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Rumors of ENDA Slow-Down In The House

by: DrJillianTWeiss

Wed Nov 11, 2009 at 21:44:22 PM EST


( - promoted by Louise)

Reposted from Bilerico.com 

Congressional offices are closed today for Veterans Day, so we can take a break from calling our Senators. As you know, we have been working on moving the Employment Non-Discrimination Act in the U.S. Senate, where the real fight is expected to take place. We are missing 4 votes in the Senate, but the House is considered by insiders to have a solid grip on ENDA.

If hints of rumors that I'm getting are good indicators, however, then their grip may be slipping, just a tiny bit. I have heard from D.C. insiders that some of the more conservative House Democrats are beginning to raise concerns about ENDA. The right-ward shift indicated by the New Jersey and Virginia gubernatorial races and the Maine vote makes them nervous, and they don't want to be forced to vote on controversial legislation. This crisis of confidence is not unexpected, of course, as the same thing happened in 2007. ENDA was considered to have very good chances of passage in 2007, but when crunch time came, first-term Democrats in conservative districts came forward to express their concerns. The device used to mollify them was the removal of gender identity protections from the bill, and the bill then sailed through the House.

Could the same thing happen again? Fortunately not. It would be impossible because Representatives Frank, Baldwin and Polis have emphatically stated that they would not permit that to happen.

Wait....just kidding....these are politicians we're talking about. Of course it could happen again, and from what I'm hearing, we're not moving in a good direction.

Am I misinterpreting? Read on, and you tell me.

DrJillianTWeiss :: Rumors of ENDA Slow-Down In The House
What They Were Saying Before Yesterday

After the House hearing in September, I learned from various sources that the next steps were a Senate hearing, and markup in the House, followed by a vote in the House before Thanksgiving. DC insiders were very confident about the House vote, feeling that they would have at least 230 votes for ENDA. I myself was wondering, because I didn't see 230 votes, and was only able to get a read on 214 likely yes votes. I tried to confirm some of those I considered unconfirmed, but I was told that the problem was in the Senate, not the House. The Senate, the Senate, the Senate. Not the House, not the House, not the House.

The timelines I heard were loose, and contingent on health care reform, but the thinking was a Senate hearing the first week in November, and markup in the House the following week. The Senate vote would take place in the New Year, perhaps January or February. Of course, as we get closer to midterm election campaigns, it becomes less and less viable to be pushing controversial bills.

The Senate hearing followed this timeline, but it also raised some eyebrows. While I thought it was very effective in addressing objections of businesses and religious organizations, there were only three Senators in attendance other than the Chair of the Committee and the bill's sponsor. There was only one gay witness and no transgender witnesses. But the testimony of the witnesses was well done, and the performance of Senator Franken gave no quarter to the witnesses who were trying to obfuscate the issues. I was satisfied.

The next thing I heard after the hearing was that markup would take place in two weeks, instead of the following week. I was not surprised because health reform was rightly taking precedence as an issue of tremendous importance. Then came the vote in the House on Saturday night, and the health reform bill was passed. I was glad to hear of the passage, but not glad to hear of the Stupak amendment, which effectively banned any insurance companies from covering abortions. That is outrageous and goes far beyond the current Hyde Amendment, which restricts federal funding for abortions. The conservative Democrats were themselves surprised, I heard, to be able to throw their weight around so effectively. This emboldened them, of course, and changed the thinking in DC about the power of the conservaDems. It didn't help that the margin of passage in the House was 5 votes.

Now that health care reform had moved through the House, in whatever damaged form, we could proceed to ENDA, right? Not right.

What They're Saying Now

Yesterday, I read the following in the Blade:

Progress on ENDA, DP benefits expected Action on other pro-LGBT legislation seems more imminent. Frank said Congress could advance the Employment Non-Discrimination Act and a bill providing partner benefits to LGBT federal employees in the near future. And the prospects for passing the Domestic Partnership Benefits & Obligations Act, he said, are the most promising. "That one I'm the most confident is going to become law because I think you have Senate support for it -- enough to get to the 60" votes needed to overcome a filibuster, Frank said.

Okay, so Rep. Frank is saying that another bill is more likely to pass than ENDA, the Domestic Partnership Benefits & Obligations Act. That bill would provide domestic partnership benefits to federal workers.

Wait, what just happened?

Why is the Domestic Partnership Benefits bill being mentioned in the same breath with ENDA, and not only in the same breath but as being more likely to pass than ENDA?

