New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said that he won’t be attending the St. Patrick’s Day Parade because
the parade does not let gay organizations march under their own banners.
The statement made the news,
though it was not likely de Blasio’s intention to do so. He mentioned it in
response to a question at a news conference he had called to announce the
appointment of a deputy mayor. But the press likes controversy over cultural
issues a lot more than rudimentary announcements of mayoral appointments, so
there you have it.
The St. Patrick’s Day Parade
does not outlaw gays. There’s no marshal on Fifth Avenue with a Shamrock Gaydar
device pulling alleged homosexuals out of the parade. The St. Patrick’s Day
Parade is organized by the Ancient Order of Hibernians. The AOH is religiously
Catholic and since the Catholic Church, like almost every other major religion,
considers homosexual acts sinful, it doesn’t want openly gay groups marching
under their own banner.
I agree that the Ancient
Order of Hibernians should allow gay Irish groups to march in the parade under
their own banner, or at least give them the same consideration they would give
to any other Irish group. I’m all for gays,
lesbians and any and every other designation under the expandingLGBT nomenclature being treated equally
under the law and given full respect and dignity.
But the Hibernians have the
right to be as ancient as they like in their attitudes and parade policies. The
parade even avoids certain city regulations because the parade predates
the American Revolution. I would love to divorce Irish culture from Catholicism
and put it on a more secular, nationalist bent. But it’s their parade and they
can run it as they choose. Likewise, organizers of the gay pride parade can
decide they don’t want Irish or Catholic gays marching under their own banner.
That’s their right.
De Blasio is being consistent
with his refusal to march in the main parade; he didn’t march as a councilman
or as Public Advocate for the same reasons. But this consistency is now a
problem. He’s not a councilman or the Public Advocate anymore. The job
description changes when you are mayor. Mayors represent the entire city and to
get drawn into battles over ethnic parades should be beneath them. Rudolph
Giuliani, a Republican mayor who was pro-gay rights and first legalized
same-sex unions in the city, marched in every St. Patrick’s Day parade as
mayor.
I’m also curious as to how
consistently political figures who avoid the mainstream St. Patrick’s Day
parade are with their insistence on inclusion. There’s a Muslim Day Parade and other overtly religious parades
that may also disapprove of gays. If they don’t have an openly gay group among
their marchers, are they verboten also?
Taking the activist left
position on everything only paints you into a corner. Though to be fair, there
was an effort to convince the Mayor to ban city workers from marching in the St. Patrick’s
Day parade in their uniforms and de Blasio didn’t take that left turn to
crazyville.
By avoiding the St. Patrick’s
Day parade, de Blasio doesn’t stand to change anything but lower his own
standing. Lots of New Yorkers, Irish or otherwise, will look at him not as a
more liberal-minded manager but as the white David Dinkins, involving himself in a well-tread skirmish
in an old and tired battle.
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