
by James A. Bacon
Is there room for a gay man, no matter how conservative, in Virginia’s Republican Party? The signals are mixed, but it appears that there may be.
Five years ago, a Virginia GOP committee passed a resolution censuring Rep. Denver Riggleman, R-Va., for betraying the party’s values when he officiated a same-sex wedding. He was challenged in a Republican primary, lost his seat, and has since dropped out of the Republican Party.
History doesn’t repeat itself, as the saying goes, but it does rhyme. Today, John Reid, the lone contender for the GOP candidacy for lieutenant governor, is under pressure to drop out of the race. Indeed, he says, he has been the victim of a “coordinated assassination attempt” to force the first gay GOP candidate for statewide office off the ticket.
Citing the existence of photos of nude men on what was purported to be Reid’s tumblr account, Governor Glenn Youngkin demanded last week that Reid drop out of the race. The former Richmond radio talk-show host refused. And it turns out that a lot of conservative Republicans are willing to look past his sexual orientation. This may not be a replay of Denver Riggleman after all.
Reid was greeted warmly in Abingdon, in far Southwest Virginia, by local GOP activists including Rep. Morgan Griffith, R-Va. The suburban ladies of the Henrico County GOP have leaped to his defense online. And Matthew Hurtt, chair of the Arlington County Republican Party, sent out a tweet protesting the Governor’s call.
Philip Kazmierczak, a member of the Virginia LGBQT+ Advisory Board, submitted his resignation. “One of the fundamental principles of the Republican Party, and a value I hold dearly, is that government should stay out of the personal lives of individuals — all of the time, not merely when it is political convenient,” he wrote. “This recent episode stands in stark contrast to that principle. We are meant to be the party of the big welcoming tent.”
Kazmierczakย wrote that he was “deeply moved” by the support that Reid was receiving from conservative circles.
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