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LGBT conservatism

LGBT conservatism refers to LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) individuals with conservative political views. It is an umbrella term used for what is bifurcated into two specific sub-categories, each with its own term and meaning. The first sub-categorical term, Pre-Stonewall LGBT Conservatism, refers to LGBT individuals embracing and promoting (even in the post-Stonewall era) the ideology of a traditional (anti-gay) conservatism in either a general or specifically-LGBT social context or environment. The second sub-categorical term, Post-Stonewall LGBT Conservatism, refers to self-affirming LGBT persons with fiscally, culturally, and politically conservative views. These post-Stonewall conservatives' social views, though generally conservative too, at the same time reflect a self-determination-stemmed and more recent socio-historical "gay-affirmation" on issues like marriage equality for same-sex couples, gay family recognition, civic equality generally for LGBT people in society, and also a positive role for (gay-affirming) religion in LGBT life, though there is not complete unanimity of opinion among them on all issues, especially those regarding the dynamics and politics of the closet and "identity management," and various legal and political issues (e.g. adoption agency placement, rights of private businesses, certain "intra-LGBT" issues of bisexuality, transgender topics, and others.) The first term can include LGBT people who are actually opposed to same-sex marriage or other LGBTQ rights while the second term, contrastingly, usually refers to self-affirming gay people who unequivocally favor marriage as a legal institution for both heterosexuals and gays (in countries where this is feasible) and who simultaneously prefer economic and political conservatism more generally. The number of self-affirming LGBT advocates for conservative ideas and policies became more apparent only after the advent of the modern LGBT civil rights movement in the 1970s (which encouraged affirmation of LGBT identity to achieve greater consolidation of political power) even as many gay conservatives, labelled as "self-hating" at the time, did remain closeted in areas where anti-gay socially conservative politicians then led the most organized opposition to LGBT rights. The Realpolitik and ideology situations (and alliance/coalition possibilities) for LGBT conservatives today vary by their own self-definition, and each country's (and local area's) sociopolitical, cultural, and legal LGBT rights landscape.

History edit

Before the Stonewall riots edit

In France, in 1791, Louis Michel le Peletier de Saint-Fargeau presented a new criminal code to the national Constituent Assembly.[1] He explained that it outlawed only "true crimes", and not "phony offenses created by superstition, feudalism, the tax system, and [royal] despotism".[1] He did not list the crimes "created by superstition". The new penal code did not mention blasphemy, heresy, sacrilege, witchcraft, incest or homosexuality, which led to these former offences being swiftly decriminalized. In 1810, a new criminal code was issued under Napoleon. As with the Penal Code of 1791, it did not contain provisions for religious crimes, incest or homosexuality. In 1852, under the prime ministership of the Duke of Saldanha, a liberal-conservative Cartista, same-sex sexual intercourse was legalized throughout Portugal.[2]

In 1870, the draft penal law submitted by Chancellor Otto von Bismarck to the North German Confederation retained the relevant Prussian penal provisions criminalizing male same-sex sexual intercourse, justifying this out of concern for "public opinion":

Even though one can justify the omission of these penal provisions from the standpoint of Medicine as well as on grounds taken from certain theories of criminal law – the public's sense of justice (das Rechtsbewußtsein im Volke) views these acts not merely as vices but as crimes [...].

On May 15, 1871, under Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, Paragraph 175 was enacted throughout the German Empire.

In August 1885, under Conservative Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury, the Labouchere Amendment passed August 7, 1885 becoming Section 11 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885.[3]

In 1887, during the period known as the Conservative Republic (Spanish: República Conservadora), same-sex sexual intercourse was legalized throughout Argentina.[4]

On February 24, 1954, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, during a cabinet meeting, bluntly replied that the Conservative Party was not going to accept responsibility for making the law more lenient towards gay men. He suggested that an enquiry might be the way forward, proposed limiting press coverage of the convictions of homosexuals, and suggested that any man caught by police should be offered the option of medical treatment. "Otherwise, I wouldn't touch the subject," he said. "Let it get worse – in hope of a more united public pressure for some amendment."[5]

In 2007, Brian Coleman, a former openly gay Conservative member of the London Assembly and former mayor of Barnet, wrote in the New Statesman that in the mid-1950s, London police were aware that future Prime Minister Edward Heath was "cottaging" (seeking out anonymous sex partners in public lavatories) and that they warned him to stop, lest it damage his career. Coleman also claimed that gays "ran" the Conservative Party in London for many years, suggesting Heath may have been "protected". "[Britain] had managed for decades with gay men holding a significant number of public offices", Coleman wrote.[6]

In 1957, after the international conference Wolfenden50, the Conservative government appointed the Committee on Homosexual Offences and Prostitution 1957 to investigate what were perceived as two increasing social problems, in the context of rising prosecutions. The committees terms of reference asked members to consider 'the law and practice' relating to both 'homosexual offences and the treatment of persons convicted of such offences' and to offences connected to 'prostitution and solicitation for immoral purposes'. The association between homosexuality and prostitution reflected the committee's assumption that both were forms of deviance threatening the family as 'the basic unit of society'. The committee's report in 1957 included as its first recommendation 'That homosexual behaviour between consenting adults in private be no longer a criminal offence'; other recommendations sought the tightening of the law concerning public same-sex behaviour and street prostitution, although acts of selling sex would remain legal.[7]

In May 1965, Arthur Gore, 8th Earl of Arran and Conservative Party Chief Whip, introduced into the House of Lords a bill decriminalizing male same-sex sexual intercourse in England and Wales. During its passage, senior peers inserted a strict privacy clause, applying a more restrictive standard of privacy than for heterosexual behavior. This specified that a 'homosexual act' would not be considered 'private' if 'more than two persons take part or are present', or if occurring in a public lavatory. The bill passed through the Lords in July 1965 and was brought into the House of Commons by Conservative MP Humphrey Berkeley, known to be homosexual by many in parliament. After a Labour victory in the general election in 1966, Berkeley lost his seat and was replaced as the bill's sponsor by Labour MP Leo Abse.[7]

Prospective Conservative Prime Minister Robert Boothby (later Lord Boothby), who was homosexual, was peppered[when defined as?] throughout parliament and the establishment, and hence their political colleagues had every interest in decriminalizing their activities. Boothby was involved in a friendship and possibly a sexual relationship with Ronnie Kray, while simultaneously the long-term lover of Lady Dorothy Macmillan, wife of Harold Macmillan, Conservative Prime Minister from 1957 to 1963.[7]

When the Sexual Offences Act 1967 passed in 1967, only a handful of Conservatives voted for the decriminalization of male same-sex sexual intercourse, including future Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.[8]

On June 25, 1969, shortly before the end of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) – Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) Grand Coalition headed by CDU Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger, Paragraph 175 was reformed, in that only the "qualified cases" that were previously handled in §175a – sex with a man less than 21 years old, homosexual prostitution, and the exploitation of a relationship of dependency (such as employing or supervising a person in a work situation) – were retained. Paragraph 175b (concerning bestiality) also was removed.