I have seen this happen before. Time and time again, bills on non-discrimination that would cover transgender people are loudly touted as "the next thing," an argument used to justify ignoring them in favor of other issues favored by more prominent gays, such as marriage, and domestic partnerships. After all, those more prominent gay people are not subjected to discrimination. They live in large, gay-friendly cities. They don't necessarily even know any one of their friends who have been subjected to blatant discrimination. Why get bent out of shape over ENDA? If conservaDems are concerned about ENDA, then no sense pushing it, right? We can always push something easier, like Domestic Partnership Benefits & Obligations Act that will affect only people in DC. That should be easy for the conservaDems to shrug off in their home districts,

You may wondering why I am being so trigger-hair sensitive. All that Representative Frank said is that the domestic partnership bill is doing well. Why should I get upset at that?

The Blade goes on to solidify these remarks.

DPB&O Noses Out ENDA



Here's the Blade again:

Frank, who's sponsoring ENDA in the House, said the bill is "in very good shape" and predicted the House Education & Labor Committee would mark up ENDA before year's end. He noted that a House floor vote is expected to occur no later than February.

February? Did he say House vote in February? Not...before Thanksgiving? Not...before the end of the year?

So wait, let me count....if the House vote takes place in February, and then proceeds to the Senate, which will need some time to do various procedural things before bring it to the Senate floor, that means that the Senate will be considering ENDA right around the time that midterm election campaigns begin.

That's a terrible time to ask the Senate to vote on this. If the conservaDems are nervous now, imagine how they will feel about taking a vote on homosexual rights and having it show up in bold on the news when people are focusing on the elections.

But wait, there's more.

"So I say," Frank said, "the schedule is the federal domestic partner benefits anytime in the next few months, ENDA out of the House in December or in February with the Senate voting in the spring, [and] 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' part of the military authorization, which means into the summer."

So now, domestic partner benefits have jumped in front of ENDA? And they're going to try to do ENDA around the same time as DADT? How many sponsors does ENDA have in the House? 189. How many for DPBO? 127. ENDA is way ahead of DPBO.

If things happen this way, ENDA supporters are in a LOT of trouble. They have just put ENDA on an ice floe and sent it toward the Bering Straits.

But the Blade follows with words of comfort from Allison Herwitt, legislative director for the Human Rights Campaign.

Herwitt, however, said HRC remains hopeful that a House vote on ENDA could take place before year's end, and that House and Senate committee markups for the Domestic Partnership Benefits & Obligations Act could also happen by that time.

They're "hopeful." Translation: All we've got are hopes. Not facts.

Never one to mince words, Rep. Frank was more blunt.

Still, Frank said there's a question of whether advocates can find 60 votes in the Senate to overcome a filibuster on ENDA and the proposed "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" repeal.

Excuse me, Representative Frank. We've got 42 co-sponsors in the Senate, and 56 likely yes votes in the Senate, and another 8 possibles in the Senate. What have you got on DPBO in the Senate? 24 Co-sponsors. I'm not against DPBO by any means, but saying that it has better chances than ENDA is not based on any evidence I can see.

My DC insider friends are telling me to calm down, there are no indications of an ENDA slow-down. There's not need to panic yet, they say. Why are you going off the deep end?

My answer is 2007.

I will wait to see what I hear tomorrow. Rep. Frank has rightly said in the past that we should spend our time lobbying Representatives and Senators who need lobbying, who are on the fence about ENDA. I have agreed with him wholeheartedly. We have been doing just that.

But if Rep. Frank is going to start saying let's put DPBO in front of ENDA and tack ENDA near a DADT vote, and do it during midterm campaign elections, I say that Rep. Frank, respectfully, you need to rethink that. We may need to start calling you, Rep. Frank, and Rep. Pelosi too, with demands for moving ENDA forward.

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Its time to party like its 1994
I have heard from D.C. insiders that some of the more conservative House Democrats are beginning to raise concerns about ENDA. The right-ward shift indicated by the New Jersey and Virginia gubernatorial races and the Maine vote makes them nervous, and they don't want to be forced to vote on controversial legislation. This crisis of confidence is not unexpected, of course, as the same thing happened in 2007. ENDA was considered to have very good chances of passage in 2007, but when crunch time came, first-term Democrats in conservative districts came forward to express their concerns. The device used to mollify them was the removal of gender identity protections from the bill, and the bill then sailed through the House.

Could the same thing happen again? Fortunately not. It would be impossible because Representatives Frank, Baldwin and Polis have emphatically stated that they would not permit that to happen.

Wait....just kidding....these are politicians we're talking about. Of course it could happen again, and from what I'm hearing, we're not moving in a good direction.

Its time to party like its 1994.

I guess the only question left is: Who will play the role of Sonny Bono this time around?

>^..^<


We need to focus our energy and time on
our organizations that should be lobbying for us with the Blue Dogs and other so-called Democrats.  It's shameful what these flea bitten cowards are doing to us.

