Vice President Joe Biden on Saturday
took a swipe at Republican presidential candidates who oppose LGBT
rights.
Biden headlined the Human Rights
Campaign's (HRC) 19th annual National Dinner in
Washington, D.C.
He started his remarks by dismissing
the praise he's received for endorsing marriage equality during a
2012 Meet the Press interview. A few days later, President
Barack Obama announced that he had “evolved” on the issue.
“I've been thanked for speaking up,
apparently out of turn on Meet the Press,” the vice
president said. “I wanna make something clear, and I mean this
sincerely. Some of you credit me with taking a political risk, or
thought I was doing something special, but folks I was just answering
in a straightforward direct way what I've known my whole life.”
Biden said that when he was 17, he
witnessed two men kiss in public. He looked at his father, who told
him, “Joey, they're in love with each other. It's that simple.”
“And it's always been that simple for
me,” Biden said.
Biden credited nationwide marriage
equality on the LGBT movement, not the celebrities or national
figures such as himself who endorsed such unions.
“It's because of all of you and
thousands of faceless people like you who have had the courage to
stand up and speak. Speak their hearts and minds. … But as I said
back in 2012, the vast majority of the American people agreed with
me, with what I said, and have agreed with you for a long time before
then. So, you left the Supreme Court absolutely no choice, no choice
whatsoever, I mean this, but to recognize the simple proposition my
father taught me 50 years ago.”
“You've changed the world in which my
grandchildren will grow up in, all for the better.”
“There's still those shrill voices in
the national political arena, trying to undo what has finally been
done. But they're not going to succeed. Don't worry about it. The
American people have moved so far beyond them and their appeals to
prejudice and fear and homophobia.”
“The American people are already with
you,” he later repeated. “Look at the numbers. Oh, there's
homophobes still left, most of them are running for president, I
think.”
Biden also praised the contributions of
HRC honorees actress Ellen Page and Apple CEO Tim Cook and called for
passage of the Equality Act.