After the Stonewall riots edit

Rise of LGBT conservatism edit

In 1975, the Conservative Group for Homosexual Equality (CGHE) was founded in the United Kingdom by Peter Walter Campbell. It was the first LGBT conservative organization ever.[9]

In 2007, Brian Coleman, a former openly gay Conservative member of the London Assembly and former mayor of Barnet, wrote in the New Statesman that many of the gay politicians in the Conservative Party joined the party and became active during the Thatcher years. He also contended that the underlying ethos of Thatcherism might well be pro-gay and it was Margaret Thatcher's personality which attracted so many homosexual men to the party. The reason he contended that the Iron Lady drew many gay men to the Conservative Party was her pure elegance, feminine perfection, perfect dress sense, and sheer determination to change society and whilst her government might have had an anti-gay aura there was simply nothing in her personal attitude to demonstrate any prejudice, she appointed gay ministers, such as Earl of Avon (son of ex-Prime Minister Anthony Eden). On the subject of AIDS it was her government with Norman Fowler as Health Secretary which faced the issue head on and refused to take a moral tone on public information and prevention work. He finishes by stating that "There are many gay Tory men who would like to sleep with David Cameron but it is Lady Thatcher whose portrait hangs over their bed!"[10]

During the First Thatcher ministry, Criminal Justice Act 1980 was passed in 1980, legalizing same-sex sexual intercourse in Scotland.

On May 28, 1988, during the Third Thatcher ministry, Clause 28 of the Local Government Act 1988 received a 2 to 1 majority in the House of Lords and a vote of 254 to 201 in the House of Commons.[11]

In 1991, the CGHE reconstituted at the Conservative Party Conference and renamed the Tory Campaign for Homosexual Equality (TORCHE). The organization would remain active til 2004 when it disbanded.[12]

On April 21, 2003, the Ba'athist regime in Iraq was deposed. The Coalition Provisional Authority, established by the George W. Bush administration, abolished the death penalty and reverted to a revised 1988 penal code, thus legalizing same-sex sexual intercourse in Iraq.

On June 24, 2004, Fine Gael proposed legalizing civil partnerships for same-sex and opposite-sex couples who choose not to marry, the first Irish political party to do so.[13] In November 2004, in reaction to the legal challenge on tax issues Taoiseach and Fianna Fáil leader Bertie Ahern said "Couples want equality and we should try to deal with some of those issues" but added that moves to legalise gay marriage are "a long way off".[14] During the 2004 Irish presidential election, Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael, and Progressive Democrats, produced policies or made statements in favor of varying forms of recognition for same-sex couples. During the 2007 Irish general election, the manifestos of Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael, and Progressive Democrats, supported civil unions for same-sex couples. All parties ran advertisements in Gay Community News (GNC) with commitments to same-sex couples.

In 2010, Ógra Fianna Fáil came out in favor of same-sex marriage.

In 2010, the Botswana government, under the control of the Botswana Democratic Party, passed an amendment to its Employment Act that will bring an end to dismissal based on an individual's sexual orientation or HIV status.[15]

In July 2011, Young Fine Gael came out in favor of same-sex marriage.[16]

On October 5, 2011, British Prime Minister David Cameron said at a Conservative Party conference that "So I don't support gay marriage despite being a Conservative. I support gay marriage because I'm a Conservative."[17]

On March 3, 2012, Fianna Fáil came out in favour of same-sex marriage in Ireland.[18]

On February 5, 2013, Marriage Act 2013, during its second reading, received in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom that Conservatives voted 126 for, 134 against (including 8 voted against from the Democratic Unionist Party), 5 both, and 36 did not vote.[19] On May 21, 2013, the act, during its third reading, received in the House of Commons that Conservatives voted 117 for, 127 against (including 8 voted against from the Democratic Unionist Party), 7 both, and 51 did not vote.[20] On June 4, 2013, the act, during its second reading, received in the House of Lords that Conservatives voted against the Dear Amendment to reject second reading, 66 voted in favour, including 2 in favour from the Democratic Unionist Party, 1 in favour from Ulster Unionist Party, and 2 in favor from UK Independence Party, and 63 did not vote.[21] The act had its third reading on July 15, 2013, and was passed by a simple voice vote.[22] The amended Bill returned to the House of Commons for approval of the amendments on 16 July 2013, which the House approved on the same day.[22]

On November 5, 2013, Fine Gael came out in favour of same-sex marriage in Ireland.[23]

On May 22, 2015, the Thirty-Fourth Amendment (Marriage Equality Act) to the Irish Constitution was passed in Ireland via national referendum. 62% of Irish voters voted in favour of same-sex marriage. Voter turnout was 61% of the national electorate. The referendum was introduced under the Fine Gael-Labour coalition government.

By country edit

Australia edit

Belgium edit

While centre-right parties such as the New Flemish Alliance support LGBT rights, as of 2014 none of the major conservative parties are opposed to LGBT rights.[24][circular reference]

Brazil edit

Before and following the Impeachment process against Dilma Rousseff, several gay conservatives have been visible. Clodovil Hernandes of the Christian Labour Party and later the Party of the Republic before his death in 2009 is considered to be the first known gay MP for the Chamber of Deputies.

On 16 January 2017, Marcelo Crivella, the mayor of Rio de Janeiro, promoted Nélio Georgini, a gay evangelical conservative, to the head of the city LGBT council.[25]

In 2018, 30% of the Brazilian LGBT community voted for the right-wing populist Jair Bolsonaro against 57% of votes for left-wing Fernando Haddad in the presidential runoff, according to Datafolha. Following the conservative wave that contributed to the emergence of the Gays com Bolsonaro Movement (inspired by the Gays for Trump organization), the 30% of LGBT votes for Bolsonaro shocked many in the Brazilian Media, as Bolsonaro is seen as a socially conservative homophobic politician.[26] The reasons attributed to these votes were the widespread fear of violence, economic insecurity, attachment to traditional values, discontent with the Workers' Party, as well as a perceived political manipulation of LGBT activism by the left.[27]

Canada edit

LGBTory was founded in 2015 as a group for LGBT supporters of the Conservative Party of Canada and provincial conservative parties across Canada. Prior to that, small groups existed locally in some Canadian cities or as discussion forums on the Internet.

Openly gay political figures such as Scott Brison, Lorne Mayencourt and Jaime Watt are or have been associated with conservative parties at the provincial or federal levels, Keith Norton, Phil Gillies and Heward Grafftey came out as gay after their careers as politicians had ended, and Richard Hatfield was outed as gay after his death.[28] Most such figures, however, have been Red Tories, a moderate or even progressive faction within Canadian conservatism, rather than conventionally conservative "Blue" Tories; Brison, in fact, quit the Progressive Conservative Party to join the Liberals after the PCs merged with the more right-wing Canadian Alliance to form the Conservative Party.

In 2015, a contingent of federal Conservative MPs and provincial Ontario Progressive Conservative Party MPPs participated in Toronto's annual Pride Week parade for the first time in its history. Organized by LGBTory, the marching contingent included federal MPs Kellie Leitch and Bernard Trottier, Ontario PC leader Patrick Brown and MPPs Lisa MacLeod and Jack MacLaren,[29] alongside numerous out LGBT party activists and supporters.

