Arizona State Senator Steve Gallardo |
Monica Alonzo
March 5, 2014
Sitting in the Senate Caucus room with a handful of reporters a week and a half after he delivered a rousing speech to activists protesting against an anti-gay measure at the Capitol, state Senator Steve Gallardo says it's time to announce his sexual orientation.
"I'm gay, I'm a Latino, and I'm a senator," he says, his voice quavering with emotion. "And it's okay."
Watching activists fighting against SB 1062, a bill that provided legal cover for business owner who chose to discriminate against gays and transgender persons, inspired him to speak out, he says.
Brewer vetoed the bill, but Gallardo says the debate was "actually a game changer."
"Seeing the people out there, protesting. I thought it's time," he says. "It's time to let people know about me. And to send people a message. I'm more interested in letting people who struggle with this know that it's okay."
As for how this may affect his congressional aspirations, he says he doesn't care, that he hasn't even thought about that.
"I couldn't care less. This is about standing up and doing the right thing," he says.
Gallardo has announced that he's running for a seat in Arizona's Congressional District 7, which longtime Congressman Ed Pastor is leaving vacant when he retires at the end of his term.
Gallardo wants his colleagues to know that the comments they make when they are debating these issues directly affects people sitting next to them.
The 44-year-old lawmaker summed up reaction from his family and friends on coming out today.
"My family asked me, 'Why do you have to do this?' And my friends said, 'It's about time.'"
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Congratulations Senator!
Welcome to a brave new world of truth and freedom
"Fear Eats the Soul"
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