Gay rapper Cazwell lays it down page 40 Mike Nelson wins bid A Thanksgiving openly gay commish for Orange County All about how to celebrate page 12 page 29 Noted. Notable . Noteworthy. LGBT News & Views Vol. 21 .Number 14 vsrww.q-notes.com November 18.2006 Julia Boseman wins reelection in New Hanover N.C. State Senator one of 67 gay candidates elected to federal, state and local offices across U.S. by Dennis Dison WILMINGTON, N.C. — Campaigning was dirty at times between incumbent State Sen. ■s'-*''*' State Senator Julia Boseman (D-New Hanover) won re-election by 11,000 votes. Julia Boseman and challenger A1 Roseman, but in the end, Boseman handily claimed vic tory by more than 11,000 votes. In an interview with the Wilmington Star, Boseman said New Hanover County voters chose her because of her work to improve education, raising teacher salaries and drum ming up funds for the University of North Carolina in Wilmington. “This election is not about me,” she said. “It’s about what is important to this commu nity.” In conceding defeat, Roseman made no mention of Boseman, but was quick to offer a backhanded congratulations to The Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund for their success. In addition to Boseman, the Victory Fund helped on the Nov. 7 election to bring an unprecedented success in electing openly gay candidates this year. Sixty-seven Victory- endorsed candidates were elected to federal, state and local offices, with some winning his toric races that make them the first openly gay or lesbian candidates ever elected in their states or legislative bodies. “This is the tipping point election for openly gay candidates,” said Chuck Wolfe, president and CEO of the Victory Fund. “We’re proving that qualified, well-prepared candi dates matched with committed donors means gays and lesbians can move from having a st^e in policy to actually making policy. There’s no reason to sit on the sidelines with our fingers crossed anymore.” Additional wins nationwide: • Patricia Todd, v/ho will represent District 54 in the Alabama State House. Todd is the first openly gay person ever elected to any office in the state. • Kathy Webh, who will represent District 37 in the Arkansas State House. Webb is the first openly gay person ever elected to any office in the state. • Henry Fernandez, who won a seat on the Lawrence Township School Board, making him the first openly gay person ever elected to any office in Indiana. • Al McAffrey, who will represent District 88 in the Oklahoma State House. McAffrey is the first openly gay person ever elected to the Oklahoma state legislature. • Jolie Justus, who will represent District 10 in the Missouri State Senate. Justus is the first openly gay state senator in Missouri history. • Ed Murray, who will represent District 43 in the Washington State Senate. Murray, a for mer state representative, is the first openly gay state senator in Washington history. • Matt McCoy, who becomes the first openly gay candidate ever elected to the Iowa legis lature. McCoy, a sitting state senator, came out during his last term. • Ken Kecchl, who won a seat on the Broward County Commission in Florida, beating an appointee of Gov. Jeb Bush. • Jamie Pedersen, who becomes the third con secutive openly gay person to be elected to represent District 43 in the Washington State House. • Judge Virginia Linder mil pin Rives Kistler on the Oregon Supreme Court, making it the first state ever to have nvo openly gay Supreme Court Justices, according to prelim inary results. Key statistics about Victory-endorsed candiaates in 2006 • Total Victory-endorsed candidates: 88 (55 non-incumbents, 33 incumbents) • Total Victory-endorsed winners: 67 • Total Victory-endorsed winners running as openly LGBT for the first time: 37 > Percent of Victory Fund bundled money spent on non-incumbent candidates: 80 per cent • Percent of Victory Fund PAC money spent on non-incumbent candidates: 91 percent • States that elected their first-ever openly LGBT officials: Alabama, Arkansas, Indiana • States that elected their first-ever openly LGBT state legislators: Alabama, Arkansas, Oklahoma ■ Seven states that still have no openly LGBT elected officials at any level of government: Alaska, Louisiana, North Dakota, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, West Virginia • Thirteen additional states that still have no openly LGBT state legislators: Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Indiana, Kansas, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, Wyoming I Arizona’s voters reject so-called ‘Protect Marriage Amendment’ Since 1966 Mid-western state becomes first to defeat such an amendment by Stacia Schacherer PHOENIX, Ariz. — The Nov. 8 ballot count resulting in the defeat of Prop. 107 marks a significant day for Arizona’s families. With 97 percent of precincts reporting. Prop. 107 was trailing by nearly three percent, which includes comfortable, margins in the state’s two largest communities, Phoenix and Tucson. The results elated campaign leaders, volun teers and supporters. “First and foremost. I’m exceptionally proud to be an Arizonan. This outcome speaks volumes about Arizona’s commitment to fami lies,” said Kyrsten Sinema, chair of Arizona Together. “Arizona voters saw through Prop. 107s rhetoric and knew that the intent of 107 was to take away domestic partner benefits from thousands of Arizona families,” contin ued Sinema. “Clearly, Arizona’s voters took the time to do their homework regarding Prop. i07,” said Steve May, campaign treasurer for Arizona Together. “We knew all along that once voters were informed about the true impact of Prop. 107 they would oppose this hurtful initiative. They made the right decision.” Arizona Together campaign chairs credit research, truth, discipline and staffing for their win, “We exposed the Prop. 107 ballot lan guage to identify exactly what impact it would have on Arizona residents. After that, we spoke to real people that would be directly impacted and told their stories to the public,” continued Sinema. “Once we discovered the truth about the initiative — that if passed it would take away impor tant benefits from fami lies — we worked non stop to get this impor tant infor mation out ‘This outcome speaks vol umes about Arizona’s com mitment to families.’ — Kyrsten Sinema, chair of Arizona Together see amendment on 19 Anti-gay amendment passes in SX. [VOTE NOI wmti r Despite efforts, measure passes by over 70 percent. See page 16 for news story. N.C. high school gets GSA page 5 |[{No«e oMfitiiic 26 yMfS talktCMkw No more Santorum page 9