Meeting with LGBT Activists and Supporters from the Diplomatic Corps
Remarks
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State
Palais des Nations
Geneva, Switzerland
December 6, 2011
Well,
I just wanted to stop by and very briefly express my appreciation to
all of you for what you do every single day. I understand that you have
traveled from 13 countries on four continents to be here, which I think
speaks volumes about how important you believe these efforts are. And I
want to thank Eileen and her team, who have been just stalwart in
supporting our leadership and advocacy on behalf of the LGBT community. I
want to thank Esther Brimmer, our Assistant Secretary for International
Organizations back at the State Department. And is Ambassador Minty
here? Is Ambassador Minty – where’s Ambassador Minty? Ambassador Minty,
thank you, and I will publicly thank South Africa in my remarks, in my
formal speech.
I want to thank – taking sort of personal privilege
and national pride – some individual representatives here from both the
American and the international NGO community – Ambassador Mike Guest,
Mark Bromley, and Julie Dorf from the Council for Global Equality, our
great partners and help coordinate a lot of other NGO voices. Mike, as
you know, is a retired ambassador from our Foreign Service, and yet is
still working in the service of public – the public interest. I want to
thank John Fisher and all who worked with him here in Geneva to support
the resolution in June.
And I want to thank each and every one of
you here in Geneva for the great work that was done on the resolution,
and also those of you who are out every single day making the case for
dignity and human rights for all people. I know it is challenging and
dangerous in many instances. But first and foremost, we want you to know
that you are not alone, that you have a growing chorus of people who
recognize this as a human rights issue for the 21st century.
So
without further ado, I will see you in the chamber, where I hope that
the United States will continue to make the case, not just for those who
are already convinced, but most importantly for the many leaders and
our fellow citizens around the world who are not, and who we have to
recognize their issues and concerns in order to keep evolving the
consensus on behalf of LGBT rights for all.
Thank you. (Applause.)
My
two cents here: MSNBC is saying she delivered her remarks "under orders
from President Obama." HRC has never required "orders" to make human
rights statements. She was the first in the administration to provide
benefits to domestic partners of employees. She held a town hall at DOS
early in her tenure and was asked by
GLIFAA
if she would do this. She promised she would look innto it, she did,
and in June of 2009 announced the new policy. Obama did not do that
until after she did.