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The best men and women for the job
by Libby Post - SGN Contributing Writer

I have to admit when I first read about the Gay and Lesbian Leadership Institute's (GLLI) "Presidential Appointments Project," to make sure there are plenty of LGBT folks in the new administration, I thought it was a bit presumptive.

Don't we have to win the election first?

And then I thought, we might as well be prepared. I'm sure many of the other "special interest"-type communities  African Americans, Latinos, people of faith, labor, etc.  are starting to line up for jobs. We should be, too  after all, it's all about visibility, isn't it?

GLLI is run out of the Lesbian and Gay Victory Fund, and its president and CEO is Chuck Wolfe  who's also the president and CEO of the Victory Fund, which is all about electing LGBT candidates to office throughout the land. They've done a good job of it, too. We have more LGBT elected officials now than ever before. And by and large, these are elected officials who happen to be LGB or T. For the most part, fighting for our rights is just part of their platforms for change.

When we look at presidential appointments, we can't simply out forward the names of folks to the new president's transition team just because they're part of our community. They have to have credible professional backgrounds, with the skills, insight, and intelligence to carry out the policy initiatives of a new administration. They should be LGBT individuals who have distinguished themselves beyond the work they have done in our community.

"I think those people in the Gay community who have worked for the common interest have clearly developed skills and talents that any new administration would want," said Ginny Apuzzo, a longtime activist for LGBT rights and a West Wing alum.

"If you want to be in the White House, I would say, work in your community, but then move your community beyond itself, and develop an expertise that gives you the credentials to run an agency in the federal government."

Apuzzo's own career reflects her perspective. She served at executive director of the National Lesbian and Gay Task Force early in the organization's history, and worked tirelessly for LGBT rights  but didn't box herself into just working in LGBT organizations. She taught; she worked in New York City government. When I met Ginny, she was the deputy commissioner of the New York State Consumer Protection Board during the Cuomo administration, where she also served as the governors liaison to the Lesbian and Gay community. She then went on to become the president of the state's Civil Service Commission, and eventually became the highest ranking openly Gay person in the White House serving in the Clinton administration, as the assistant to the president for management and administration  she basically ran the day-to-day operations at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.

"I didn't go to the White House as a Gay activist, but as a person with 15 years experience in administration," she told me in a recent phone interview.

Having experience, a breadth and depth of knowledge, political acumen  these are what any new administration will be looking for.

If McCain is elected, it will be politics as usual, and the majority of us  except for a few Gay GOPers  can keep our day jobs. If it's President Obama, as I think it will be, we have to be prepared for a new way of doing business.

"Obama talks about bring a new mindset to Washington," said Apuzzo. "That's the keenest statement that he makes  not just new personnel, but a new way of thinking and not the old way of doing things."

If that's the case, lining our folks up with resumes and sitting down with transition teams may not be what waits for us after Election Day. Like Eliot Spitzer has done in New York State, Obama may forgo the traditional way of doling out jobs and look for the best and the brightest  folks with talent who weren't even looking for a government position.

That's what happened to David Hansell, an openly Gay man, whose government expertise ranges from advocating on behalf of people living with HIV/AIDS for the Gay Men's Health Crisis, to being the Chief of Staff at the New York City Human Resources Administration. He never put his name in for his new job as New York State Commissioner of the Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance. Someone sent his resume to Spitzer, who saw in David a commitment to public service and to helping those in need. David is one of those people who have helped move our community beyond our own issues by working for the greater good.

As the Presidential Appointments Project moves forward and resumes roll in, it will behoove those vetting credentials to make sure the folks they put forward are the folks who can move us forward as well.

Libby Post is the founding chair of the Empire State Pride Agenda and a political commentator on public radio, on the Web, and in print media. She can be reached care of this publication or at LesbianNotions@qsyndicate.com.

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