US: Facing Threats and Bias, LGBT Candidates Are Running in Record Numbers

Ashley Lunkenheimer’s campaign for the Democratic nomination in Pennsylvania’s Fifth Congressional District in May was trailed by whispers from some in her own party: It was fine that she was a lesbian, they said, but were voters ready for that?

Gina Ortiz Jones, a Democratic candidate in the 23rd Congressional District in Texas, faced a similar question, but for her it happened out in the open. An opponent in the primary asked her onstage during a candidate forum to make it clear to voters that she was a lesbian so it would not be “revealed later” in a Republican attack.

Catholic voters in the heavily Hispanic district “may still vote for you, but let’s get it out there,” said the opponent, Angie Villescaz.

“She made it seem like I was hiding who I was from voters, as if maybe I was supposed to mention that in every single sentence,” said Ms. Jones, an Air Force veteran who served under “don’t ask, don’t tell,” a law, now repealed, that banned openly gay men, lesbians and bisexuals from military service. “Her implication obviously was if voters knew, then they wouldn’t be voting for me.”

It was a bump in the road for Ms. Jones, who won the nomination. “The voters proved her wrong,” Ms. Jones said of Ms. Villescaz. Ms. Jones will face Will Hurd, a Republican incumbent, on Tuesday.

But the episode is indicative of the challenges faced by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender candidates in the midterm elections, when a record number — at least 244, all Democrats — are running for elected office at all levels of government, including 21 for Congress and four for governor. Read more via New York Times