[Congressional Record Volume 153, Number 114 (Tuesday, July 17, 2007)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E1542]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING DAVID CLARENBACH
______
HON. TAMMY BALDWIN
of wisconsin
in the house of representatives
Tuesday, July 17, 2007
Ms. BALDWIN. Madam Speaker, as the State of Wisconsin celebrates the
25th anniversary of the Nation's first Gay and Lesbian Civil Rights
Act, I rise today to honor the courageous individual who authored this
historic legislation, David Clarenbach.
David Clarenbach is a seasoned veteran of local, state, and national
politics. He won his first term as a Dane County Supervisor at the age
of 18, and was elected to the Madison Common Council in 1974. He served
in the Wisconsin State Assembly from 1975 to 1993, and was Speaker pro
tem from 1983 to 1993. In 1992 David was a Democratic Congressional
candidate from Wisconsin's Second District.
Throughout his career, David Clarenbach has been intimately involved
in the growth and development of the LGBT civil rights movement. During
his tenure in the Wisconsin Legislature he wrote the Gay and Lesbian
Civil Rights Act of 1982, the first in the Nation to include gay and
lesbian people in statewide anti-discrimination laws. He authored
Wisconsin's Hate Crimes Act, which was upheld unanimously by the U.S.
Supreme Court. He sponsored a Bill of Rights for people with AIDS and
HIV infection. And, in 1983, he authored the Consenting Adults Act,
legalizing all sexual activity between consenting adults in private,
thus repealing the state's sodomy prohibitions. He has served as a
consultant and mentor to openly gay and lesbian candidates throughout
the country.
Bringing together his vast experience in policy development,
legislative relations, and grassroots organizing, on February 3, 1981,
then Wisconsin State Representative David Clarenbach introduced
Assembly Bill 70 to include discrimination based on sexual orientation
in the state's prohibition on discrimination in employment, housing,
and public accommodations. At the time only 41 municipalities and 8
counties in the United States offered limited protections against
discrimination based on sexual orientation. In explaining the bill,
Representative Clarenbach stated that ``the right of private sexual
preference among adults should be considered inherent . . . he or she
should be guaranteed the basic human right to live without harassment
or discrimination.'' The bill was endorsed by a broad coalition of
clergy, religious denominations, and medical and professional groups.
In October 1981, Assembly Bill 70 was approved by the Wisconsin State
Assembly by a vote of 50 to 46, and in February 1982, the Wisconsin
State Senate approved the proposal by a vote of 19 to 13. Later that
month, Republican Governor Lee Sherman Dreyfus signed Assembly Bill 70
into law, making Wisconsin the first in the Nation to enact a civil
rights statute covering sexual orientation.
For his tenacity, his skills, and most of all, his courage, I join
with all of Wisconsin in saluting David Clarenbach.
____________________