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A Conversation
with Scudder Parker
Democrat Hopes to Oust Republican Governor
by Paul Olsen
Governor,
Democrat Scudder Parker promises to provide Vermonters with bold leadership
on a variety of issues, including issues of concern to the gay, lesbian,
bisexual and transgender community.
Parker, a minister raised in Vermont’s
Northeast Kingdom, represented Caledonia County in the state Senate
for eight years. Most recently, he worked as an energy consultant and
for Vermont Businesses for Social Responsibility.
Parker met with Out in the
Mountains to discuss his campaign against incumbent Republican Governor
Jim Douglas. The interview:
OITM: Why should GLBT Vermonters support your candidacy?
Parker: I will be an effective Governor on a whole bunch of issues that
all Vermonters care about: a secure energy future; building a stable,
affordable health care system; building a strong economy; and a concern
for the spectrum of human services that focuses on making investments
in people. Fundamentally, I think it is the same reason everybody else
should be supportive of my campaign.
Specifi cally, I have a long history
of commitment to social justice and am committed to equal rights for
all Vermonters. That really is one of the fundamental pieces of building
a healthy society, a strong community, and a great economy.
OITM: Gov. Douglas recently vetoed legislation banning discrimination
in Vermont on the basis of gender identity or expression. What is your
position on H.865?
Parker: I was astonished by the Governor’s veto of it and frankly
appalled. I think it was the fi rst piece of civil rights legislation
that has been vetoed by a (Vermont) governor. I was also perturbed by
the way he appears to have drawn the Human Rights Commission (HRC) into
a situation where it looked like what they were doing was providing
cover for him. I’m concerned about what we’re seeing with
his appointees to that commission. That kind of behavior suggests that
the HRC is no longer an independent body that can give an ear in government
to the voice of people who are seeking justice and antidiscrimination
recourse.
OITM: Would you have signed H.865?
Parker: I absolutely would have signed the bill. If there were any questions
about it, the Governor was capable of having his staff address them
in the course of the legislative process. It was not a bill that moved
swiftly, it was around for two years.
OITM: Chuck Kletecka, the only openly gay member of the Human Rights
Commission, resigned to protest Gov. Douglas’ veto of H.865. As
Governor, would you appoint openly gay men, lesbians, bisexual and transgender
Vermonters to state boards and commissions?
Parker: One of the privileges that a Governor has is the opportunity
to put people with a breadth of perspectives into a whole range of appointed
positions. Last year the Legislature had to take legislative action
to make sure Governor Douglas appointed a person of color.
As Governor, I will bring a passion
for making sure there is real representation from labor, people of color,
and the gay and lesbian community.
OITM: Would you issue an Executive Order prohibiting discrimination
on the basis of gender identity and expression in state government?
Parker: Of course. We wouldn’t want any kind of discrimination,
even as passively accepted practices, in state government. We’d
get the bill (H.865) through as fast as possible, but as an interim,
sure.
OITM: What is your position on Vermont’s civil union compromise?
Parker: The stated purpose of the civil union compromise was to provide
full and equal rights to gay and lesbian couples. What we know now is
that outside of Vermont those rights are jeopardized. The reality is
we have a compromise that was regarded as a bold step when it was passed,
but it did not provide full equality to gay and lesbian couples.
OITM: Gay marriage?
Parker: What we need to do now is address a point of confusion in the
ongoing discussion about marriage. I think civil marriage is something
the state offers as a way of recognizing and supporting committed relationships
between two loving partners and that’s what civil marriage should
be. It should give to gay and lesbian relationships as well as to heterosexual
relationships the status of marriage. It should not try to tell the
churches what marriage is, but on the other hand, the state should not
let any church dictate what marriage is for the purposes of the state.
OITM: So you are supportive of the movement to pursue full marriage
rights for gay and lesbian couples in Vermont.
Parker: Yes, civil marriage. There are many religious defi nitions of
what marriage is. Some of them say gay and lesbian couples can be married
and others say no. The state should never be trying to tell a religious
tradition that you have to do this.
OITM: In his race against former Lieutenant Gov. Doug Racine, Jim Douglas’
campaign gay-baited using the issue of gay marriage. Are you concerned
that Douglas and GOP Chairman Jim Barnett will do the same to you?
Parker: I have no idea what they will do. What I am doing is speaking
my mind and my conscience on this. This is not even an issue for me.
It is a matter of protecting members
of my family and respecting their right to have respected by the law
their very clear, committed, stable relationships. How could I possibly,
as a person of faith or as a member of my family, do anything else?
OITM: To date, Gov. Douglas has refused to issue a proclamation recognizing
Vermont’s Pride Day celebration. Would you issue such a proclamation?
Parker: Yes. I think it is an appropriate and wonderful celebration
of a part of the richness of Vermont and our nation’s culture.
OITM: What other message do you have for readers of Out in the Mountains?
Parker: There is an enormous amount of opportunity in this state right
now. We have a society that has a commitment to a tradition of justice,
innovation, economic diversity, and to building creative new institutions.
I believe we have a governor who is not helping to create those institutions
and is not responding to the very real crises we face from the national
government and the policies it is putting in place.
My message to Vermonters is if you
want to put in place a governor who will stand up for justice, build
a sustainable energy policy, make affordable housing available, build
a strong and vibrant economy, and get universal health care system in
place, then work hard to elect me.
Paul Olsen is the Vermont correspondent for Boston's in newsweekly.
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