In 2016, Interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose became the first leader of the federal Conservative Party to march in the Toronto Pride Parade. She was joined by leadership contestants & MPs, Lisa Raitt, Michael Chong, Kellie Leitch, and Maxime Bernier.

In 2019, Ontario Premier Doug Ford, Deputy Premier Christine Elliott, and cabinet ministers Caroline Mulroney & Stephen Lecce all marched in the York Region Pride Parade. This was the first time a sitting conservative Ontario Premier had marched in a pride parade while in office.

Eric Duncan was elected as the first openly gay Conservative MP in 2019, and Melissa Lantsman was elected as the first openly lesbian Conservative MP in 2021.

LGBT representation in politics is promoted by ProudPolitics, a non-partisan networking and mentoring organization whose members span the political spectrum.

Chile edit

In 2014, the doctrinal council of the conservative National Renewal voted 72.3% to reject a proposal that would have advocated limiting marriage and adoption to heterosexual couples.[30]

European Union edit

Members of the European Parliament from across the political spectrum, including conservatives, have formed the European Parliament Intergroup on LGBT Rights.

Denmark edit

The leader of the Conservative People's Party in Denmark, Søren Pape Poulsen, is openly gay.[31]

France edit

A 2013 IFOP survey of French LGBT people found that French LGBT people have same underlying trends as the rest of the population, namely a radicalization of positions and some disenchantment with political parties. The left wing parties of France did not capitalize on Law 2013-404 with LGBT voters, which implies that the party positions on social issues are secondary to policy choices, with LGBT people having no distinction on this point the rest of the population. Despite some French media representations, sexual orientation does not appear to determine political views. With increasing acceptance of LGBT people in France, LGBT people in France feel less inclined to mobilize behind parties with the political demands of the LGBT community.[32]

Support for the Socialist Party (PS) from 2012 and 2013 found that 21% of bisexuals supported PS in 2012, but only 16% supported PS in 2013, while LGBT people maintained support for PS and the Europe Ecology – The Greens at 27% and 6% from 2012 to 2013. Law 2013-404 has allowed the left government to maintain its support among LGBT people overall, while in steep decline in the overall population. In 2011, 50% of LGBT people supported left wing parties, while in 2012, 44% of LGBT people supported left wing parties, and in 2013, 36% of LGBT people supported left wing parties. When counting gay voters only, 45% supported left wing parties in 2012, while 38% supported left wing parties in 2013. Among non-heterosexuals, 24% supported left wing parties in 2012, while 21% supported left wing parties in 2013. Among heterosexuals, 21% supported left wing parties in 2012, while 18% supported left wing parties in 2013. Disaffection towards the left party is a phenomenon is affecting all sexual orientation categories of the population.[32]

In 2011, 15% of non-heterosexuals supported center-right wing parties, while in 2012, 20% of non-heterosexuals supported center-right wing parties, and in 2013, 22% of non-heterosexuals supported center-right wing parties. In 2011, 17% of bisexuals supported center-right wing parties, while in 2012, 21% of bisexuals supported center-right wing parties, and in 2013, 17% of bisexuals supported center-right wing parties. In 2011, 13% of LGBT people supported center-right wing parties, while in 2012, 20% of LGBT people supported center-right wing parties, and in 2013, 21% of LGBT people supported center-right wing parties. In 2011, 21% of heterosexuals supported center-right wing parties, while in 2012, 25% of heterosexuals supported center-right wing parties, and in 2013, 22% of heterosexuals supported center-right wing parties.[32]

Despite their opposition to Law 2013–404, the center right parties maintains its support among the LGBT electorate, but in a more fragmented way than in the past. In 2012, 16% of LGBT people supported the Union for a Popular Movement (UPM), while in 2013, 14% of LGBT supported the UPM. In 2012, 20% of heterosexuals people supported the UPM, while in 2013, 17% of heterosexuals supported the UPM. This decline of support for UPM helped benefit of the Union of Democrats and Independents, with 6% among LGBT people in 2013, given that the positions taken by some of its leaders, such as Rama Yade and Jean-Louis Borloo, in favor of same-sex marriage it was perhaps not unrelated.[32]

In 2012, 10% of non-heterosexuals supported the National Front, while in 2013, 16% of non-heterosexuals supported the National Front. In 2012, 9% of bisexuals supported the National Front, while in 2013, 16% of bisexuals supported the National Front. In 2012, 10% of LGBT people supported the National Front, while in 2013, 15% of LGBT supported the National Front. In 2012, 9% of heterosexuals people supported the National Front, while in 2013, 13% of heterosexuals supported the National Front.[32]

Support for the National Front is stronger in the ranks of LGBT people than among all the French people, with 13% support for the National Front in 2013. The National Front is benefiting among LGBT voters, with a +5% increase between 2012 and 2013, than in the rest of the population, +4% of heterosexuals in the same period. The increase of the National Front among LGBT people is probably due to the composition of the electorate, with more male, urban, and younger people than the average population therefore generally more willing to vote for the National Front. In Paris, 26% of LGBT residents support the National Front, with 16% heterosexuals support National Front. The National Front's opposition to Islamism is attractive to LGBT people who perceive Islam as a threat to their lives and freedoms.[32]

2013 IFOP survey on French LGBT people's political support by party[32]
Affiliation % of French LGBT people
Total 100 100
 
Right-wing parties 36 36
 
Gaullist parties 21 21
 
Union for a Popular Movement 14 14
 
Union of Democrats and Independents 6 6
 
Other 1 1
 
National Front 15 15
 
Left-wing parties 36 36
 
Socialist Party 27 27
 
Europe Ecology – The Greens 6 6
 
Other 3 3
 

Netherlands edit

Much of the Dutch right wing (including figures such as Geert Wilders) has evolved to include LGBT rights platforms which do not conflict with the current status quo but also embrace an increased perturbation to supposed threats from minority religions (especially Islam) which, in their view, threaten to upend the vestiges of the liberalism and tolerance which has been associated with the Dutch social climate.

The former political party the Pim Fortuyn List supported LGBT rights, and its leader and namesake Pim Fortuyn was openly gay.

Russia edit

Sweden edit

The Open Moderates is the LGBT-organisation of the Moderate Party in Sweden. The Open Moderates is an organization for everyone that shares the values of the Moderate Party and who believe that LGBT-issues are important political issues to work with from a centre-right perspective.

The origin of the Open Moderates is the Stockholm-based club "Gay Moderates" that was formed already in the late 1970s. That club had mostly social activities and it was active upon until the mid-1990s. A new generation took over and reorganized the Gay Moderates as a new more political network to lobby the Moderate Party. In 2003 the name was changed to the current Open Moderates to signal that the organisation is open to everyone regardless of sexual orientation that want to work with LGBT political issues.

In recent years, the national conservative Sweden Democrats party has softened its stance on LGBT rights and same-sex parenting with party leader Jimmie Åkesson suggesting in 2018 that the party would rewrite its program for the first time to include LGBT related issues. One of the SD's legislators and spokesmen Bo Broman is homosexual.

The conservative Citizens' Coalition leader Ilan Sadé is openly gay.[33]

Switzerland edit

In Switzerland, the centre-right party Conservative Democratic Party of Switzerland support LGBT rights,[34] but the right-wing Swiss People's Party does not.

