Nevada State Sen. Kelvin Atkinson (D – North Las Vegas) came out to his fellow lawmakers Monday during a legislative debate on removing the gay marriage ban from the state constitution.
“I never considered myself someone who was in the closet,” Sen. Atkinson told theGrio. ”My family and friends knew.”
Atkinson said while his close friends in the Nevada House and Senate knew his sexual orientation, his statement Monday “was the first time publicly acknowledging it for everyone else.”
“I had no intentions of speaking that night. [I] heard some of my colleagues speak, and I just felt like now is a really good time to do it. My heart was pounding through my suit. I just felt like it was time.”
The Senate Debate
When he took the floor to express his views, Atkinson followed up on a previous senator’s comments regarding prior laws banning African-Americans and Caucasians to marry.
Atkinson told fellow legislators that his father remarried when he was very young to a white woman and has seven mixed-race siblings, which would not have been possible years ago.
Finishing his argument on why the gay marriage ban should be repealed, Atkinson concluded with, “I’m black. I’m gay.”
“I know this is the first time many of you have heard me say that I am a black, gay male,” Atkinson told his peers.
Defending gay marriage against the argument that it threatens traditional marriage, the Democratic senator said, “If this hurts your marriage, then your marriage was in trouble in the first place.”
At the end of a long, emotional debate on gay marriage, the Nevada Senate eventually voted 12-9 to begin the process of repealing the ban, reported the Las Vegas Sun.
Sen. Atkinson told theGrio that following the vote there was a senator or two who reported Atkinson’s speech had swayed their vote.
In response to becoming an ambassador to the black community for gay rights, the Nevada state senator said “I would like to think so, although that is not the reason I did this.”
Obama’s Stance
Carrie Healey









