Ross Douthat, a columnist for The
New York Times, has apologized for appearing at a fundraiser for
an anti-gay legal group.
The event, titled The Price of
Citizenship: Losing Religious Freedom in America, took place on
October 16 in Denton, Texas and was hosted by the Alliance Defending
Freedom (ADF), a Christian conservative legal group strongly opposed
to gay rights.
Douthat's participation was highlighted
by media watchdog Equality
Matters.
“The event touched on a number of
popular right-wing horror stories about LGBT equality, from the
plight of anti-gay bakers and florists, to the outrage over the
recent subpoenaing of several Houston pastors,” the site explained.
“At the end of the event, ADF solicited donations from the
audience, announcing a dollar-for-dollar matching pledge from an
anonymous donor.”
On Wednesday, Douthat issued a
statement stating that he did not know that the event was a
fundraiser.
“I was not aware in advance that this
event was a fundraiser and had I known, I would not have agreed to
participate,” he said. “I was invited by an events organizing
group, not the ADF directly. I understood this to be a public
conversation about religious liberty. This is my fault for not doing
my due diligence, and I will be declining the honorarium [I received
from the ADF].”
A skeptical Dan Savage responded in a
The Stranger editorial: “So... it would've been fine for
Douthat to have a 'conversation' with the organization that wants to
send [out Times columnists] Frank Bruni and Josh Barro to
prison but a line was crossed when Douthat helped raise money for the
organization that wants to send Frank Bruni and Josh Barro to prison.
And let's end with [a] followup question for Ross Douthat: We know
that your pals at the ADF want to send Josh and Frank to prison –
along with all the other gay men, lesbians, bisexuals, and trans
folks who work at the New York Times – but do you? Do you
believe that gay sex should be criminalized? And if you don't, Ross,
what are you doing in bed with people who do?”
Savage was referring to ADF's work
defending Texas' sodomy law in the 2003 Supreme Curt case Lawrence
v. Texas. Lawrence, of course, is the groundbreaking
ruling that struck down state sodomy laws prohibiting oral and anal
sex between consenting adults. The laws were used almost exclusively
to criminalize gay sex.