United Kingdom edit

In April 2015, PinkNews found 26% of British LGBT people supported the Conservative and Unionist Party, a 5% increase from the last election in 2010, 26% support the Labour Party, a 2% decrease from the last election in 2010, 19% support the Liberal Democrats, a 21% decrease from the last election in 2010, 20% support the Green Party of England and Wales/Scottish Green Party/Green Party in Northern Ireland, a 16% increase from the last election in 2010, and 2% supported the UK Independence Party. This is the first time in the 10 years that PinkNews has polled the LGBT community that the Conservatives have led the survey of voting intentions.[35]

The first LGBT Conservative group was called CGHE (Conservative Group for Homosexual Equality). That group was reconstituted at the Conservative party Conference in 1991 and was renamed TORCHE (the Tory Campaign for Homosexual Equality). This group was active until 2003. Some years later LGBTory was formed. LGBTory has an active membership often organised using its Facebook groups and pages and attends vigils and LGBT Pride events across the UK including Pride London, Pride Scotia, Leeds Pride, Manchester Pride, Doncaster Pride and Brighton Pride.

LGBTory campaigned in seats throughout the campaign for the 6 May 2010 General Election. There are now at least 12 openly gay and lesbian Conservative MPs in parliament.

LGBTory, now renamed to LGBT+ Conservatives, works to promote LGBT Equality within the Conservative Party and generally across the UK, actively campaigning against the Gay Blood Ban and for marriage equality, regardless of sexuality or gender identity.

The UK Independence Party has an officially recognised LGBTQ in UKIP campaigning group which is active on the social media sites Twitter and Facebook. It has been represented at the party's annual conference.[36] Peter Whittle of the UKIP was the only LGBT candidate in the 2016 London Assembly election and afterwards was selected as the UKIP's deputy leader.

United States edit

Notable LGBT conservatives edit

Lesbian women edit

Gay men edit

Bisexual edit

Transgender edit

List of organizations edit

Some organizations include:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Livre III ... du code pénal" Choix de rapports, opinions et discours prononcés à la tribune nationale (in French). VI. Paris: A. Eymery. 1819. p. 320. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  2. ^ "Sodomylaws.org". Sodomylaws.org. Retrieved 2013-10-05.
  3. ^ "Key dates for lesbian, gay, bi and trans equality". 26 July 2016.
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  5. ^ "Archives reveal Churchill's Cabinet discussed gays". PinkNews.
  6. ^ "Edward Heath: Britain's Forgotten And Mysterious Prime Minister". International Business Times. 21 June 2013.
  7. ^ a b c "UNITED KINGDOM: CONFRONTING CRIMINAL HISTORIES" (PDF).
  8. ^ Doran, Tom (8 April 2013). "Margaret Thatcher's Legacy on Gay Rights". The Daily Beast – via www.thedailybeast.com.
  9. ^ Aster, Tony (19 October 2014). "The Dissident: Peter Campbell, the Conservative Party Paedophile behind Gay Marriage".
  10. ^ Coleman, Brian (June 25, 2007). . New Statesman. Archived from the original on December 1, 2008. Retrieved June 10, 2023.
  11. ^ Engel, Stephen M. (26 July 2001). The Unfinished Revolution: Social Movement Theory and the Gay and Lesbian Movement. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521003773 – via Google Books.
  12. ^ Taylor, Yvette; Snowdon, Ria (18 February 2014). Queering Religion, Religious Queers. Routledge. ISBN 9781135013769 – via Google Books.
  13. ^ "FG proposes civil partnership rights". RTÉ.ie. 24 June 2004.
  14. ^ "'Better rights' for gay couples". 15 November 2004 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
  15. ^ "Amendment to end dismissal based on HIV status". 9 September 2010.
  16. ^ . 27 August 2011. Archived from the original on 27 August 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  17. ^ guardian.co.uk (5 October 2011). "David Cameron's Conservative party conference speech in full" – via www.theguardian.com.
  18. ^ . GLEN. March 3, 2012. Archived from the original on May 23, 2015. Retrieved June 10, 2023.
  19. ^ "MP-by-MP: Gay marriage vote". BBC News. 5 February 2013.
  20. ^ . The Public Whip. Archived from the original on October 28, 2014. Retrieved June 10, 2023.
  21. ^ . UK Parliament. June 4, 2013. Archived from the original on November 2, 2013. Retrieved June 10, 2023.
  22. ^ a b "Bill stages — Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill 2012-13 to 2013-14". UK Parliament. 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
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  24. ^ "Vlaams Belang".
  25. ^ "Crivella nomeia gay "evangélico" para pasta em defesa de LGBT". lgbtbrasil.com.br.
  26. ^ Sullivan, Zoe (October 29, 2018). "LGBTQ Brazilians on edge after self-described 'homophobic' lawmaker elected president". NBC News.
  27. ^ Bulgarelli, Lucas (2018-10-27). "Análisis | Por que 29% dos LGBTs votam em Bolsonaro?". EL PAÍS (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  28. ^ "Gay politicians come out of the closet and into the cabinet". The Globe and Mail, November 13, 2009.
  29. ^ Brennan, Richard J (June 29, 2015). . Toronto Star. Archived from the original on June 30, 2015. Retrieved June 10, 2023.
  30. ^ "Consejo doctrinario de RN rechaza limitar idea de familia al matrimonio heterosexual".
  31. ^ "Conservative leader: 'I'm gay, so what?'". The Local Denmark. 13 August 2014. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  32. ^ a b c d e f g "Google Translate". translate.googleusercontent.com.
  33. ^ "Varför portas Medborgerlig Samling från Pride" (in Swedish).
  34. ^ "Swiss Political Parties Reveal Their Colours". Swissinfo. September 11, 2015. Retrieved October 29, 2015.
  35. ^ Rhoden-Paul, André (23 March 2015). "Tories draw level with Labour in winning gay vote" – via www.theguardian.com.
  36. ^ Roberts, Scott (25 September 2012). "UKIP approves internal LGBT campaign group". PinkNews. Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  37. ^ Roberts, Jeremy (March 15, 2022). "Roberts: Coming out while in politics has been both positive and liberating". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved March 15, 2022.
  38. ^ Lewak, Doree (15 June 2019). . The New York Post. Archived from the original on June 16, 2019. Retrieved June 10, 2023.
  39. ^ Jensen, Erin (February 19, 2016). "Caitlyn Jenner says she gets more 'flak' for being a Republican than trans". USA Today.

