past decade, Mr. David has served as an Adjunct Professor of Law. He began his work in academia with Fordham University Law School and continued at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law.

He is a graduate of the University of Maryland and Temple University School of Law.

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11 inspiring tweets from Pride events around the U.S.

11 inspiring tweets from Pride events around the U.S.

Photo Credit: GLAAD

Throughout the month of June, people have celebrated Pride Month with Pride events around the United States. By expressing our love for the LGBTQ community, we are able to spread awareness as well as teach youth that being LGBTQ is beautiful. As we head into the final weekend of Pride Month, we wanted to highlight some of the amazing Pride celebrations that have already taken place so far. Here are some of the inspiring and powerful tweets from all across the nation:

I was proud to march in today’s #BuffaloPride parade. We are all stronger when we are ALL included. Today, we stand up & celebrate our diversity, & tomorrow we continue fighting for equal rights across the City of Buffalo, all of Erie Cty, NYS, & this entire country. pic.twitter.com/J02gldam9B

— Lisa Chimera (@Lisa4Legislator) June 2, 2019

.@scaldwell15 of @NERevolution became the first active professional athlete to march in the Boston Pride Parade! #SoccerForAll

Watch here: t.co/sVuDyJchIg

: @jeff_lemieux pic.twitter.com/FXFX1oW17h

— MLS WORKS (@MLSWORKS) June 16, 2019

#LAPride this year felt like a dream there was so much love everywhere and i couldnt stop smiling. it was my mom and sister’s first pride too which made this year significantly more special. i am SO grateful to have people in my life who love and accept me for all that i am pic.twitter.com/V5hpFjfogz

— drew patrick (@imdrewpatrick) June 10, 2019

Well, #ClevelandPride was amazing. So many people were there! When I watched the parade walking, it all just hit me and I cried. Just…being in such a welcoming space and free to be me. It was humbling and wonderful.

— Rhonda Merwarth (@RhondaMerwarth) June 1, 2019

#AlbanyPride had all these little children with their moms and dads. Teaching kids early on to not hate other humans seems like a good parenting strategy.

— Aliya (@DocAliya) June 10, 2019

This weekend was my first experience at #minneapolispride I truly don’t understand how anyone could hate such a loving event. Everyone is welcome and love is everywhere. Thank you Minneapolis for welcoming everyone and being such an amazing love filled city .

— Meredith Hackler (@MhacklerTV) June 24, 2019

Today the Pride Flag was raised at Cincinnati City Hall for the first time. Thank you to all the leaders who made this happen. As @GregLandsman said, “this is your city. You belong here. You are loved here. This is your home” #CincinnatiPride pic.twitter.com/QZW9rYQtDk

— Caroline (@c_bright28) June 21, 2019

Don’t let Tennessee fool you.. #Nashville LOVES. The BIGGEST parade in city history is the first ever #NashvillePride parade. So proud of this town pic.twitter.com/QQSo6TvdnC

— Todd Walker (@ToddWalker__) June 22, 2019

I literally couldn’t have asked for a better first time in drag! Chicago pride was a blast pic.twitter.com/uuJSbsJNOn

— Lola Vuitton (@thelolavuitton) June 25, 2019

Pride this past weekend with my beautiful girlfriend
#DallasPride#Pride2019 pic.twitter.com/XZ5z32upQG

— Daisy Saldana (@Daisy_saldana97) June 3, 2019

I’m at City Hall today, celebrating love and being an ally to my brothers and sisters. We’re a small town, but a mighty one. #AlbanyPride pic.twitter.com/bGga9SfiND

— Dominic Vieira (@jrmintsforme) July 22, 2017

June 25, 2019

www.glaad.org/blog/11-inspiring-tweets-pride-events-around-us

Telenovela Featuring Gay Couple as Lead Characters is Historic First for Mexican TV: WATCH

Telenovela Featuring Gay Couple as Lead Characters is Historic First for Mexican TV: WATCH

Juntos, El Corazon Nunca se Equivoca, (Together, the Heart is Never Wrong), a Mexican telenovela (soap opera), made history this week as the first to feature a gay couple as lead characters, Reuters reports.

The soap is a spin-off of another massively-popular telenovela, Mi Marido Tiene Mas Familia, on which the characters, Aristoteles (Emilio Osorio) and Temo (Joaquin Bondoni), first appeared. In the new show they move to Mexico City to attend a university.

Check out the trailer below.

