A butterfly slay. Credit: Jax Ko

The Stranger will go on the record saying we love gay people. We love being gay people, being friends with gay people, dating gay people, and, heck, we even love electing gay people!

But none of that stops us from critiquing Seattle’s first lesbian Mayor for tear-gassing the gayborhood during Pride Month, and we certainly don’t want to see the likes of former Mayor Ed Murray creeping back into the halls of power.

Just like straight elected officials, LGBTQ elected officials can sometimes slay, sometimes betray, and–when you take off your rainbow-tinted glasses–sometimes they wind up somewhere in the gray. Let’s take a quick little look-see at some primary examples.

Slay 🙂

Let’s start with the positive–it is Pride Month, after all.

Every single member of the current Washington State Legislative LGBTQ+ Caucus has slayed a time or two, and every year they all spearhead and/or support bills to improve and protect our civil rights. Yes, even Sen. Jamie Pedersen *grumble grumble*. But some slays have been more major than others.

Wayyyyy back in 2011, Pedersen passed a bill legalizing and regulating surrogacy, opening up opportunities for queer people looking to become parents. He also carried the gay marriage bill for years before its passage. More recently, he helped repeal antiquated “lewd conduct” rules to free the nipple near booze in gay clubs and in strip clubs.

Sen. Claire Wilson championed the Comprehensive Sex Ed bill in 2019 and sponsored legislation to establish the Washington State LGBTQ Commission, ensuring that queer people have a seat at every table. That same year, Sen. Marko Liias passed a bill codifying a bunch of best practices related to student records, privacy, and restroom access for trans kids. Last year, Liias also staunchly supported and defended legislation to protect trans runaways.

In 2024, Sen. Emily Randall passed a bill to ensure that religious hospital mergers and acquisitions do not restrict access to reproductive and gender-affirming care.

Beyond more obvious wins for the girls, the gays, and the theys, some legislators also understand that queer and trans people suffer under wealth inequality. Rep. Laurie Jinkins sponsored a capital gains tax every year from 2012 until it finally passed. Rep. Nicole Macri fights hard against the landlord lobby to protect renters from gouging. And Rep. Beth Doglio state house has to approve a really neat bill to give striking workers unemployment insurance benefits.

Gray :/

Jax Ko

But representation is not a magic pill to get all the policies that queer people want, partially because queer people are not a monolith of blue-haired baristas like the internet would have you believe.

Sometimes LGBTQ politicians feel the pressure to conform to the moderate status quo because they face more scrutiny than straight peers. And sometimes, politicians of all sexualities just suck.

Queer communities demanded that the State Legislature pass rent control this session, but Sen. Pedersen decided to ride the fence instead of taking a strong stand with the progressive, working-class gays. When cops put gay nightlife under attack because of prudish laws around nudity and alcohol, Jinkins, the first lesbian Speaker of the House, didn’t do much speaking to the press! Citing her public health background, she reportedly objected to the bill due to concerns over the expansion of alcohol licenses. She eventually voted the right way, but queer people, strippers, and queer strippers deserved a stronger advocate in Jinkins.

Some have betrayed the gays in more subtle ways. For example, Liias floated a bad car tabs “fix” in 2020 that would have slashed more than a $1 billion in transit funding. LGBTQ+ people need reliable public transit! They can’t drive! Or at least I am a queer person who can’t. Luckily for us all, the proposal never landed.

Betray >:(

Jax Ko

Of course, those weak moments from the caucus sorta pale in comparison to the shit gay Republicans and mayors have gotten up to.

When he was in the State Legislature, Republican James West, who chaired committees and served for a year as Senate Majority Leader, voted against gay rights bills and supported anti-gay bills. He later became Mayor of Spokane, but he lost the gig over a gay sex scandal in 2006. Bruh.

On the other side of the mountains, Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan totally eroded public trust by allegedly dropping her phone into a tide pool, destroying text messages that could have revealed critical information about her horrendous handling of the CHOP in 2020. But she’s somehow less disgraceful than Murray, who left his position as Mayor in 2017 after being outed as an alleged child sex abuser, allegations he denies.

