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The Rev. Fred Phelps is known for picketing funerals of those who have died of AIDS and funeral of Matthew Shepard
national
Topeka voters decide to keep law barring discrimination
Anti-gay picketer and followers promise another repeal effort
Published Thursday, 10-Mar-2005 in issue 898
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) – A minister known for picketing the funerals of AIDS victims failed in his attempt to repeal a Topeka ordinance that prohibits discrimination against gays and lesbians in municipal hiring.
The Rev. Fred Phelps Sr. was undaunted after voters upheld the anti-discrimination measure, and publicly dared the city council to enact another, broader ordinance.
“If you succeed in passing a gay-rights ordinance, the next morning, we’ll be back on the streets, collecting signatures,” he said.
In final, unofficial results, 53 percent, or 14,285, opposed the repeal effort, while 47 percent, or 12,795, voted for the repeal. Had it passed, the measure also would have blocked future efforts to reinstate such a law for 10 years.
Some said they opposed repealing the measure partly because of Phelps, who has long been a fierce foe of gay rights. His church has picketed the funerals of people who died of AIDS for more than a decade. And his protest outside the 1998 funeral for Matthew Shepard, the gay college student beaten to death in Wyoming, led to his portrayal in the play The Laramie Project.
Susan Kitchkommie, 49, said Phelps was a factor in her “no,” vote, adding, “I don’t think anybody should be discriminated against.”
Even some voters who wanted to repeal the ordinance distanced themselves from Phelps.
Retired teacher Jim Paramore said he was “not for Fred Phelps,” explaining that he voted to repeal the ordinance because “there doesn’t need to be special consideration made for homosexuality.”
Matt Foreman, executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, said the vote was encouraging, coming after voters last year amended 13 state constitutions to ban same-sex marriage.
“This really was a question in every gay American’s mind whether Fred Phelps represented the voters of Topeka,” he said.
One of the minister’s granddaughters, meanwhile, fell short in her efforts to unseat an openly gay member of the city council. The granddaughter, Jael Phelps, and council member Tiffany Muller were among four candidates in a nonpartisan primary.
Jael Phelps finished last. Muller finished second, behind an attorney, but advanced to the city’s April 5 general election.
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