WASHINGTON,
Nov. 8 -- The Gay & Lesbian
Victory Fund today reported unprecedented success in electing openly Gay
candidates this year. Sixty-seven Victory-endorsed candidates were elected to
federal, state and local offices, with some winning historic races that make
them the first openly Gay or Lesbian candidates ever elected in their states or
legislative bodies.
"This
is the tipping point election for openly Gay candidates," said Chuck
Wolfe, president and CEO of the Victory Fund. "We're proving that
qualified, well-prepared candidates matched with committed donors means Gays
and Lesbians can move from having a stake in policy to actually making policy.
There's no reason to sit on the sidelines with our fingers crossed
anymore."
Ten key
Victories in 2006:
·
Patricia
Todd, who will represent District 54 in the Alabama State House. Todd is the
first openly Gay person ever elected to any office in the state.
·
Kathy
Webb, who will represent District 37 in the Arkansas State House. Webb is the
first openly Gay person ever elected to any office in the state.
·
Henry
Fernandez, who won a seat on the Lawrence Township School Board, making him the
first openly Gay person ever elected to any office in Indiana .
·
Al McAffrey, who will represent District 88 in the Oklahoma
State House. McAffrey is the first openly Gay person
ever elected to the Oklahoma state legislature.
·
Jolie Justus, who
will represent District 10 in the Missouri State Senate. Justus is the first
openly Gay state senator in Missouri history.
·
Ed
Murray, who will represent District 43 in the Washington State Senate. Murray,
a former state representative, is the second openly Gay state senator in Washington history.
·
Matt
McCoy, who becomes the first openly Gay candidate ever elected to the Iowa legislature. McCoy, a sitting state
senator, came out during his last term.
·
Ken Keechl, who won a seat on the Broward County Commission in Florida , beating an appointee of Gov. Jeb Bush.
·
Jamie
Pedersen, who becomes the third consecutive openly Gay person to be elected to
represent District 43 in the Washington State House.
·
Judge
Virginia Linder will join Rives Kistler on the Oregon
Supreme Court, making it the first state ever to have two openly Gay Supreme
Court Justices, according to preliminary results.
Key
statistics about Victory-endorsed candidates in 2006:
·
Total
Victory-endorsed candidates: 88 (55 non-incumbents, 33 incumbents)
·
Total
Victory-endorsed winners: 67
·
Total
Victory-endorsed winners running as openly LGBT for the first time: 37
·
Percent
of Victory Fund bundled money spent on non- incumbent candidates: 80 percent
·
Percent
of Victory Fund PAC money spent on non-incumbent candidates: 91 percent
·
States
that elected their first-ever openly LGBT officials: Alabama , Arkansas , Indiana
·
States
that elected their first-ever openly LGBT state legislators: Alabama , Arkansas , Oklahoma
·
Seven
states that still have no openly LGBT elected officials at any level of
government: Alaska, Louisiana , North Dakota , South Carolina , South Dakota , Tennessee , West Virginia
·
Thirteen
additional states that still have no openly LGBT state legislators: Delaware,
Florida, Hawaii, Indiana, Kansas, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Jersey, New
Mexico, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, Wyoming
The Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund
provides strategic, technical and financial support to openly LGBT candidates
and officials. It's the only national organization solely committed to
increasing the number of openly LGBT public officials at federal, state and
local levels of government. Victory is the nation's largest LGBT political
action committee and one of the nation's largest non-connected PACs. In 15
years, Victory has helped the number of openly LGBT officials grow from 49 to
more than 350. Roughly 22 percent of all Americans are represented by an openly
LGBT elected official. Go to http://www.victoryfund.org
for full election results