Yesterday a broad-based community letter
called on Mayor Bill de Blasio to direct NYPD and FDNY Commissioners to
stop sending uniformed officers to the nation's largest anti-LGBTQ
event—the NYC St. Patrick's Day parade. In response, the Mayor has
ducked and punted, saying only that he won't march himself. This isn't
much to be celebrated: no truly progressive politician has marched since
the parade banned the Irish Lesbian and Gay Organization from marching
with its banner in 1991, and Mayor Dinkins stood alongside ILGO only to
be pelted with beer cans.
The parade is explicitly anti-gay and
discriminatory. Because the NYC Human Rights Commission said it violated
the City's human rights law in 1992, parade organizers sought
deliberately to define it as a private and religious event in order to
continue to exclude LGBTQ people. Indeed, John Dunleavy, the St.
Patrick’s Day Parade chairman, infamously compared LGBTQ marchers to the
KKK being allowed to march in an African-American parade in Harlem.
Police and firefighters march by the
thousands, making up most of the parade. (Did you think it was a
celebration of Irish pride? That’s so 1992.) Their uniforms clearly
convey that the City endorses the march. The Mayor's cavalier dismissal
of the City's human rights law today compounds that effect. We get it:
we LGBTQ people don't matter.
When NYPD and the FDNY wear their
official work uniforms and march in the St. Patrick’s Day parade, they
diminish their sworn respect for the laws of this great city and violate
the spirit of the city’s human rights law. Employers make rules about
uniforms and that’s the issue in dispute – the wearing of official
uniforms which conveys to the world that this parade’s bigotry is
endorsed by our city government. But the law protects us, and we will
insist that the Mayor uphold it. We are told that we can march if we
don’t identify ourselves in any way. If that is the way we are to be
treated, then City personnel should march as individuals with their
counties but not in City uniforms. While we protest the rising
homophobia in Russia, Nigeria and elsewhere around the world, we seek to
end homophobic discrimination here at home as well. The St. Pat’s
Parade has a right to its anti-gay march under the constitution. But the
City and all supporters of human rights must do everything we can to
isolate it.
The full list of LGBTQ groups and allies signing the letter can be found HERE.
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