LGBT advocates got some encouragement from Sen. Harry Reid on Wednesday about the prospects of a bill designed to protect gay and transgender employees from workplace discrimination. Reid didn’t exactly guarantee that he would put the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) to a Senate vote this year, but he did disclose in an interview with the Huffington Post that his niece is gay–a potential sign, advocates hope, that the majority leader will take a more aggressive approach to passing ENDA as soon as possible.
“My niece is a lesbian,” said Reid to reporters on Wednesday. “She’s a school teacher. Her employment shouldn’t be affected with that. We should have a law that says that, not just the good graces of wherever you work.”
Reid co-sponsored a version of ENDA in 1996, but the measure failed to pass by one vote. The Senate hasn’t voted on the bill since, even in the years the Democrats have had control. A watered-down version of the law without transgender protections passed the House in 2007–the year Reid became majority leader–but it died in the upper chamber.
Now Reid is saying there’s “a chance” he’ll bring up ENDA for a vote this year. While advocates are encouraged by the news of Reid’s niece, they are far from throwing a victory party.
“There is still a need for all of us in the LGBT community to push Sen. Reid to keep his promise of holding an ENDA vote as soon as possible,” said Tico Almeida, president of Freedom to Work, to msnbc.com. “He promised that vote was coming ‘soon’ in 2010, but did not keep that promise, so we have to keep mobilizing and pushing until ENDA gets to the Senate floor for a vote that is long overdue.”
Almeida doesn’t believe that Reid has intentionally avoided putting the bill to a vote because of personal objections. Rather, he feels the majority leader is a “very careful” vote counter, who is unwilling to put legislation on the floor without sufficient confidence it can pass.
“I believe there are 60 votes this year for ENDA,” said Almeida. “But it’s a matter of [Reid] confirming those votes and getting enough assurance to put the bill on the floor…We were pleasantly surprised Sen. Reid retweeted our message to hold a vote in 2013.”
Heather Cronk, co-director of GetEQUAL, is also hoping Reid’s niece will give him the “immediacy” he needs to get ENDA passed in 2013. “When you know someone who is LGBT, then a legislative issue becomes a personal issue,” said Cronk to msnbc.com Thursday. “When you have someone looking over your shoulder, that’s when bills get passed.”
A bipartisan group of lawmakers introduced ENDA in both the Senate and House of Representatives last month. Modeled after Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the bill seeks to create a national ban on workplace discrimination against LGBT Americans in the same way that federal law already prohibits employment discrimination based on religion, race, gender, national origin, or disability.









