After weeks of working tirelessly on CA's campaign, LGBT Project Director Matt Coles is waiting for the election results and reflecting on the campaign.
During this excruciating wait for the polls to close and the results to be reported on Californias marriage initiative, I let myself think about history for a few moments.
Intimacy for same-sex couples was a crime in California until 1974. There wasnt a single law recognizing the relationships of same-sex couplesanywhere in the U.S. until the Berkeley School District passed one in 1984. San Franciscos groundbreaking domestic partnership law, passed in 1982, was vetoed by the very same Dianne Feinstein , the proposal to take marriage away.
Weve come a long way in what is, in cultural history, a very short time.
And laws may not be the best way to measure that change. A few years ago, I had lunch with George Hecht, a man who supported a lot of LGBT organizations. George was then in his 80s. He told me about how hard it had been to keep a relationship alive in the 30s in the 40s: the absolute need to hide it from employers, co-workers, even from close friends and family. The details were painful to listen to. He looked up wistfully as he told me how he and the man he loved had managed for a time, but that eventually, it had all been too much.
Society in the mid 20th century did everything it possibly could do to make sure that gay people led the sad, isolated lives it said were our lot. Some people, like Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon (and countless others I got to know as a young lawyer in San Francisco in the 70s), were able to fight it and forge ways of living despite the social pressures. But there were many others who werent. I think about those damaged lives, and I grieve.
One of the things that has struck me as Ive worked in California for most of the last two months on the campaign is the number of straight people who care as passionately about this as I do: the real estate agent who asked me if I had an extra No On 8 sticker because it mattered so much, the server who asked me if I knew where to volunteer, my college roommate, who, unbeknownst to me, was volunteering in a phone bank.
I wish I knew for sure how this election is going to turn out. But talking to those folks around California over the last few months has made it clear to me that were not going back to George Hechts youth, or even to mine. In 1978, it was inconceivable that a majority of Californians would support marriage for same-sex couples, then or in 50 years. Today, the nail-biter is whether that happens today or in a few years.
It would be great to win, and it is always great to make the law carry out the promises of the Constitution. But the point really is to make it possible for millions of people to live their lives, and not have to hide their love. Were winning that for sure.
For additional information on Prop. 8 and tools for advancing LGBT equality in your community, visit www.aclu.org/getequal.