The post Telenovela Featuring Gay Couple as Lead Characters is Historic First for Mexican TV: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Telenovela Featuring Gay Couple as Lead Characters is Historic First for Mexican TV: WATCH

Don Lemon stares down death threats to call out racism & homophobia

Don Lemon stares down death threats to call out racism & homophobia

CNN Anchor Don Lemon

Name: Don Lemon, 53

Who he is: News anchor

How he’s contributed: The host of CNN Tonight and self-proclaimed “Twitter king,” Lemon is fearless, whether the topic is Donald Trump, gun violence, racism, or homophobia. He came out publicly in 2011 in a New York Times interview about his memoir, Transparent, which details his youth in Louisiana and the years he spent working his way into the echelons of national broadcast news. Even before that, he revealed on-air that he’d been molested as a child. In typical Lemon fashion, his statement wasn’t planned, but a spontaneous and emotionally powerful response to a pedophile scandal he was reporting on.

With the advent of the Fearmonger-in-Chief, Lemon upped the ante, opening one of his broadcasts with, “This is CNN Tonight, I’m Don Lemon. The president of the United States is racist,” after Trump called Haiti, El Salvador, and African nations “shithole countries.” After two black men were killed at a Kentucky supermarket in 2018, Lemon called white men “the biggest terror threat in the country”—an assertion that resulted in a Twitter hate storm, a barrage of racial slurs, and even calls for his lynching. He’s been a favorite target of Trumpians, even withstanding a bomb threat made during the taping of his CNN show, and yet he just won’t quiet down. 

Lemon’s humanity is often on display. He’s made on-air gaffes and isn’t afraid to ask unpopular questions—we’re assuming for rhetorical purposes—such as “Is being gay a choice?” While taping a 2017 New Year’s Eve special in New Orleans, a visibly tipsy Lemon kissed his boyfriend Tim Malone on air, exclaiming, “I love you, baby!” For any public LGBTQ figure to kiss their partner on live television is still a boundary-breaking act—even more so for a black man. Lemon and Malone were engaged to be married in April.

Why we’re proud: At great personal risk to himself (see: death threats), Lemon continues to push the boundaries of equal treatment for both LGBTQ people and African-Americans, and especially for the intersection of the two. Earlier this year, when Kevin Hart appeared on the Ellen show after being fired by the Oscars for his anti-gay tweets, Lemon addressed the issue directly, saying, “We in the African-American community need to stop low-key cosigning homophobia. It’s not cool,” and asking, “If I don’t speak for that community, who’s going to?”

And Lemon doesn’t just break barriers while onscreen. This touching story by Garren Keith Gaynor details how Lemon turned a backstage interview at the Native Son Awards into a personal coaching session, encouraging the young reporter to be honest and come out to his mother, who was likely “stronger than you think.” Gaynor did so, with great results.

As Lemon said during their interview:

“Being out both personally and professionally is liberating. I am a completely emancipated person. I am free. That’s a great place for people to strive to be. I think everyone should be out in all places.”

www.queerty.com/don-lemon-stares-death-threats-call-racism-homophobia-wherever-sees-20190625?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Zachary Quinto, Wilson Cruz, Joel Grey and 15 Celebs Portray Trump Officials in Play Ripped from the Pages of the Mueller Report: WATCH

Zachary Quinto, Wilson Cruz, Joel Grey and 15 Celebs Portray Trump Officials in Play Ripped from the Pages of the Mueller Report: WATCH

The Investigation: A Search for the Truth in Ten Acts, a play based on the Mueller Report, got a staged reading last night by actors Annette Bening, Kevin Kline, John Lithgow, Frederick Weller, Ben McKenzie, Michael Shannon, Noah Emmerich, Justin Long, Jason Alexander, Gina Gershon, Wilson Cruz, Joel Grey, Alyssa Milano, Kyra Sedgwick, Alfre Woodard, Piper Perabo, Zachary Quinto, and Aidan Quinn.

The play was written by Robert Schenkkan and produced by Law Works. You can watch some highlights below, plus, the full streamed production underneath that (it starts with a 1:24 trailer).

