In 2008, then-Sen. Barack Obama was asked by the Houston LGBT Political Caucus if he would support a formal written policy banning federal contractors from discriminating against employees on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity. His response, according to a copy leaked more than a year ago to Metro Weekly, was one word: “Yes.”
Fast forward nearly a term and a half, and the man once dubbed “the first gay president” is quickly running out of time to follow through.
As the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) languishes in Congress, advocates are growing increasingly agitated with the president’s as yet unfulfilled pledge to extend workplace protections to LGBT Americans. The first version of ENDA was originally introduced in 1974, but has never made through Congress.
Rather than relying wholly on lawmakers to pass ENDA, advocates argue that the president should expand an existing executive order that already prohibits federal contractors from discriminating on the basis of race, color, religion, sex or national origin—but not sexual orientation or identity. The order covers employers with federal contracts or subcontracts that exceed $10,000, or that would be expected to accumulate more than $10,000 in any 12-month period. Thus, this executive order would apply to companies like ExxonMobil, whose shareholders recently voted for the 14th year in a row to reject adding LGBT protections to the company’s equal employment opportunity policy.
“Companies like ExxonMobil and others, which receive millions of dollars every year in federal contracts paid for with taxpayer money, will only institute non-discrimination policies when forced to by the federal government,” said Heather Cronk, co-director of GetEQUAL, in an email to msnbc. “Now is the time for President Obama to say, once and for all, that America is not a country that discriminates based on who you are or who you love.”
Following the ExxonMobil vote, calls for President Obama to act grew stronger. But the White House only withdrew further, telling Metro Weekly that there were no updates “regarding a hypothetical executive order.”
LGBT advocates were furious.









