Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Former GOProud Founder Slams Republican Party's "Cultural Disease"


As many readers know, I was once, many years ago now at this point, an active Republican serving on the Virginia Beach City Committee for the GOP for over eight years.   That's where I got to know the now indicted Bob McDonnell.  But when the Christofascists takeover of the Republican Party of Virginia in earnest, I resigned from the GOP in disgust over the ongoing fusion of far right Christian religious belief with the GOP platform and, worse yet, reforming the civil laws to enforce Christofascist goals.  Many gays in the GOP did not figure out the full toxicity of the GOP or the futility of trying to "reform the party from the inside" as quickly as I did.  A case in point is Jimmy LaSalvia, a co-founder of GOProud.  In an interview with Michelangelo Signorile, LaSalvia lets loose on the religious extremist swamp fever that grips the GOP.  I wish more Republicans - both gay and straight - would open their eyes and walk away from the GOP which deserves to wither and die.  Here are highlights from the interview:
In a fiery interview, the co-founder of the conservative gay group GOProud, which made headlines in recent years after it was banned from the annual Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), lashed out at the GOP days after announcing he's left the Republican Party, having registered as an Independent.

Jimmy LaSalvia said that among the reasons why he fled the party was that the Republican National Committee (RNC) chairman Reince Preibus told him that he was afraid of getting “a phone call from Tony Perkins [of the Family Research Council]” if the party spoke out against anti-gay rhetoric. LaSalvia charged Preibus, House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), and other Republican leaders with lacking “the backbone to say to the forces of intolerance, ‘You either change or you can’t come with us on this journey.'”

LaSalvia said the GOP suffers from “a cultural disease that can’t be fixed,” and charged that the recent crop of GOP potential presidential contenders, including New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R), refuse to confront the problem. He also spoke out on the recent controversy over attempts at outing GOP Congressman Aaron Schock (R-IL.), saying if Schock is gay, he has "lied about it repeatedly."  

“Intellectually, they know that the party has to change and modernize,” LaSalvia said in an interview with me on Friday on SiriusXM Progress. “It’s kind of like the drug addict who knows they have a problem, who knows the drug is not good for them, but can’t [get off the drug].”

“I did say I was embarrassed to be a Republican,” he said. “The 2012 election is when I really came to the realization that no matter how hard we tried, no matter how fast support grew, there were still the anti-gay forces in the Republican Party. While I thought they would dissolve over time, the truth is they’re tolerated. They tolerate anti-gay people and that shows a cultural disconnect and they’re so out of touch that I think you can’t fix it.”

“They cannot win the presidency with the cultural problem they have,” he said. "The problem all of those people have is that they’re not willing to stand up and say, 'The forces of intolerance in our party are wrong.' Chris Christie has the best ability to connect with people and people trust him, but he does what everyone else does and says,’Well that’s not me.’ And honestly, if you’re going to win elections, that’s not enough. You have to say, ‘Those people are wrong,’ because bigotry is something different from everything else. If you have people demonizing gay people, you have to say,’That’s wrong,’ because everyone in American knows that’s wrong. If you can’t acknowledge that, if you only say, “That’s not me, they don’t speak for me,’ that’s not enough. Because their bigotry will stain you.”
LaSalvia also addressed the recent controversy over the alleged outing of Congressman Schock (R-IL), who has voted with, and supported the positions of, anti-gay conservatives for the past several years.

"I have no idea if Aaron Schock is gay or not," he said. "And frankly, I think he's wrong on all those issues. And he's free to be wrong. The problem that Aaron is going to have if in fact he turns out to be gay, is that he's lied about it repeatedly. "

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