By John Riley on June 25, 2015 @JRileyMW
President Barack Obama ticked off a laundry list of LGBT achievements by his administration during last night’s White House Pride Month reception. However, not everyone was enthusiastic to hear the president speak.
As the president began his introduction, a transgender woman interrupted him, shouting, “President Obama, release all LGBTQ immigrants from detention and stop all deportations.” She continued shouting as the president tried to resume his speech.
“No, no, no, no, no. Hey, listen, you’re in my house,” President Obama finally retorted, as the audience burst into applause. “It’s not respectful when you go into somebody’s house. You’re not going to get a good response from me by interrupting me.”
As the woman continued, the crowd began to boo her, as a second voice from the crowd started yelling, “President Obama!” This prompted the crowd of prominent LGBT invitees to began chanting, “Obama! Obama!” to drown out any further disruptions until the hecklers could be removed from the room. One person even yelled out, “Bye, Felicia!” as she was escorted from the room. The heckler could still be heard outside as she was led away.
The woman was later identified as Jennicet Gutiérrez, in a press release issued by a coalition of radical queer and LGBT immigrant groups.
According to GetEQUAL, the #Not1More campaign and Familia QLTM, Gutiérrez — an undocumented transgender woman from Mexico — said she could not celebrate while some 75 transgender detainees are at higher risk of physical assault and sexual abuse in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody at various detention centers for undocumented immigrants awaiting deportation hearings. Groups such as the National LGBTQ Task Force and 35 members of Congress have previously raised concerns about the detainees’ safety, and have called on the Department of Homeland Security and ICE to release LGBTQ immigrants out of concern for their welfare.
The president later referenced the Gutiérrez disruption, when another person yelled out, “We love you! The transsexuals love you!,” allowing Obama to joke, “That’s the kind of heckling I can accept.”
The reception, which has become an annual event under the Obama administration, was fairly boisterous and in a celebratory mood — with the help of some social lubricant.
The guests at the reception included a “Who’s Who” of both D.C.-based and national LGBT organizations, as well as several local LGBT “power couples” whose jobs range from the legal field to LGBT activism to political consulting to lobbying. Some of the more prominent figures among those present included House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.); Eric Fanning, the first openly gay chief of staff of the U.S. Department of Defense; Chad Griffin, president of the Human Rights Campaign (HRC); Sarah McBride, a transgender activist and research associate for the Center for American Progress; Six transgender members of the pro-LGBT military organization Service Members, Partners, Allies For Respect and Tolerance For All (SPARTA); Martin Garcia of civic engagement nonprofit IMPACT and an officer with the Gertrude Stein Democratic Club; and Sultan Shakir, the executive director of the LGBT youth organization SMYAL.
Calling the cause of LGBT equality “an issue whose time has come,” the president acknowledged the work of LGBT activists and organizations over the years, adding, “Together, we’ve been able to do more to protect the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people than at any time in our history.”
The president reflected on the major LGBT progress achieved under his administration, including:
As the president listed each accomplishment, the raucous crowd interrupted him with cheers and applause. Obama also noted the shift in societal attitudes toward the LGBT community, even among the slow-to-change political class.
“When I became president, same-sex marriage was legal in only two states. Today, it’s legal in 37 states,” Obama said. “A decade ago, politicians ran against LGBT rights. Today, they’re running towards them.”
Looking toward the future, Obama acknowledged the looming specter of a decision from the U.S. Supreme Court. Expected in the next few days, they will rule on whether same-sex couples have a fundamental right to marry under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. He also name-checked several other priorities for the LGBT community that have yet to be acted upon, such as the passage of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA), and reiterated his call for banning the practice of conversion therapy or other sexual orientation change efforts on minors.
The president also told those in attendance that they had demonstrated the kind of courage that comes from being true to oneself.
“To a young boy or girl out there struggling with their own identity, the folks in this room are heroes,” Obama said. “They’ve shown extraordinary courage, not only in helping others find the strength to be true to who they are, you’re helping America be true to we are as a nation. And that’s ultimately what this Pride month is supposed to be about.”
By John Riley on September 13, 2025 @JRileyMW
Jason Collins, the first openly gay NBA player, is reportedly undergoing treatment for a brain tumor. Collins made headlines more than a decade ago when he came out publicly in a first-person essay for Sports Illustrated.
The 41-year-old former center earned All-American honors at Stanford before being drafted by the Houston Rockets in 2001. Over his 13-year career, he played for several NBA teams, including the New Jersey Nets, Minnesota Timberwolves, Atlanta Hawks, Boston Celtics, and Brooklyn Nets.
By John Riley on October 9, 2025 @JRileyMW
John Reid, the gay Republican nominee for Virginia lieutenant governor, has defended the right of his running mate, current Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, to oppose same-sex marriage -- even though he personally disagrees with her on the issue.
Speaking on the conservative talk radio program The Wilkow Majority on SiriusXM, Reid said he and Earle-Sears are "willing to put aside our differences" to support policies they believe are best for Virginia. Host Andrew Wilkow then asked Reid to name an issue on which the two disagree.
"She's not for gay marriage. She's 100 percent against it," Reid said. "You know, she's from Jamaica, and her religious background tells her a very different narrative than my Episcopalian white-guy Virginia background. I understand!"
By Maximilian Sandefer on September 8, 2025
In her first televised interview since her 2020 confirmation, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett appeared on CBS Sunday Morning to promote her new book, offering only vague commentary to host Norah O’Donnell in defense of the Court’s legitimacy when asked whether justices might overturn Obergefell v. Hodges.
Barrett was pressed on recent remarks from former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who told the Raging Moderates podcast that the Court will likely “do to gay marriage what they did to abortion” and “send it back to the states.”
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