lgbt, conservatism, this, article, written, like, personal, reflection, personal, essay, argumentative, essay, that, states, wikipedia, editor, personal, feelings, presents, original, argument, about, topic, please, help, improve, rewriting, encyclopedic, styl. This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style September 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message LGBT conservatism refers to LGBT lesbian gay bisexual and transgender individuals with conservative political views It is an umbrella term used for what is bifurcated into two specific sub categories each with its own term and meaning The first sub categorical term Pre Stonewall LGBT Conservatism refers to LGBT individuals embracing and promoting even in the post Stonewall era the ideology of a traditional anti gay conservatism in either a general or specifically LGBT social context or environment The second sub categorical term Post Stonewall LGBT Conservatism refers to self affirming LGBT persons with fiscally culturally and politically conservative views These post Stonewall conservatives social views though generally conservative too at the same time reflect a self determination stemmed and more recent socio historical gay affirmation on issues like marriage equality for same sex couples gay family recognition civic equality generally for LGBT people in society and also a positive role for gay affirming religion in LGBT life though there is not complete unanimity of opinion among them on all issues especially those regarding the dynamics and politics of the closet and identity management and various legal and political issues e g adoption agency placement rights of private businesses certain intra LGBT issues of bisexuality transgender topics and others The first term can include LGBT people who are actually opposed to same sex marriage or other LGBTQ rights while the second term contrastingly usually refers to self affirming gay people who unequivocally favor marriage as a legal institution for both heterosexuals and gays in countries where this is feasible and who simultaneously prefer economic and political conservatism more generally The number of self affirming LGBT advocates for conservative ideas and policies became more apparent only after the advent of the modern LGBT civil rights movement in the 1970s which encouraged affirmation of LGBT identity to achieve greater consolidation of political power even as many gay conservatives labelled as self hating at the time did remain closeted in areas where anti gay socially conservative politicians then led the most organized opposition to LGBT rights The Realpolitik and ideology situations and alliance coalition possibilities for LGBT conservatives today vary by their own self definition and each country s and local area s sociopolitical cultural and legal LGBT rights landscape Contents 1 History 1 1 Before the Stonewall riots 1 2 After the Stonewall riots 1 2 1 Rise of LGBT conservatism 2 By country 2 1 Australia 2 2 Belgium 2 3 Brazil 2 4 Canada 2 5 Chile 2 6 European Union 2 7 Denmark 2 8 France 2 9 Netherlands 2 10 Russia 2 11 Sweden 2 12 Switzerland 2 13 United Kingdom 2 14 United States 3 Notable LGBT conservatives 3 1 Lesbian women 3 2 Gay men 3 3 Bisexual 3 4 Transgender 4 List of organizations 5 See also 6 ReferencesHistory editSee also LGBT conservatism in the United States History Before the Stonewall riots edit In France in 1791 Louis Michel le Peletier de Saint Fargeau presented a new criminal code to the national Constituent Assembly 1 He explained that it outlawed only true crimes and not phony offenses created by superstition feudalism the tax system and royal despotism 1 He did not list the crimes created by superstition The new penal code did not mention blasphemy heresy sacrilege witchcraft incest or homosexuality which led to these former offences being swiftly decriminalized In 1810 a new criminal code was issued under Napoleon As with the Penal Code of 1791 it did not contain provisions for religious crimes incest or homosexuality In 1852 under the prime ministership of the Duke of Saldanha a liberal conservative Cartista same sex sexual intercourse was legalized throughout Portugal 2 In 1870 the draft penal law submitted by Chancellor Otto von Bismarck to the North German Confederation retained the relevant Prussian penal provisions criminalizing male same sex sexual intercourse justifying this out of concern for public opinion Even though one can justify the omission of these penal provisions from the standpoint of Medicine as well as on grounds taken from certain theories of criminal law the public s sense of justice das Rechtsbewusstsein im Volke views these acts not merely as vices but as crimes On May 15 1871 under Chancellor Otto von Bismarck Paragraph 175 was enacted throughout the German Empire In August 1885 under Conservative Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Robert Gascoyne Cecil 3rd Marquess of Salisbury the Labouchere Amendment passed August 7 1885 becoming Section 11 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885 3 In 1887 during the period known as the Conservative Republic Spanish Republica Conservadora same sex sexual intercourse was legalized throughout Argentina 4 On February 24 1954 British Prime Minister Winston Churchill during a cabinet meeting bluntly replied that the Conservative Party was not going to accept responsibility for making the law more lenient towards gay men He suggested that an enquiry might be the way forward proposed limiting press coverage of the convictions of homosexuals and suggested that any man caught by police should be offered the option of medical treatment Otherwise I wouldn t touch the subject he said Let it get worse in hope of a more united public pressure for some amendment 5 In 2007 Brian Coleman a former openly gay Conservative member of the London Assembly and former mayor of Barnet wrote in the New Statesman that in the mid 1950s London police were aware that future Prime Minister Edward Heath was cottaging seeking out anonymous sex partners in public lavatories and that they warned him to stop lest it damage his career Coleman also claimed that gays ran the Conservative Party in London for many years suggesting Heath may have been protected Britain had managed for decades with gay men holding a significant number of public offices Coleman wrote 6 In 1957 after the international conference Wolfenden50 the Conservative government appointed the Committee on Homosexual Offences and Prostitution 1957 to investigate what were perceived as two increasing social problems in the context of rising prosecutions The committees terms of reference asked members to consider the law and practice relating to both homosexual offences and the treatment of persons convicted of such offences and to offences connected to prostitution and solicitation for immoral purposes The association between homosexuality and prostitution reflected the committee s assumption that both were forms of deviance threatening the family as the basic unit of society The committee s report in 1957 included as its first recommendation That homosexual behaviour between consenting adults in private be no longer a criminal offence other recommendations sought the tightening of the law concerning public same sex behaviour and street prostitution although acts of selling sex would remain legal 7 In May 1965 Arthur Gore 8th Earl of Arran and Conservative Party Chief Whip introduced into the House of Lords a bill decriminalizing male same sex sexual intercourse in England and Wales During its passage senior peers inserted a strict privacy clause applying a more restrictive standard of privacy than for heterosexual behavior This specified that a homosexual act would not be considered private if more than two persons take part or are present or if occurring in a public lavatory The bill passed through the Lords in July 1965 and was brought into the House of Commons by Conservative MP Humphrey Berkeley known to be homosexual by many in parliament After a Labour victory in the general election in 1966 Berkeley lost his seat and was replaced as the bill s sponsor by Labour MP Leo Abse 7 Prospective Conservative Prime Minister Robert Boothby later Lord Boothby who was homosexual was peppered when defined as throughout parliament and the establishment and hence their political colleagues had every interest in decriminalizing their activities Boothby was involved in a friendship and