History, I believe, furnishes no example of a priest-ridden people maintaining a free civil government.-- Thomas Jefferson

Ways to take action now
HRC has a whole web page full of ways to take action for ENDA.

http://www.hrc.org/sites/passe...

If you'd like another organizational path, then use the Equality Federation's action alert.

http://eqfed.org/eqfed/notice-...

Personally, I would currently urge folks to work on the House members in their states.  That's where the next vote is coming.  

The more yes votes we rack up in the House, the easier it will be to work on Senators.


It's not just ENDA and Trans people
they simply do not want any LGBT legislation going to floor til after the 2010 elections. ENDA was the next in line, so it needs to be taken off of the rails first.

The Dems, under attack from the right, are going to throw the LGBT's from the sledge to the wolves, rather than to fight back and define the Left as something worth defending

I tell you Chica that no greater abomination exists than women denying their spirit of sisterhood and instead becoming the oppressor. -Rebeca, Universidad Complutense de Madrid


ENDA House Vote on 11-18-09
Looks like the house will vote on ENDA on 11-18-09

Mark your calendars!
Give your reps. a call, make sure they are on board and will fully support the passage of ENDA!!!!

Come, come, my conservative friend, wipe the dew off your spectacles, and see that the world is moving."
-Elizabeth Cady Stanton


[ Parent ]
Hope is not a plan of action.
Here's a plan of action. I just got off the phone with Rep. Barney Franks office. I've spoken to many an aide, and Barney's was less than interested in my call and doesn't know why ENDA is now on the slow path to die yet again.

But don't despair here's Barney (career politician)Franks DC office number. 1.202.225.5931 Give him a call. He is lead sponsor and if the lead sponsor doesn't advocate for it's passage we are in big trouble.

We must apply pressure to hold ALL of our lawmakers accountable. That goes for the gay ones too.

Come, come, my conservative friend, wipe the dew off your spectacles, and see that the world is moving."
-Elizabeth Cady Stanton


RE: ENDA House Vote on 11-18-09
Sorry looks like it the mark up vote in committee, not a floor vote.  

Dan Lipinski is waiting from approval from the Church
I live in the 3rd district of Illinois. Dan Lipinski is my rep. I've been on the phone with his office several times over the last few weeks with his office. I've sent letters and emails. I received this from my alderwoman yesterday:

Fw: update on Lipinski and ENDA

A few weeks ago, I met with Congressman Dan Lipinski's assistant. I was invited to attend along with Equality Illinois and PFLAG. This was our second attempt to encourage the Congressman to support the Employment Non Discrimination Act (ENDA).

The first attempt was with the Congressman himself and I explained how the Berwyn City Council had amended the City's Human Rights Ordinance to include the LGBT community. I explained at that time that I was his constituent and could guarantee no backlash in Berwyn for his support of ENDA.

When I introduced myself to the Congressman's aid this time, I could say that not only was I a constituent, but that I was now an elected official and represented more than 7,000 Berwyn Citizens....and I could definitely guarantee no political backlash for the Congressman's support of ENDA.

Please read the e-mail I am forwarding from Caroline Staerk, Field Director for Allied for Equity. Allied for Equity is a subsidiary of Equality Illinois. Does anyone out there know Cardinal George? If you are Catholic, please call or e-mail Congressman Lipinski. Please ask your RC friends to do so as well.

Thanks for your consideration. Getting our Congressman on board would be a first.

Fw: update on Lipinski and ENDA

Hello everyone!  I just wanted to let you know that John and Char Cepek followed up with Michael (Lipinski's aide).  Michael said that he thought that Lipinski would end up supporting ENDA (but Lipinski is checking with Catholic Church Reps beforehand).  That is a positive step forward!

However, it is good to reinforce that Catholics support this bill.  So, if you know of anyone in his district who is Catholic, please encourage them to call the D.C. office (202-225-5701) - identify themselves as a Catholic and urge Lipinski to vote for ENDA (H.R. 3017)  :)  The hope is that a vote will take place in the U.S. House of Reps before Thanksgiving.

THANK YOU again for helping with this important legislation.

Caroline Staerk
Field Director, Allied for Equality

In the past, Lipinski has voted the way that the church wanted him to on LGBT issues. He forgets about the pesky little issue of church and state separation. Hopefully he will remember just who his constituents are and how they feel on the issue. Overall, the 3rd district of Illinois is pretty liberal. The problem is Lipinski's view of the LGBT population.  


Clarification on DPBO coverage
You write that DPBO only benefits those in DC. That's not quite accurate.  My partner is a non-DC federal employee, as are thousands of others around the country.  If she had domestic partner benefits, I could have saved thousands of dollars on self-coverage.  This isn't to detract from your argument about ENDA (I think it's right to worry), but DPBO is an important bill for many families, not just those in DC.

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