President signs historic bill to repeal DADT

President Barack Obama signs the Don't Ask, Don't Tell Repeal Act of 2010 during a ceremony at the Interior Department in Washington, D.C., Dec. 22, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)

President Barack Obama signs the Don't Ask, Don't Tell Repeal Act of 2010 during a ceremony at the Interior Department in Washington, D.C., Dec. 22, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)

Following a dramatic and eloquent speech, President Obama Wednesday morning signed the legislation that will launch the repeal of a 17-year-old law that prohibits openly gay people from serving in the military.

“This is done,” he said, looking up and slapping his hand on the table, and the crowded auditorium of an Interior Department building in Washington, D.C., erupted with cheers and applause.

The historic ceremony took place less than 24 hours after Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell took an 11th hour action of trying to make implementation of repeal much more difficult and time-consuming. According to a report on Politico.com, McConnell tried to introduce an amendment to the annual defense authorization bill that would have required that implementation of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell (DADT) not take place until after the four service chiefs certify that it could be done without negative consequences for military readiness. The DADT repeal legislation requires certification by the President, the Secretary of Defense, and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

According to Politico, McConnell attempted to add the amendment by unanimous consent, but Senator Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.), a champion of the repeal measure, objected. Lieberman’s objection effectively blocked the amendment from being considered without first getting the consent of at least 60 senators.

The president was greeted with a roar of cheers and applause after he was introduced by Vice President Joe Biden at 9:13 Wednesday morning. As the president greeted many special guests on stage with him, the crowded began to chant, “Yes, we can,” a prominent slogan of Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign. When the president reached the podium, he smiled and called back, “Yes, we did.”

“I am just overwhelmed,” said President Obama, beginning his prepared remarks. “This is a very good day, and I want to thank all of you, especially the people on this stage.” He then told a story about a soldier who fought in the Battle of the Bulge in the Belgian mountains against the Germans in World War II. The soldier, Andy Lee, who put his own life in peril in order to scale a ravine and rescue a fellow soldier, Lloyd Corwin. Forty years later, Lee let Corwin know he was gay.

“He had no idea,” said President Obama of Corwin, “and didn’t much care. Lloyd knew what mattered. He knew what kept him alive.”

Obama also told the story of a young female servicemember who gave him a hug on a receiving line in Afghanistan several weeks ago, when the president made a visit to the troops. The woman whispered in his ear, “Get Don’t Ask Don’t Tell done,” said the president. “And I said to her, ‘I promise you I will.’”

With the signing of the bill today, President Obama has also fulfilled a long-standing promise to the LGBT community overall, a feat that is prompting widespread praise, even from gay Republicans.

“He made this a priority,” said R. Clarke Cooper, executive director of the Log Cabin Republicans group. “He was sincere and correct about making this a priority.” (Cooper later revised his remarks to say President Obama made repeal a priority “within the Department of Defense.”) Cooper, a combat veteran serving now as an Army Reserve officer, had a front row seat during Wednesday’s ceremony, said that, as the President shook hands with guests on the front row, following the ceremony, Cooper said to the president, “You said get me those [Republican] votes and I got more than you needed.”

In a critical procedural vote to force the repeal measure to the floor in the Senate on Saturday, six Republicans joined Democrats and Independents to provide more than the 60 votes necessary to break the Republican-led filibuster.

Cooper said the ceremony was a “very emotional” one in the auditorium and that “there were definitely many tears of joy” in his eyes and in the eyes of other former servicemembers discharged under the DADT policy during the past 17 years.

The president acknowledged the tenacious work of numerous individuals during Wednesday’s ceremony, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, House Majority Whip Steny Hoyer, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Republican Senator Susan Collins, and the bill’s sponsor Rep. Patrick Murphy. NBC News Washington Bureau Chief Mark Whitaker, speaking on MSNBC shortly before the ceremony, said it was House Majority Whip Hoyer whose idea it was to take DADT repeal language out of the annual defense authorization bill –which was being filibustered by McConnell, Senator John McCain (R-Ariz.), and most Republicans—and put it into a special standalone bill in the House last week.

The House passed that bill on December 15 on a 250 to 175 vote and sent it immediately to the Senate, which approved it December 18 on a 65 to 31 vote.

The president also singled out Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), in the front of the auditorium, for having “kept up the fight” in the House.

Speaking to MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell Tuesday night, Frank characterized the Congressional vote to repeal Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell as being “comparable to the 1964 Civil Rights Act.”

“It is an enormous move forward,” said Frank. Frank said he was moved by a special ceremony held on Capitol Hill Tuesday by House Speaker Pelosi and Majority Whip Hoyer to sign the enrollment document for the bill to be sent to the president. Frank said the hundreds of people in attendance saying “God Bless America.”

“It was a very moving moment,” said Frank.

Also on stage for Wednesday’s ceremony was Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Admiral Mike Mullen and Staff Sgt. Eric Alva, an openly gay Marine who was the first servicemember wounded in the Iraq War.

The president used 15 pens to sign the legislation into law. It could not be determined by deadline to whom those pens will be given.

2 Responses to President signs historic bill to repeal DADT

  1. TJ says:

    now we’re screwed…. Its too much of a distraction for the people who are supposed to be defending our country

  2. Bill Wingarden says:

    This is great news. Here we have people willing to die for their country. A country which has tens of millions of misled people and some religioous bigots who expect these people to hide who they are, and have to watch every word they say lest they get thrown out of the service.

    America is now the next to last nast country to allow gays to serve openly. Only Islamic Turkey forbids gays from serving openly. I think that gives us an idea of the level of evil of the leadership of the objectors: People whose religions are so backwards they always need someone to hate to sell their love, while they profess Christianity, where Jesus said to love thy neighbor as thyself. Such hypocrites.

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