possibly a sexual relationship with Ronnie Kray while simultaneously the long term lover of Lady Dorothy Macmillan wife of Harold Macmillan Conservative Prime Minister from 1957 to 1963 7 When the Sexual Offences Act 1967 passed in 1967 only a handful of Conservatives voted for the decriminalization of male same sex sexual intercourse including future Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher 8 On June 25 1969 shortly before the end of the Christian Democratic Union CDU Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD Grand Coalition headed by CDU Chancellor Kurt Georg Kiesinger Paragraph 175 was reformed in that only the qualified cases that were previously handled in 175a sex with a man less than 21 years old homosexual prostitution and the exploitation of a relationship of dependency such as employing or supervising a person in a work situation were retained Paragraph 175b concerning bestiality also was removed After the Stonewall riots edit Rise of LGBT conservatism edit In 1975 the Conservative Group for Homosexual Equality CGHE was founded in the United Kingdom by Peter Walter Campbell It was the first LGBT conservative organization ever 9 In 2007 Brian Coleman a former openly gay Conservative member of the London Assembly and former mayor of Barnet wrote in the New Statesman that many of the gay politicians in the Conservative Party joined the party and became active during the Thatcher years He also contended that the underlying ethos of Thatcherism might well be pro gay and it was Margaret Thatcher s personality which attracted so many homosexual men to the party The reason he contended that the Iron Lady drew many gay men to the Conservative Party was her pure elegance feminine perfection perfect dress sense and sheer determination to change society and whilst her government might have had an anti gay aura there was simply nothing in her personal attitude to demonstrate any prejudice she appointed gay ministers such as Earl of Avon son of ex Prime Minister Anthony Eden On the subject of AIDS it was her government with Norman Fowler as Health Secretary which faced the issue head on and refused to take a moral tone on public information and prevention work He finishes by stating that There are many gay Tory men who would like to sleep with David Cameron but it is Lady Thatcher whose portrait hangs over their bed 10 During the First Thatcher ministry Criminal Justice Act 1980 was passed in 1980 legalizing same sex sexual intercourse in Scotland On May 28 1988 during the Third Thatcher ministry Clause 28 of the Local Government Act 1988 received a 2 to 1 majority in the House of Lords and a vote of 254 to 201 in the House of Commons 11 In 1991 the CGHE reconstituted at the Conservative Party Conference and renamed the Tory Campaign for Homosexual Equality TORCHE The organization would remain active til 2004 when it disbanded 12 On April 21 2003 the Ba athist regime in Iraq was deposed The Coalition Provisional Authority established by the George W Bush administration abolished the death penalty and reverted to a revised 1988 penal code thus legalizing same sex sexual intercourse in Iraq On June 24 2004 Fine Gael proposed legalizing civil partnerships for same sex and opposite sex couples who choose not to marry the first Irish political party to do so 13 In November 2004 in reaction to the legal challenge on tax issues Taoiseach and Fianna Fail leader Bertie Ahern said Couples want equality and we should try to deal with some of those issues but added that moves to legalise gay marriage are a long way off 14 During the 2004 Irish presidential election Fianna Fail Fine Gael and Progressive Democrats produced policies or made statements in favor of varying forms of recognition for same sex couples During the 2007 Irish general election the manifestos of Fianna Fail Fine Gael and Progressive Democrats supported civil unions for same sex couples All parties ran advertisements in Gay Community News GNC with commitments to same sex couples In 2010 ogra Fianna Fail came out in favor of same sex marriage In 2010 the Botswana government under the control of the Botswana Democratic Party passed an amendment to its Employment Act that will bring an end to dismissal based on an individual s sexual orientation or HIV status 15 In July 2011 Young Fine Gael came out in favor of same sex marriage 16 On October 5 2011 British Prime Minister David Cameron said at a Conservative Party conference that So I don t support gay marriage despite being a Conservative I support gay marriage because I m a Conservative 17 On March 3 2012 Fianna Fail came out in favour of same sex marriage in Ireland 18 On February 5 2013 Marriage Act 2013 during its second reading received in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom that Conservatives voted 126 for 134 against including 8 voted against from the Democratic Unionist Party 5 both and 36 did not vote 19 On May 21 2013 the act during its third reading received in the House of Commons that Conservatives voted 117 for 127 against including 8 voted against from the Democratic Unionist Party 7 both and 51 did not vote 20 On June 4 2013 the act during its second reading received in the House of Lords that Conservatives voted against the Dear Amendment to reject second reading 66 voted in favour including 2 in favour from the Democratic Unionist Party 1 in favour from Ulster Unionist Party and 2 in favor from UK Independence Party and 63 did not vote 21 The act had its third reading on July 15 2013 and was passed by a simple voice vote 22 The amended Bill returned to the House of Commons for approval of the amendments on 16 July 2013 which the House approved on the same day 22 On November 5 2013 Fine Gael came out in favour of same sex marriage in Ireland 23 On May 22 2015 the Thirty Fourth Amendment Marriage Equality Act to the Irish Constitution was passed in Ireland via national referendum 62 of Irish voters voted in favour of same sex marriage Voter turnout was 61 of the national electorate The referendum was introduced under the Fine Gael Labour coalition government By country editAustralia edit See also Liberal Pride Belgium edit While centre right parties such as the New Flemish Alliance support LGBT rights as of 2014 none of the major conservative parties are opposed to LGBT rights 24 circular reference Brazil edit Before and following the Impeachment process against Dilma Rousseff several gay conservatives have been visible Clodovil Hernandes of the Christian Labour Party and later the Party of the Republic before his death in 2009 is considered to be the first known gay MP for the Chamber of Deputies On 16 January 2017 Marcelo Crivella the mayor of Rio de Janeiro promoted Nelio Georgini a gay evangelical conservative to the head of the city LGBT council 25 In 2018 30 of the Brazilian LGBT community voted for the right wing populist Jair Bolsonaro against 57 of votes for left wing Fernando Haddad in the presidential runoff according to Datafolha Following the conservative wave that contributed to the emergence of the Gays com Bolsonaro Movement inspired by the Gays for Trump organization the 30 of LGBT votes for Bolsonaro shocked many in the Brazilian Media as Bolsonaro is seen as a socially conservative homophobic politician 26 The reasons attributed to these votes were the widespread fear of violence economic insecurity attachment to traditional values discontent with the Workers Party as well as a perceived political manipulation of LGBT activism by the left 27 Canada edit LGBTory was founded in 2015 as a group for LGBT supporters of the Conservative Party of Canada and provincial conservative parties across Canada Prior to that small groups existed locally in some Canadian cities or as discussion forums on the Internet Openly gay political figures such as Scott Brison Lorne Mayencourt and Jaime Watt are or have been associated with conservative parties at the provincial or federal levels Keith Norton Phil Gillies and Heward Grafftey came out as gay after their careers as politicians had ended and Richard Hatfield was outed as gay after his death 28 Most such figures however have been Red Tories a moderate or even progressive faction within Canadian conservatism rather than conventionally conservative Blue Tories Brison in fact quit the Progressive Conservative Party to join the Liberals after the PCs merged with the more right wing Canadian Alliance to form the Conservative Party In 2015 a contingent of federal