By Justin Snow on July 21, 2014 @JustinCSnow
President Barack Obama signed an executive order Monday prohibiting federal contractors from LGBT workplace discrimination and protecting transgender federal employees from discrimination, marking the end of a long campaign by LGBT-rights advocates to convinceĀ Obama to take such executive actions.
During a signing ceremony in the East Room of the White House, Obama remarked on the years of lobbying efforts advocates have taken to convince the Obama administration to not only support federal legislation that would prohibit LGBT workplace discrimination, such as the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA), but also an executive order for federal contractors.
āMany of you have worked for a long time to see this day coming.Ā You organized, you spoke up, you signed petitions, you sent letters — I know because I got a lot of them,ā Obama told an audience that included many leaders of the LGBT-rights movement as well as champions of ENDA such as Sens. Tammy Baldwin and Jeff Merkley.Ā āAnd now, thanks to your passionate advocacy and the irrefutable rightness of your cause, our government — government of the people, by the people, and for the people — will become just a little bit fairer.ā
Obamaās executive order amends Executive Order 11246, which prohibits federal contractors from discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex and national origin and was first issued by President Lyndon Johnson in 1965, to include sexual orientation and gender identity. It also amends Executive Order 11478, which prohibits discrimination against federal employees on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, disability and age and was originally issued by President Richard Nixon in 1969, to also include gender identity. That executive order was previously amended by President Bill Clinton in 1998 to include sexual orientation. Although the Obama administrationĀ previouslyĀ interpreted existing law to cover transgender federal employees, the order ensures federal employees will now be formally and explicitly protected from discrimination on the basis of gender identity.
Obamaās executive actions will impact 24,000 companies that employ 28 million workers ā a fifth of the nationās workforce, according to a senior administration official.
The executive order protecting transgender federal employees from discrimination will take effect immediately, whereas the executive order prohibiting federal contractors from LGBT workplace discrimination will apply only to federal contractors who enterĀ a contract with the federal government after a date designated by the Department of Labor. According to the senior administration official, the executive order requires the Labor Department to prepare regulations within 90 days and the order will likely be fully implemented by early 2015.
Moreover, Obamaās executive order does not modify an executive order signed by President George W. Bush in 2002 that allows religiously affiliated federal contractors to favor individuals of the same faith in their hiring practices ā something LGBT-rights advocates have called on ObamaĀ to changeĀ since taking office.
āFor more than two centuries, we have strived, often at great cost, to form āa more perfect unionā — to make sure that āwe, the peopleā applies to all the people,ā Obama said Monday. āMany of us are only here because others fought to secure rights and opportunities for us. And weāve got a responsibility to do the same for future generations.Ā Weāve got an obligation to make sure that the country we love remains a place where no matter who you are, or what you look like, or where you come from, or how you started out, or what your last name is, or who you love — no matter what, you can make it in this country.ā
Obama was joined on stage by Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe (D), who as his first act as governor prohibited discrimination against LGBT employees of the state, Deputy Secretary of Labor Chris Lu, Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs Director Pat Shiu, Rev. Delman Coates, Rabbi David Saperstein and LGBT workplace equality advocates Kylar Broadus, Michael Carney, Anne Vonhof and Faith Cheltenham.Ā
The White House announced on June 16 that Obama would sign the executive order prohibiting federal contractors from LGBT workplace discrimination ā a move long sought by LGBT-rights advocates that has garnered increased attention as federal legislation remains stalled in Congress. On June 30, at the White Houseās annual LGBT Pride Month reception, Obama also announced his plans to sign an executive order protecting transgender federal employees from discrimination. Obamaās actions Monday were greeted with applause by LGBT-rights advocates who have been pressuring for such action since Obama was a candidate for president in 2008 and indicated he would sign such an executive order.
āWith this action, President Obama has cemented his legacy as a transformative leader,ā said Chad Griffin, president of the Human Rights Campaign, in a statement. āConsistently, this administration has taken unprecedented and historic executive actions to advance LGBT equality in this country and around the world.ā
Indeed, Obama’s executive orderĀ appears to haveĀ solidified his legacy on LGBT rights. According to Griffin, focus now returns to the House of Representatives, where ENDA has been blocked by Republican leaders since it was approved with a 64-32 vote by the Senate in November. Since then, a fight over the scope of ENDAās religious exemption hasĀ brokenĀ out among several LGBT-rights groups.Ā
āA bipartisan coalition of Americans is standing behind LGBT equality, a bipartisan coalition of our elected leaders should be doing the same,ā Griffin said.
During his remarks Monday, Obama urged advocates to maintain pressure on Congress.Ā
āCongress has spent 40 years — four decades — considering legislation that would help solve the problem.Ā That’s a long time. And yet they still havenāt gotten it done,ā Obama said. āBut Iām going to do what I can, with the authority I have, to act.Ā The rest of you, of course, need to keep putting pressure on Congress to pass federal legislation that resolves this problem once and for all.ā
Tico Almeida, founder and president of Freedom to Work, said a clock has now started ticking for corporations, such as ExxonMobil, that do work with the federal government but do not prohibit LGBT workplace discrimination.
āPresident Obamaās signature sends a strong message: update your workplace policies to protect LGBT employees or forfeit your highly lucrative taxpayer-funded contracts. This is a watershed moment in our countryās march toward equality,ā Almeida said in a statement.
Before sitting down to sign the long-sought executive order, Obama took note of the many steps toward full LGBT equality that have been taken since he assumed office.
āWe’ve got a long way to go, but I hope as everybody looks around this room, you are reminded of the extraordinary progress that we have made not just in our lifetimes, but in the last five years. In the last two years. In the last one year,ā Obama said. āWeāre on the right side of history.āĀ
Read Obama’s full remarks on the nextĀ page.
By John Riley on August 14, 2025 @JRileyMW
Edward O'Keefe, owner of Peabody Heights Brewery in Baltimore's Abell neighborhood, says a man maced two people outside the brewery as they were leaving "Butch Garden," a queer community event held from 4 to 9 p.m. on Saturday, August 2, reports NBC affiliate WBAL.
According to charging documents, police received a call around 9:30 p.m. reporting that someone with a plastic baton was trying to attack him.
At Abell Avenue and 32nd Street, a few blocks from the brewery, a police officer saw a man in dark clothing running east. The man was later identified as 34-year-old Matthew Middleton. When the officer approached and asked what was happening, Middleton allegedly said he had been chased.
By Doug Rule on September 2, 2025 @ruleonwriting
"It was kind of confusing," David Archuleta says, recalling the time roughly 16 years ago when he was first asked to write a memoir. "What am I supposed to talk about? I'm 18 years old, and I feel like I'm just starting my journey, and you want me to write a memoir now?"
That memoir, Chords of Strength: A Memoir of Soul, Song, and the Power of Perseverance, was written by Archuleta with Monica Haim and published by an imprint of Penguin Group in 2010. He was barely an adult at the time, and it had only been two years since he competed on American Idol, becoming the season seven runner-up.
By John Riley on September 19, 2025 @JRileyMW
Treven Michael Gokey was arrested by Phoenix police on September 17 for allegedly threatening to shoot up Cruisinā 7th, a popular gay bar near his Arizona apartment. He faces felony charges of making a terroristic threat and using a computer to threaten, after blaming the LGBTQ community for recent acts of violence.
According to court documents, police were called to the 39-year-old's apartment for a welfare check after a crisis hotline reported he had threatened to shoot up the bar, claiming he was ātriggered by political events.ā
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