Andrew Sullivan Hails Obama as 'The First Gay President'
In the essay,
Sullivan readily acknowledges that he was a vocal critic of Obama,
having dismissed the approach of the Obama administration as the “fierce
urgency of whenever.” The president’s announcement last week appears to
have changed Sullivan’s perspective, however, and he now argues that
the country has seen “an astonishing pace of change in one presidential
term.”
“But when you step back a little and assess the record of
Obama on gay rights, you see, in fact, that this was not an aberration.
It was an inevitable culmination of three years of work,” writes
Sullivan. “He did this the way he always does: leading from behind and
playing the long game.”
Sullivan said that he was “utterly unprepared for how
psychologically transformative the moment would be.” He said that he
cried as he watched the interview with ABC News. But upon reflection,
Sullivan believes that the announcement should not be surprising,
because the president and the gay community share a bond of
“displacement, a sense of belonging and yet not belonging.”
“Barack Obama had to come out of a different closet,”
writes Sullivan. “He had to discover his black identity and then
reconcile it with his white family, just as gays discover their
homosexual identity and then have to reconcile it with their
heterosexual family. The America he grew up in had no space for a boy
like him: black yet enveloped by loving whiteness, estranged from a
father he longed for (another common gay experience), hurtling between
being a Barry and a Barack, needing an American racial identity as he
grew older but chafing also against it and over-embracing it at times.
“This is the gay experience: the discovery in adulthood of
a community not like your own home and the struggle to belong in both
places, without displacement, without alienation,” he continues. “It is
easier today than ever. But it is never truly without emotional scar
tissue. Obama learned to be black the way gays learn to be gay. And in
Obama’s marriage to a professional, determined, charismatic black woman,
he created a kind of family he never had before, without ever leaving
his real family behind. He did the hard work of integration and managed
to create a space in America for people who did not have the space to be
themselves before. And then as president, he constitutionally
represented us all.”
Sullivan’s piece recalls the Toni Morrison essay from 1998 in The New Yorker,
where she made a case for Bill Clinton as “the first black president.”
She wrote that “Clinton displays almost every trope of blackness:
single-parent household, born poor, working-class, saxophone-playing,
McDonald’s-and-junk-food-loving boy from Arkansas.”
Newsweek also has drawn attention for the cover
that accompanies the essay. Comments through social media have compared
the rainbow halo image of President Obama with the rainbow-columned
White House on the cover of The New Yorker this week.
oh gheesh.
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