Conservative MPs and provincial Ontario Progressive Conservative Party MPPs participated in Toronto s annual Pride Week parade for the first time in its history Organized by LGBTory the marching contingent included federal MPs Kellie Leitch and Bernard Trottier Ontario PC leader Patrick Brown and MPPs Lisa MacLeod and Jack MacLaren 29 alongside numerous out LGBT party activists and supporters In 2016 Interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose became the first leader of the federal Conservative Party to march in the Toronto Pride Parade She was joined by leadership contestants amp MPs Lisa Raitt Michael Chong Kellie Leitch and Maxime Bernier In 2019 Ontario Premier Doug Ford Deputy Premier Christine Elliott and cabinet ministers Caroline Mulroney amp Stephen Lecce all marched in the York Region Pride Parade This was the first time a sitting conservative Ontario Premier had marched in a pride parade while in office Eric Duncan was elected as the first openly gay Conservative MP in 2019 and Melissa Lantsman was elected as the first openly lesbian Conservative MP in 2021 LGBT representation in politics is promoted by ProudPolitics a non partisan networking and mentoring organization whose members span the political spectrum Chile edit In 2014 the doctrinal council of the conservative National Renewal voted 72 3 to reject a proposal that would have advocated limiting marriage and adoption to heterosexual couples 30 European Union edit Members of the European Parliament from across the political spectrum including conservatives have formed the European Parliament Intergroup on LGBT Rights Denmark edit The leader of the Conservative People s Party in Denmark Soren Pape Poulsen is openly gay 31 France edit A 2013 IFOP survey of French LGBT people found that French LGBT people have same underlying trends as the rest of the population namely a radicalization of positions and some disenchantment with political parties The left wing parties of France did not capitalize on Law 2013 404 with LGBT voters which implies that the party positions on social issues are secondary to policy choices with LGBT people having no distinction on this point the rest of the population Despite some French media representations sexual orientation does not appear to determine political views With increasing acceptance of LGBT people in France LGBT people in France feel less inclined to mobilize behind parties with the political demands of the LGBT community 32 Support for the Socialist Party PS from 2012 and 2013 found that 21 of bisexuals supported PS in 2012 but only 16 supported PS in 2013 while LGBT people maintained support for PS and the Europe Ecology The Greens at 27 and 6 from 2012 to 2013 Law 2013 404 has allowed the left government to maintain its support among LGBT people overall while in steep decline in the overall population In 2011 50 of LGBT people supported left wing parties while in 2012 44 of LGBT people supported left wing parties and in 2013 36 of LGBT people supported left wing parties When counting gay voters only 45 supported left wing parties in 2012 while 38 supported left wing parties in 2013 Among non heterosexuals 24 supported left wing parties in 2012 while 21 supported left wing parties in 2013 Among heterosexuals 21 supported left wing parties in 2012 while 18 supported left wing parties in 2013 Disaffection towards the left party is a phenomenon is affecting all sexual orientation categories of the population 32 In 2011 15 of non heterosexuals supported center right wing parties while in 2012 20 of non heterosexuals supported center right wing parties and in 2013 22 of non heterosexuals supported center right wing parties In 2011 17 of bisexuals supported center right wing parties while in 2012 21 of bisexuals supported center right wing parties and in 2013 17 of bisexuals supported center right wing parties In 2011 13 of LGBT people supported center right wing parties while in 2012 20 of LGBT people supported center right wing parties and in 2013 21 of LGBT people supported center right wing parties In 2011 21 of heterosexuals supported center right wing parties while in 2012 25 of heterosexuals supported center right wing parties and in 2013 22 of heterosexuals supported center right wing parties 32 Despite their opposition to Law 2013 404 the center right parties maintains its support among the LGBT electorate but in a more fragmented way than in the past In 2012 16 of LGBT people supported the Union for a Popular Movement UPM while in 2013 14 of LGBT supported the UPM In 2012 20 of heterosexuals people supported the UPM while in 2013 17 of heterosexuals supported the UPM This decline of support for UPM helped benefit of the Union of Democrats and Independents with 6 among LGBT people in 2013 given that the positions taken by some of its leaders such as Rama Yade and Jean Louis Borloo in favor of same sex marriage it was perhaps not unrelated 32 In 2012 10 of non heterosexuals supported the National Front while in 2013 16 of non heterosexuals supported the National Front In 2012 9 of bisexuals supported the National Front while in 2013 16 of bisexuals supported the National Front In 2012 10 of LGBT people supported the National Front while in 2013 15 of LGBT supported the National Front In 2012 9 of heterosexuals people supported the National Front while in 2013 13 of heterosexuals supported the National Front 32 Support for the National Front is stronger in the ranks of LGBT people than among all the French people with 13 support for the National Front in 2013 The National Front is benefiting among LGBT voters with a 5 increase between 2012 and 2013 than in the rest of the population 4 of heterosexuals in the same period The increase of the National Front among LGBT people is probably due to the composition of the electorate with more male urban and younger people than the average population therefore generally more willing to vote for the National Front In Paris 26 of LGBT residents support the National Front with 16 heterosexuals support National Front The National Front s opposition to Islamism is attractive to LGBT people who perceive Islam as a threat to their lives and freedoms 32 2013 IFOP survey on French LGBT people s political support by party 32 Affiliation of French LGBT peopleTotal 100 100 Right wing parties 36 36 Gaullist parties 21 21 Union for a Popular Movement 14 14 Union of Democrats and Independents 6 6 Other 1 1 National Front 15 15 Left wing parties 36 36 Socialist Party 27 27 Europe Ecology The Greens 6 6 Other 3 3 Netherlands edit Much of the Dutch right wing including figures such as Geert Wilders has evolved to include LGBT rights platforms which do not conflict with the current status quo but also embrace an increased perturbation to supposed threats from minority religions especially Islam which in their view threaten to upend the vestiges of the liberalism and tolerance which has been associated with the Dutch social climate The former political party the Pim Fortuyn List supported LGBT rights and its leader and namesake Pim Fortuyn was openly gay Russia edit See also Gays for Putin Sweden edit The Open Moderates is the LGBT organisation of the Moderate Party in Sweden The Open Moderates is an organization for everyone that shares the values of the Moderate Party and who believe that LGBT issues are important political issues to work with from a centre right perspective The origin of the Open Moderates is the Stockholm based club Gay Moderates that was formed already in the late 1970s That club had mostly social activities and it was active upon until the mid 1990s A new generation took over and reorganized the Gay Moderates as a new more political network to lobby the Moderate Party In 2003 the name was changed to the current Open Moderates to signal that the organisation is open to everyone regardless of sexual orientation that want to work with LGBT political issues In recent years the national conservative Sweden Democrats party has softened its stance on LGBT rights and same sex parenting with party leader Jimmie Akesson suggesting in 2018 that the party would rewrite its program for the first time to include LGBT related issues One of the SD s legislators and spokesmen Bo Broman is homosexual The conservative Citizens Coalition leader Ilan Sade is openly gay 33 Switzerland edit In Switzerland the centre right party Conservative Democratic Party of Switzerland support LGBT rights 34 but the right wing Swiss People s Party