The post Zachary Quinto, Wilson Cruz, Joel Grey and 15 Celebs Portray Trump Officials in Play Ripped from the Pages of the Mueller Report: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Zachary Quinto, Wilson Cruz, Joel Grey and 15 Celebs Portray Trump Officials in Play Ripped from the Pages of the Mueller Report: WATCH

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: June 25, 2019

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: June 25, 2019

TODAY — MARKING SIX YEARS SINCE SHELBY COUNTY V. HOLDER DECISION: On June 25, 2013, the U.S. Supreme Court delivered a blow to civil rights in Shelby County v. Holder by striking down a key provision in the Voting Right Act (VRA). More from HRC

Six years after #SCOTUS gutted the Voting Rights Act, @HRC joins with our partners across movements in urging Congress to #RestoreTheVote. Expanding access to the ballot box & protecting our democracy are central to the fight for full equality. t.co/l8struR303

— Chad Griffin (@ChadHGriffin) June 24, 2019

HRC JOINS ACTIVISTS IN LETTER TO SEC OF STATE MIKE POMPEO ASSERTING  STATE DEPARTMENT “HAS ABANDONED FULL SUPPORT OF LGBTI PEOPLE”: “We cannot but conclude that you and the president have embarked on a clear-cut effort to undermine LGBTI progress at home and disavow LGBTI populations abroad,” the letter says. More from The Washington Blade

TUESDAY TWEET — JOIN HRC IN STOPPING HHS PROPOSAL THAT WOULD ENDANGER LGBTQ HEALTH CARE:  A Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) proposal seeks to strip away explicit health care protections on the basis of gender identity, effectively targeting transgender and gender non-conforming people’s access to critical care. More from HRC

.@HHSgov seeks to rip away health care protections on the basis of gender identity. This is not only discriminatory, but against the public health & mission of HHS.

Share your comment & tell them discrimination in health care is wrong. #ProtectOurHealth t.co/yOORArVnCt pic.twitter.com/XZQUM7RCVF

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) June 24, 2019

NEW REPORT SPOTLIGHTS CHALLENGES FACING LGBTQ COLORADANS: The Colorado Health Foundation (@COHealthFDN) finds that LGTBQ Coloradans face challenges when it comes to financial stability, mental health and substance use issues. More from Public News Service. 

PRIDE MONTH ROUNDUP

IN USA TODAY — “WHY WE OWE PRIDE TO BLACK TRANSGENDER WOMEN”: “Black transgender women deserve credit for the state of LGBTQ progress today,” writes Rasha Ali (@RashaFierce) and David Oliver (@doliver8) in an oped. Read more in USA Today

#SLIDEFORPRIDE — AKA HAVING FUN WHILE DOING GOOD: Tinder is partnering with HRC and asking participants to email their senators urging support for the Equality Act. More from Bustle and Pix11.

Hey NYC. Head to Flatiron Plaza today and #slideforpride! Each person who slides we will donate $10 to @HRC. Come slide! pic.twitter.com/TvSEqjQK3F

— Tinder (@Tinder) June 24, 2019

SMITHSONIAN MUSEUM OPENS NEW EXHIBIT, “ILLEGAL TO BE YOU: GAY HISTORY BEYOND STONEWALL”: More from New York Daily News

GLOBAL EQUALITY NEWS

STRUGGLE AMONG PROGRESS — A GLOBAL REVIEW OF THE STATE OF LGBTQ EQUALITY IN THE PAST YEAR: From Taiwan legalizing same-sex marriage and India’s Supreme Court decriminalizing same-sex relations, to the ongoing systemic violence against LGBTQ people in Chechnya, J. Lester Feder (@jlfeder) provides the update at The New York Times

“THEY CAME DURING THE NIGHT” — GAY MAN DESCRIBES HORRIFIC TORTURE IN CHECHNYA: “I don’t feel safe here at all,” said Ahmed. More from NBC

UKRAINE LGBTQ PRIDE HAS HISTORIC TURNOUT, ENCOUNTERS PROTESTERS DURING PARADE: More from Pink News and Radio Free Europe

  • Georgia’s first Pride march called off amid political turmoil. More from Openly
  • Costa Rica celebrates Pride for first time since its courts legalized marriage equality. It’s the first country in Central American to recognize that right. More from Reuters

READING RAINBOW – Bookmark now to read on your lunch break!

Mashable spotlights how Afro-Latinx artist and organizer Sage Grace Dolan-Sandrino (@graceadvocates) showcases activism through storytelling; My San Antonio shares list of the most LGBTQ-friendly cities; HuffPost shares ‘American Crime’ star Connor Jessup’s (@connorjessup) powerful coming out story

“If you’re gay, bi, trans, two-spirit or questioning, if you’re confused, if you’re in pain or you feel you’re alone, if you aren’t or you don’t: You make the world more surprising and bearable.”

Thank you @connorjessup for sharing your truth and inspiring other LGBTQ people.��️‍�� t.co/oOA7atEBH6

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) June 25, 2019

Have news? Send us your news and tips at [email protected]. Click here to subscribe to #AM_Equality and follow @HRC for all the latest news. Thanks for reading!

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