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Ending Military's Gay Ban Lets Obama Fulfill Another Clinton Promise(Cloture Vote 63 - 33)
npr ^ | December 18, 2010 12:03 pm | Ron Elving

Posted on 12/18/2010 9:32:56 AM PST by Red Steel

Nearly two decades ago, President Bill Clinton ignited the first of the firestorms that would define his presidency by announcing an end to the ban on gays and lesbians in the military.

Today, 18 years later, the U.S. Senate took the vote that means gays and lesbians will be able to serve openly in all branches of the U.S. armed forces. As the House has passed an identical bill, a final vote in the Senate will send the legislation to President Obama, whose signature will make it law and make it a signal achievement of his presidency to date.

Thus the service of gays in the military becomes the latest issue on which the agenda and fate of the last two Democratic presidents seem to be inextricably linked. As with the health care bill earlier this year, it would be fitting for the former present to be present at the signing ceremony, which should take place next week.

We have come to refer to this particular milestone in American social history as the repeal of the "don't ask don't tell" policy. It may be a curiously inverted term for the debate, but it harks back to the last time the issue consumed Washington and tells us a lot about how change happens.

Back in 1992, Clinton had promised several prominent backers he would overturn the longstanding military prohibition on homosexuality, and he tried to deliver on that promise immediately. He thought Congress and the country would go along because he had spoken of changing the policy in his campaign.

He was wrong. Resistance arose immediately within the military and among social conservatives, and Clinton soon found many in his own party deserting him in Congress. He was forced to fall back on a compromise.

The compromise had two parts. First, the military would stop trying to discover and discharge gays and lesbians. Second, those who let their orientation be known would still be subject to dismissal.

The policy was called "don't ask, don't tell." It pleased no one, but it let everyone move on. That is, after all, the essential function of a compromise. Congress codified it in 1993.

Over the years, the policy sometimes shorthanded as “DADT” made no new friends. Those who wanted homosexuality banned in the services rankled at the DADT restraints, while the gay community saw the enforced concealment as inherently shaming and discriminatory.

More than 13,500 active service members have been discharged under the provisions of this law. But beyond that, it has come to represent the persistence of gay closeting in the culture writ large. What had begun as an effort to change attitudes became a symbol of the difficulty in doing just that.

Clinton had thought he could make the break by imitating President Harry Truman, who had stunned much of the country in 1948 by ordering an end to racial segregation in the armed forces. Truman did it by fiat, simply ordering the military to integrate "as quickly as possible." Officially, the Pentagon saluted and complied. In reality, the process was labored and took years.

Still, Clinton thought the Truman model would work for him. He reasoned that the existence of gays and lesbians in the ranks was an open secret in the military and in the society in general. He thought he was not so much altering a reality as repealing a hypocrisy. But that sort of thing can get a president in trouble, too.

Saturday's vote will be called a great victory for President Obama, and indeed he can take great satisfaction in completing the policy change Clinton set in motion almost a generation ago.

The climate for this issue has warmed considerably in the interim, thanks to a long campaign by gay activists and civil rights groups and by moderating attitudes in the public and within the uniformed services — as measured in recent surveys.

But as change continues, resistance to it also persists. That is the lesson of the national elections of 2008 and 2010. And it was the lesson of the Senate votes taken this Saturday morning.

On the same day the Senate agreed to repeal DADT, it failed to break another Republican filibuster threat against the DREAM Act. This is a bill allowing the children of people who entered the U.S. illegally allowed to earn citizenship if they go to college or serve in military.

Why was DADT repealed but the DREAM Act blocked? The difference was that four Republicans were willing to buck their party's filibuster threat and vote for the repeal of DADT, but there wasn't an equivalent showing from the GOP for DREAM.

The DREAM Act was at one time a bipartisan measure, and indeed it has attracted GOP support in the House. But in the Senate it is hostage to the same tactical game by which the minority party maintains much of the power to run the Senate — the "virtual filibuster" that requires 60 votes to do anything.

It took nearly a generation to muster this many votes for gays in the military. How long will it take to find that many for the next meaningful change in the immigration laws?


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Front Page News
KEYWORDS: barf; dadt; dontask; dontaskdonttell; donttell; homosexualagenda
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To: eater-of-toast

I agree with what you are saying. It will be difficult. I don’t think any nation has ever reversed such a policy.

The last vote is from the officers and NCOs in the ranks. I suspect once the morale plummett, those are the ones we need to hear from in order to turn the tide.


41 posted on 12/18/2010 1:31:39 PM PST by Salvavida (The restoration of the U.S.A. starts with filling the pews at every Bible-believing church.)
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To: Twinkie

Yes INDEED!!!

In 1993-1994 we had a brief spasm of bad liberal agenda items - gun bans, tax hikes, attempt to tax carbon, spending sprees, leftists on the courts, ... and the gays-in-the-military attempt.

In 1993, DADT was 1/2 step and this was the other half.
In 2010, ObamaCare was 1/2 step to single payer and if we make the mistake of allowing another leftist President and Congress in, there will be the completion of THAT project.

This is how it works. For 8 years, Clinton failed to enforce immigration law, undoing the 1986 ‘amnesty’ purpose. As a result, we have millions of illegal immigrants. That led, inevitably, to a push for another ‘amnesty’ to the DREAM Act and other attempts to legalize what has been permitted through a failure to enforce the law for 20 years.

We saw the last gasps of this era’s Liberal Moment in these votes today. Liberalism has advanced in fits and starts lately, for the simple reason that the people don’t really support it, so they can only do it when given more power for reasons other than faith in the liberal agenda. Obama wasn’t elected to enact DREAM Act or to socialize medicine.


42 posted on 12/18/2010 2:17:11 PM PST by WOSG (Carpe Diem)
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To: Twinkie
Hillary’s seems to be more serious and more for keeps.

LOL, that's putting it mildly.


43 posted on 12/18/2010 3:33:52 PM PST by Talisker (When you find a turtle on top of a fence post, you can be damn sure it didn't get there on its own.)
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To: Red Steel

This was beatable, and it was the fault of the RINOS much more than any other political group, IMHO. The RINOS could of sided with conservatives on this issue, but they didn’t. Any and all problems with DADT will be the fault of all leftists from both major U.S. political parties.


44 posted on 12/18/2010 5:13:48 PM PST by johnthebaptistmoore (If leftist legislation that's already in place really can't be ended by non-leftists, then what?)
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To: Red Steel

Give it 2-3 years - they will have PINK TANKS!!! Believe it! Wait till the Army has Gay Pride day!


45 posted on 12/18/2010 6:15:48 PM PST by 2harddrive
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