Out freshman councilmembers changing debate in New York
Danny Dromm and James Van Bramer made headlines last fall when they won their elections to the New York city council and doubled the number of openly LGBT voices on the council. Today, these out leaders are changing the debate and using the bully pulpit to serve LGBT New Yorkers.
“I’m a strong believer of when people get to know each other, it’s very hard to discriminate against each other,” said Dromm to EDGE. “As legislators, we can bring that home to our colleagues because we’re openly gay.”
EDGE reports:
Dromm and Van Bramer are the newest members of what many affectionately dub the City Council’s “gay and lesbian caucus.” Councilmember Rosie Mendez [D-Lower East Side] and Speaker Christine Quinn [D-Chelsea] round it out, and Melissa Mark-Viverito and others have periodically proclaimed themselves honorary members. Both men maintain their election will allow them to use what they categorized as the Council’s bully pulpit to push for marriage for same-sex couples and other LGBT-specific issues.
“There will be opportunities for us to stand up as a unit and express our feelings and express our power-as we did with Jorge Steven López Mercado,” Van Bramer said to EDGE earlier this week.
Dromm, who chairs the Council’s Immigration Committee, agreed.
“I’m a strong believer of when people get to know each other, it’s very hard to discriminate against each other,” he said. “As legislators, we can bring that home to our colleagues because we’re openly gay.”
Dromm added his and Van Bramer’s election broke a glass ceiling, but the question remains: Will they, Mendez and Quinn have any collective power to further advance an LGBT legislative agenda at the city and state levels?
Kenneth Sherrill, a political science professor at Hunter College, became the city’s first openly gay elected official with his election as a Democratic district leader in 1977. He told EDGE gay and lesbian Councilmembers could prove pivotal during the upcoming city and state budget process. They could prove decisive in shaping the discourse over funding for HIV/AIDS services and the city’s Human Rights Commission and the implementation of safer-school programs.
“I would look for members of the state legislature and members of the City Council to mobilize to protect the community from what could be dangerous retrenchment,” Sherrill said.

