
Carl Levin
A key supporter of repealing Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell is poised to deal the legislation a significant setback.
Senator Carl Levin, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee  and a strong supporter of repealing the law which bars openly gay people  from serving in the military, said Tuesday he will hold hearings on the  upcoming Pentagon study about implementation of repeal.
That study is due December 1 and Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell  said last Friday that “no one at the Pentagon will comment” on the  study’s contents until December 1.
Levin indicated, in his remarks to reporters Tuesday, that he is open  to staging separate votes on DADT repeal and on the annual Defense  Authorization bill, which currently contains the repeal language.
“The [defense spending] bill has 849 pages and only two of them are  ‘Don’ t Ask, Don’t Tell,’” said Levin to reporters, according to a 
Washington Post account. “The rest have to do with our troops, they have to do with a whole lot of critically important things.”
Levin has hinted before that he might pull DADT repeal from the  defense bill for stand-alone consideration and, following Tuesday’s  comments, many now expect that is what he will do.
Passage as a stand-alone measure weakens the repeal’s chances in  several ways. It puts it in a long line of pressing issues that are  competing for Congress’ attention during the final weeks of the  lame-duck Congress. And, even if Congress does take it up, the stand  alone measure leaves repeal vulnerable to many more amendments from  opponents who will likely seek to damage or undermine its intent.
On an optimistic note, Rep. Patrick Murphy, who championed the  addition of DADT repeal language to the House defense authorization bill  last spring, told the 
Washington Blade Tuesday that he  believes the Obama White House and Defense Department will deliver a  “full spectrum of engagement” to pass DADT repeal.
White House spokesman Shin Inouye said President Obama called Levin  Wednesday to urge him to keep DADT repeal within the defense bill.  Inouye said the call to Levin followed “outreach over the past week by  the White House to dozens of Senators from both sides of the aisle on  this issue.”
But Levin’s apparent readiness to acquiesce to Republican  pressure—particularly from Senator John McCain, the ranking minority  leader on the Armed Services Committee—is clearly a blow.
“This is no time to lose our resolve,” said Human Rights Campaign  President Joe Solmonese, in a statement Tuesday. “Chairman Levin has  been our advocate and we have every reason to believe that he will  continue to push to end this unjust and discriminatory law. DADT came  into being by way of the [defense spending bill] and it should be  removed by the [defense spending bill] . This can and must get done.”
Levin’s comments came just one day after two relatively small and  obscure groups that support repeal of the military’s ban on gays issued a  statement urging the Senate to pass the annual defense authorization  bill “whether or not the repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell” is included.”  A coalition of larger and better known LGBT groups issued a  counter-statement saying, “Under no circumstances should DADT repeal be  stripped from the underlying Defense Authorization bill.”
The Palm Center, a think tank which has been vigorously promoting  repeal of DADT, initially supported the notion of allowing the defense  spending bill to go through, even without DADT repeal language. But on  Wednesday, it issued a statement suggesting Levin is being manipulated  by McCain.
“Senator McCain is holding all military spending hostage in order to  force Senator Levin to cut the repeal of DADT from the Defense  Authorization bill,” said Palm Center Executive Director Aaron Belkin.  Belkin called the defense spending bill the “best legislative vehicle  for repeal” and said McCain’s goal is “continued discrimination of gay  and lesbian service members….If repeal is not accomplished now, we could  be looking at years of continued discrimination against loyal Americans  serving their country.”
Copyright ©2010 Keen News Service. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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If we want to pass DADT repeal we need 60 US Senators, in the lame duck we are 5 short. In January we will have only 53 LGBT-supportive Senators. What are HRC and these other “advocates” doing about that reality?
LGBT advocacy and activist groups are about raising money to pay their salaries more than creating a strategy to actually win. They have no incentive to finish the job, because they’d be out of their jobs. That is something that MUST be corrected.