Just Out names Sam Adams Outstanding Person of the Year
Just Out magazine selected Victory endorsee Sam Adams as its Outstanding Person of the Year, citing historic election as mayor of Portland, Oregon. Adams won the post outright in May by collecting more than 50 percent of the vote in the primary.
Adams will also face heightened scrutiny from the sexual minorities community. It would be easy to elevate Adams to queer martyrdom before he even takes office in January. That would be a mistake. Yes, we’re grinning with pride about Adams’ election to office and his banner year as a city commissioner, but we also hope Portland queers continue to challenge, question and debate with him once he’s in the driver’s seat. If there’s one character flaw that might prove fatal to Adams as mayor, it’s his sprawling ambition. Adams never met an idea he didn’t like, and he needs the queer community to help him stay on track.
As mayor of Portland, what will his priorities be? Adams rattles off “reducing [the] high school dropout rate, reducing over 30% of Portlanders who are unemployed or on a poverty wage, and bringing Portland to a new level of sustainable practices” as some of his top places to press forward. Adams is also taking the unusual step of retaining his arts commissioner role as mayor; creative people across the city should be dancing in the streets about this. Adams has already embarked on an ambitious Creative Capacity Initiative that seeks to identify and open new funding streams for folks in the creative sector, from musicians to marketing executives. He plans to unveil the next stage of this initiative in January.
And about that whole gay thing – Adams has not only been open about his sexual orientation for the better part of a decade, he’s worked in smart and innovative ways to advance causes important to the queer community. He led the founding of Portland’s facility for the sexual minorities community, The Q Center, and he helped pass an ordinance prohibiting the city from contracting with anti-gay companies. And his mayoral staff, so far anyway, is stuffed with fabulous openly gay people like Shoshanah Oppenheim, Cevero Gonzales and Wade Nkrumah.
This month Adams attended the red carpet world premiere of Portland filmmaker Gus van Sant’s bio-pic about the life of Harvey Milk. Adams openly acknowledges the “great debt” he owes to Milk’s work, which helped “pave the way for viable gay candidates to elected office.” And at the November 15 Portland rally to protest the passage of California’s Proposition 8, Adams himself raised the spectre of Milk’s extraordinary legacy when he grabbed a bullhorn, took the stage to roaring crowds, and updated a signature Milk rallying cry for his own purposes:
“My name is Sam Adams!” he bellowed to wild applause. “And I’m here to recruit you!”

