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Nearly three full days have passed since the Democratic State Committee's
disgraceful anti-LGBTI, transphobic behavior at the Democratic State
Conference last Friday night -- and still we have not gotten an apology, let
alone concrete action to make the party more diverse and
LGBTI-responsive.  Enough is enough.

We at Garden State Equality ask you to sign our petition at
http://eqfed.org/campaign/NJDSC, which will go directly to Democratic state
chairman Joe Cryan, Democratic state vice-chairwoman Dana Redd, and
Democratic state executive director Diane Legreide.

If you'd like a review of what happened, here it is:

Each Friday at the Conference, different constituencies have different
Caucus meetings.  This year, three organizations, Garden State Equality, New
Jersey Stonewell Democrats and the Gender Rights Advocacy Association of New
Jersey, produced the LGBTI Caucus.  We decided to do something different --
to present an entertainer at the end of our Caucus meeting.  We had an open
bar and hired a Cher impersonator.  Last year's LGBTI Caucus attracted 8
people.  This year's attracted more than 120.

In a Caucus that began at 6:00 pm, "Cher" only came on at 6:52 pm.  It was
hardly as if serious business weren't being done.

But before the event started, Diane Legreide pointed to "Cher" and said the
following:

"We cannot have THAT walking in the hallway."

"You cannot have THAT inside your Caucus."

"The State Committee will not have someone like THAT attending dinner --
THAT cannot come inside the ballroom."

"What if the press sees THAT -- what if they report on THAT in tomorrow's
papers?"

Diane delivered these statements as a diatribe in the hallway, ironically
drawing attention to an intolerance that was far more embarrassing than
anything around her.  She was also completely unself-conscious about
referring to a transgender person repeatedly as THAT -- as not even a person
-- right next to Barbra Casbar, a member of the transgender community who is
a leader in the three organizations sponsoring the Caucus.

We answered:  "Diane, it's our caucus and transgender people are part of our
community."

Diane's response?  "It's not your event, it's our event.  If THAT's going to
be inside the room, we're going to boycott your Caucus."

Senator Loretta Weinberg and her staffer Debbie Francica were outraged on
behalf of the LGBTI community.  They went to Diane and to Chair Joe Cryan
and told it like it was:

"We can't believe your reaction.  You're acting like Republicans.  This is
supposed to be a Democratic convention where we embrace diversity, not a
Republican convention where we're afraid of it.  Transgender people are part
of this community and they're entitled to be in that room and they include
people like Cher."

We certainly don't blame Diane Legreide's meltdown on Governor Corzine,
whose campaigns, Senate staff and gubernatorial Administration have all been
more diverse than any we've ever seen in New Jersey.  Governor Corzine has
appointed an unprecedented number of women, people of color and LGBTI New
Jerseyans at the most senior levels of government.  He succeeded
dramatically in lifting the glass ceiling.  God bless him.

But the State Committee continues to be an uptight, insensitive and
LGBTI-uncomfortable mess that does not reflect the Democratic electorate in
New Jersey, likely the country's most progressive Democratic electorate in
likely the country's most progressive state.  At the two previous year's
conventions, party officials repeatedly singled out every constituency in
their speeches except for the LGBTI community.  And they wonder why the
LGBTI community wasn't attending the annual Democratic convention in higher
numbers, in contrast to Garden State Equality's town meetings that have
drawn 10,000 people, straight and LGBTI alike, since 2003.  That's an
average of 400 people per town meeting.

Diane Legreide's young operatives said her hallway diatribe reflected
Chairman Joe Cryan's sentiments as well.  That's surprising -- we've found
Joe to be a progressive, inclusive guy.

We're troubled by the "boycott" of our Caucus when the state committee has
no problem with our community's money and volunteers.  In the past two
years, Garden State Equality has raised nearly $400,000, including more than
well over $100,000 for political candidates.  Like our state's progressive
organizations, we at GSE have triaged droves of volunteers to Democratic
candidates.  We conceived and implemented a huge GOTV operation in 2005 and
are about to unveil one for this fall's campaign.

The message Diane Legreide sent was this:  We will accept you in the LGBTI
community so long as you look and act a certain way.

Well, she and her state committee had better embrace the LGBTI community's
diversity right now.   Our community is a rich and proud mosaic.  We range
from those identify with genders different from their birth genders... to
those who like to cross-dress... to those wear traditional clothing and even
religious vestments.  No one has the right to tell us who in our community
is acceptable and who is not.  We are all acceptable and we all deserve
respect.

If a state party leader in a comparably progressive state like California,
New York or Massachusetts delived a transphobic, anti-LGBTI diatribe like
that which Diane Legreide did in the hallway of this convention, that
official might well be fired.

In the petition you're about to sign, you will not only seek an apology, but
concrete action.

It's time for the state Democratic Party to endorse marriage equality
outright.  The state Democratic Parties of California, New York,
Massachusetts, Washington State, Iowa, New Mexico and Texas have done
so.  But it's New Jersey that has the strongest poll numbers for marriage
equality in America, where two-thirds of all state Democrats favor marriage
equality.   If our side loses the marriage case, God forbid, the state
Democratic Party must endorse marriage-equality legislation.  Garden State
Equality and our millions of straight allies across New Jersey will not take
no for an answer.

It's time for the state Democratic Party to get the transgender equality
bill passed this year -- 70 percent of New Jersey favors the bill whereas
only 19 percent oppose it.  The Democrats have not even posted the bill in
committee, stalling for nearly two years.

Quite simply, it's time for the State Democratic Committee to leave the
Jurassic Era.  This is New Jersey, an extraordinary state with a rich
history of being on the cutting edge of civil rights in America, and we
demand no less.

If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to contact me, Steven
Goldstein, GSE chair, at (917) 449-8918 or [log in to unmask]
Thanks so much - and remember, please forward this email to everyone in New
Jersey you know.  We want this petition to be big.