Obama Shares Hopeful Message For LGBTQ+ Community At Stonewall Day
“I hope you know that your voice can make an enormous difference.”
“I hope you know that your voice can make an enormous difference.”
Last night Obama received the loudest applause at the ESPY Awards in Los Angeles.
2016 Couple We Love Danielle and Aisha Moodie-Mills on how unity, representation and resolve must remain positive and proactive in a political era that demands action.
Former White House LGBT Liaison Aditi Hardikar reflects on President Obama’s remarkable tenure as our nation’s leader.
The U.S. House of Representatives will weigh a Senate-passed proposed law, The Global Magnisky Act, that would give the president new, broader authority to impose sanctions on human rights abusers worldwide—including those who target LGBTQ people.
On Aug 4, Barack Obama's birthday, the president gave women in this country a gift by writing a pro-feminist op-ed in the women's magazine Glamour.
Our president’s leadership has helped bring marriage equality to all Americans, while the end of marriage discrimination now rests in the hands of our highest court.
With no religious exemption, the order bans discrimination by businesses with federal contracts and protects LGBT federal employees.
LGBT pols condemn persecution of gays by Putin
New standard would require agencies to recognize all valid marriages regardless of locale
Marriage equality advocates elated over two Supreme Court victories
Images of the 2009 National Equality March
Obama’s first weeks in office have had many ups and down.
GO publisher Amy Lesser presents an open letter the to gay community from Philadelphia Gay News
For this installment of Street Talkers, GO stepped off the street and into New York’s swanky Sunday brunch party, Stiletto, to ask their savvy patrons: Who are you voting for and why?
Nationally renowned writer, activist, scholar and public theologian Reverend Irene Monroe on the candidates… and where they stand on just about everything.
Rosie came back into view, “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” took center stage, Barack and Hillary stepped up to the presidential plate. NYC lost the Roxy and CBGBs, Britney lost her long locks, our community lost a dear activist, Barbara Gittings. And Ellen became the most visible, successful lesbian in the universe. A look back at the events that shaped GO’s world in the past year.
Thirteen months from now YOU will choose a new president. So, if you know more about YouTube’s Obama Girl than you do about Barack’s policies, if you’re hot for Hillary yet don’t know her take on gay marriage, if you’re McLovin’ McCain or a Kucinich chick just ’cause you think he’s “nice,” you better start doing your research. Recently, we asked 10 of our NYC-based readers this question: If the election wree held tomorrow, who would get your vote?
Our Sixth Year In Review!
Democratic hopefuls scheduled to participate in debate centered on LGBT issues