does not United Kingdom edit In April 2015 PinkNews found 26 of British LGBT people supported the Conservative and Unionist Party a 5 increase from the last election in 2010 26 support the Labour Party a 2 decrease from the last election in 2010 19 support the Liberal Democrats a 21 decrease from the last election in 2010 20 support the Green Party of England and Wales Scottish Green Party Green Party in Northern Ireland a 16 increase from the last election in 2010 and 2 supported the UK Independence Party This is the first time in the 10 years that PinkNews has polled the LGBT community that the Conservatives have led the survey of voting intentions 35 The first LGBT Conservative group was called CGHE Conservative Group for Homosexual Equality That group was reconstituted at the Conservative party Conference in 1991 and was renamed TORCHE the Tory Campaign for Homosexual Equality This group was active until 2003 Some years later LGBTory was formed LGBTory has an active membership often organised using its Facebook groups and pages and attends vigils and LGBT Pride events across the UK including Pride London Pride Scotia Leeds Pride Manchester Pride Doncaster Pride and Brighton Pride LGBTory campaigned in seats throughout the campaign for the 6 May 2010 General Election There are now at least 12 openly gay and lesbian Conservative MPs in parliament LGBTory now renamed to LGBT Conservatives works to promote LGBT Equality within the Conservative Party and generally across the UK actively campaigning against the Gay Blood Ban and for marriage equality regardless of sexuality or gender identity The UK Independence Party has an officially recognised LGBTQ in UKIP campaigning group which is active on the social media sites Twitter and Facebook It has been represented at the party s annual conference 36 Peter Whittle of the UKIP was the only LGBT candidate in the 2016 London Assembly election and afterwards was selected as the UKIP s deputy leader United States edit Main article LGBT conservatism in the United States See also Gays for TrumpNotable LGBT conservatives editLesbian women edit Tammy Bruce Mary Cheney Melissa Lantsman Alice Weidel Ana Brnabic Gay men edit Guy Benson Bruno Bilde Peter Boykin Steeve Briois Bo Broman David Bull Renaud Camus Sebastien Chenu Iain Dale Jack Donovan Eric Duncan Kenny Everett Pim Fortuyn Peter Gibson Richard Grenell Darren Grimes Gerald Grosz Chris Janssens Jose Maria Marco Javier Maroto Ken Mehlman Deroy Murdock Douglas Murray Andy Ngo Amir Ohana Matthew Parris Florian Philippot Soren Pape Poulsen Jeremy Roberts 37 Lee Rowley Dave Rubin George Santos Dean Smith Jens Spahn Brandon Straka 38 David Starkey Andrew Sullivan Peter Thiel Tomas Tobe Leo Varadkar Peter Whittle Tim Wilson Lucian Wintrich Dan Wootton William Wragg Bisexual edit Dehenna Davison Michael Fabricant Jeromy Farkas Daniel Kawczynski Sebastian Tynkkynen Transgender edit Caitlyn Jenner 39 Jennifer Pritzker Nikki Sinclaire Blaire White Jamie Wallis Buck AngelList of organizations editSome organizations include Gay Voter s League not active since 1981 linked to the Republican Party United States Gays for Trump linked to the Republican Party United States GayLib linked to the Union for a Popular Movement Union of Democrats and Independents and Radical Movement France GOProud linked to the Republican Party United States Liberal Pride linked to Liberal Party of Australia Australia Likud Pride linked to Likud Israel LGBTory linked to the Conservative Party of Canada Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario Canada LGBT Conservatives formerly known as LGBTory linked to the Conservative Party United Kingdom Log Cabin Republicans linked to the Republican Party United States Open Moderates originally called Gay Moderates linked to the Moderate Party Sweden Republican Unity Coalition linked to the Republican Party United States Tory Campaign for Homosexual Equality originally called the Conservative Group for Homosexual Equality linked to the Conservative Party United Kingdom See also edit nbsp LGBT portal nbsp Politics portalLGBT movements Liberal homophobia Progressive conservatismReferences edit a b Livre III du code penal Choix de rapports opinions et discours prononces a la tribune nationale in French VI Paris A Eymery 1819 p 320 Retrieved 2008 03 31 Sodomylaws org Sodomylaws org Retrieved 2013 10 05 Key dates for lesbian gay bi and trans equality 26 July 2016 Lucas Paoli Itaborahy Zhu Jingshu May 2013 A world survey of laws Criminalisation protection and recognition of same sex law PDF International Lesbian Gay Bisexual Trans and Intersex Association Archived from the original PDF on 2013 07 17 Archives reveal Churchill s Cabinet discussed gays PinkNews Edward Heath Britain s Forgotten And Mysterious Prime Minister International Business Times 21 June 2013 a b c UNITED KINGDOM CONFRONTING CRIMINAL HISTORIES PDF Doran Tom 8 April 2013 Margaret Thatcher s Legacy on Gay Rights The Daily Beast via www thedailybeast com Aster Tony 19 October 2014 The Dissident Peter Campbell the Conservative Party Paedophile behind Gay Marriage Coleman Brian June 25 2007 Thatcher the gay icon New Statesman Archived from the original on December 1 2008 Retrieved June 10 2023 Engel Stephen M 26 July 2001 The Unfinished Revolution Social Movement Theory and the Gay and Lesbian Movement Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521003773 via Google Books Taylor Yvette Snowdon Ria 18 February 2014 Queering Religion Religious Queers Routledge ISBN 9781135013769 via Google Books FG proposes civil partnership rights RTE ie 24 June 2004 Better rights for gay couples 15 November 2004 via news bbc co uk Amendment to end dismissal based on HIV status 9 September 2010 Young FG Propose the Recognition of Marriage for Same Sex Couples 27 August 2011 Archived from the original on 27 August 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link guardian co uk 5 October 2011 David Cameron s Conservative party conference speech in full via www theguardian com Fianna Fail Ard Fheis Supports Same Sex Marriage GLEN March 3 2012 Archived from the original on May 23 2015 Retrieved June 10 2023 MP by MP Gay marriage vote BBC News 5 February 2013 Marriage Same Sex Couples Bill Third Reading 21 May 2013 The Public Whip Archived from the original on October 28 2014 Retrieved June 10 2023 Lords Divisions results UK Parliament June 4 2013 Archived from the original on November 2 2013 Retrieved June 10 2023 a b Bill stages Marriage Same Sex Couples Bill 2012 13 to 2013 14 UK Parliament 2013 Retrieved 26 June 2013 Government to call for Yes vote for gay marriage Independent ie Vlaams Belang Crivella nomeia gay evangelico para pasta em defesa de LGBT lgbtbrasil com br Sullivan Zoe October 29 2018 LGBTQ Brazilians on edge after self described homophobic lawmaker elected president NBC News Bulgarelli Lucas 2018 10 27 Analisis Por que 29 dos LGBTs votam em Bolsonaro EL PAIS in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 2021 07 28 Gay politicians come out of the closet and into the cabinet The Globe and Mail November 13 2009 Brennan Richard J June 29 2015 Tory MPP Lisa MacLeod rejects anti Pride comments from Ottawa radio host Toronto Star Archived from the original on June 30 2015 Retrieved June 10 2023 Consejo doctrinario de RN rechaza limitar idea de familia al matrimonio heterosexual Conservative leader I m gay so what The Local Denmark 13 August 2014 Retrieved 2021 07 28 a b c d e f g Google Translate translate googleusercontent com Varfor portas Medborgerlig Samling fran Pride in Swedish Swiss Political Parties Reveal Their Colours Swissinfo September 11 2015 Retrieved October 29 2015 Rhoden Paul Andre 23 March 2015 Tories draw level with Labour in winning gay vote via www theguardian com Roberts Scott 25 September 2012 UKIP approves internal LGBT campaign group PinkNews Retrieved 23 December 2014 Roberts Jeremy March 15 2022 Roberts Coming out while in politics has been both positive and liberating Ottawa Citizen Retrieved March 15 2022 Lewak Doree 15 June 2019 Former Democrat turned conservative gay rights activist slams Pride sues LGBT Center The New York Post Archived from the original on June 16 2019 Retrieved June 10 2023 Jensen Erin February 19 2016 Caitlyn Jenner says she gets more flak for being a Republican than trans USA Today Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title LGBT conservatism amp oldid 1187010271, wikipedia, wiki, 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