As much as The Stranger would love to see more gay, lesbian, trans, and bisexual women with boyfriends in the halls of power, we understand that we shouldn’t elect just anyone with pronouns in their bio. Some queer people have shit opinions. Some queer people have great opinions. And, of course, no person–much less a politician under the crushing pressure of their donors and the institutions themselves–is perfect. But Rep. Macri comes pretty close. ν

Hannah Krieg is a staff writer at The Stranger covering everything that goes down at Seattle City Hall. Importantly, she is a Libra. She is also The Stranger's resident Gen Z writer, with an affinity for...

12 replies on “The Gays Who Slayed and the Gays Who Betrayed”

  1. “…Murray, who left his position as Mayor in 2017 after being outed as an alleged child sex abuser, allegations he denies.”

    When Murray was first elected to the legislature, there were no statewide protections for LGBTQ+ persons. Anyone living outside enclaves such as Seattle could be fired, evicted, etc. for non-heterosexuality. Gay marriage was a pipe dream. Sen. Murray accomplished all of it. He built the house; everyone you’re praising here has merely dressed the windows.

    Along the way, he made more than a few enemies out of some very, very hateful bigots. One of them provided legal representation for two of his accusers; another advised a third of his accusers to go public; all three were felons, convicted for crimes of deceit. The Stranger should never have swallowed the emissions of these male convicts; the voters of Seattle never have.

  2. TL:DR those in the LGBTQ are a diverse group with a diverse range of political opinions and thinking they are automatically going to prefer TS political positions is really dumb. It’s kind of feels like evaluating political candidates based on traits and not policy positions is equally dumb.

  3. Have you guys missed the last 50 years of American politics? The “moral majority” drummed LGBTQ people out of the conservative movement decades ago and have been leveraging anti-LGBTQ policy as a wedge issue ever since. Of course some individuals can be conservative but they’re a rarity for a reason. Supporting progressive political causes is a matter of self-preservation for queer people.

  4. It’s messed up that we still need to remind people in 2024 that sexual orientation is but one facet of a human and there are all kinds of people so be critical thinkers y’all.

  5. Republican support for same sex marriage is in decline right now because queer people are once again in the wedge issue hot-seat for this election cycle (RIP critical race theory, 2020—2022).

    The idea that “gender ideology” is somehow distinct from the general revulsion movement conservatives feel for LGBTQ people is a fantasy straight out of “First They Came.” Same hateful rhetoric, same discriminatory goals, slightly different approach. The court could take away marriage equality just as easily as they gave it to us, and your willingness to throw trans people under the bus only helps them advance their goals.

    https://www.statista.com/statistics/1249216/support-for-same-sex-marriage-in-the-united-states-by-political-party/

  6. Gee, it’s almost like far-right extremists have been harassing employees and calling in bomb threats over Pride merchandise because there has been an increased focus on LGBTQ issues in conservative media over the past year. Are you trying to prove my point for me?

    “Cultural divisions” is a nice way of saying one side of our culture wants queer people erased from public life and the other simply wants to live their lives in peace. Queer people existing is not the problem, it’s the bigots. It’s always the bigots.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/minnesota/news/lgbtq-leaders-concerned-target-removes-pride-merch-violent-threats-harassment/

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2023/06/04/target-lgbtq-culture-wars/

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2023/06/12/target-bomb-threat-pride

  7. My god you’re pathetic, a classic “enlightened centrist” running defense for bigots while thinking you’re above it all: https://thenib.com/centrist-history-2-0be/

    Let the record reflect that in the span of 3 comments, you’ve moved your goalposts from “America was cool with gay people until ‘gender ideology’ happened,” to “Pride is so over,” to “it’s NBD that bigots are bullying our institutions into submission through the threat of violence because queer people will continue to exist.” How do you type these things out and not immediately die from embarrassment?

  8. @3: And LGBTQ elected officials who are worthless on gay-rights issues have been an issue in Seattle since the earliest days of the Stranger:

    “In 1991, Sherry D. Harris was the first out black lesbian elected to public office in the United States. This also gave her the distinction of being the first African American woman on the Seattle City Council in Washington State.”

    (https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/harris-sherry-d-1957/)

    She spent what would be her only term of office demonstrating that being female, Black, and queer did not mean she cared in the slightest about the issues facing those communities.

    In particular, the early 1990s saw growing threats to the LGBTQ community of Washington state. Bigots from both outside and inside the state started trying to remove civil-rights protections from LGBTQ persons. CM Harris was so utterly worthless against this threat, Dan Savage performed in drag at a fund-raiser for her 1995 opponent, under the stage name, “Scary Harris.”

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