Video Interview, Harry Bronson, August 2, 2012

  • KEVIN INDOVINO: And I am rolling, sir.
  • OK.
  • Let's just start off generally, Harry.
  • Because actually Evelyn had mentioned to me
  • that you have an interesting coming-out story that she
  • wanted me to get out of you.
  • I have no idea what it is.
  • But what can you share with us as far
  • as coming out as a gay person?
  • HARRY BRONSON: Well, as I think most people
  • in the LGBT community understand and appreciate, coming out it
  • is an ongoing process.
  • It's not one event over another.
  • But there are a number of experiences
  • that I had to face that really put
  • coming out not only to individual friends,
  • but to the public.
  • And the one that actually happened
  • was when I became the president of the Gay Alliance.
  • And even though I had been out to my friends and my family
  • at that point, I had not been out to my business partners
  • and to many of my colleagues in the legal profession.
  • So what happened was I was the vice president
  • of the Gay Alliance.
  • And the then president decided he
  • was going to step down and announce that
  • to the whole board.
  • So the very next day, I had to go to my law partners and say,
  • "just so you know, I'm going to become the president of the Gay
  • Alliance.
  • And we do not have an executive director,
  • so the president is the spokesperson
  • for the organization.
  • So from this point forward, I'm going
  • to be talking to the media about being gay.
  • So I think you should probably know I'm gay."
  • That was received relatively well.
  • There were some partners who balked at the idea little bit.
  • But for the most part, it was received very, very well.
  • So that was my professional coming out time.
  • With my family years before that,
  • I had been trying to tell my mom and my dad
  • that I was gay for a long time.
  • And my mom and dad, they have 12 children.
  • I'm one of 12.
  • And so I had invited my mom and my brother and his wife
  • up for the weekend.
  • At that point, I lived in Buffalo, New York.
  • And I had invited them up and I said,
  • this is going to be the weekend.
  • I am going to tell them I'm gay this weekend.
  • And of course, we went through Friday night--
  • didn't tell them.
  • Went through Saturday all day--
  • didn't tell them.
  • Went through Sunday-- didn't tell them.
  • Monday morning, I'm getting ready to go to work,
  • they're getting ready to get in the car
  • and go back to my hometown, Windsor, New York.
  • And I said, "mom, come on into the bedroom.
  • I need to talk to you."
  • So she came in, and I said, "why don't you sit down."
  • And she goes, "oh, no.
  • This is a big one, isn't it?"
  • I said, "yeah, this is pretty big."
  • and at that point, I didn't know if my mom would really
  • know what the word gay meant.
  • Because she had lived a rather sheltered life.
  • And so I just said, "mom, I'm a homosexual."
  • And her immediate response was, oh no.
  • And her whole body language was deflated,
  • like I had just destroyed any image she had of who I was
  • and all that.
  • And we never really talked about what that phrase meant.
  • We went on and she said, "well, all right."
  • She goes, "I got to digest this, but I'm not
  • telling your father.
  • You have to tell your father.
  • And you're not bringing anybody home
  • until you tell your father."
  • So those were the rules.
  • They got in the car, drove home--
  • which was about a four hour drive from my apartment--
  • and then she called me.
  • And she said, "I thought about it on the way home."
  • She goes, "I don't understand this.
  • I don't get it.
  • But just so you know, I love you."
  • And so it was a very positive, positive experience for me.
  • Years later when we became more comfortable in talking
  • about my homosexuality and my sexual identity,
  • she and I were involved in a conversation.
  • So I posed to her the question of what she meant
  • when she blurted out, "oh no."
  • Because I had thought that I had affirmed suspicions
  • she may have had.
  • And that's not what it was at all.
  • She said to me that she immediately
  • envisioned a very difficult and oppressive life for me,
  • her son.
  • And that concerned her.
  • And it continued to concern her to the point
  • when I called her and sought her advice and guidance in deciding
  • whether or not I was going to become an elected official,
  • and at that point, she actually advised me
  • that I probably shouldn't do that
  • because of being gay and the difficulties
  • that that would cause.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: I want to touch upon
  • that just a little bit about that conversation
  • with your mother about what did she mean when she said, "oh,
  • no."
  • Talk to me from your point of view really how--
  • I don't want to say how significant,
  • but maybe how fortunate you were to be
  • able to have that conversation with your mother.
  • Because there's a lot of kids out there
  • that would give to have that conversation.
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yeah.
  • Unfortunately, there are far, far too
  • many young people and other people
  • who come out to their families and don't
  • have a supportive response from their family member.
  • And don't get me wrong.
  • Mine wasn't all supportive.
  • We went through with some of the siblings
  • about we'll help you go through counseling
  • and all that kind of stuff.
  • But that was pretty short lived and they got it pretty quickly.
  • And my mom definitely got it.
  • But for me personally to have the love and the support
  • of my family, and in particular, my mom and my dad,
  • that allowed me then to develop and strengthen
  • the courage to then go out and be part of the general public
  • and say, I'm gay, but that's just one piece of me.
  • I'm many other things.
  • I'm an attorney.
  • I'm a male.
  • Now I love to read.
  • I love to bike.
  • There's lots of things about me.
  • Being gay is one aspect of it, albeit a very significant
  • aspect of it.
  • But to have my parents ultimately be supportive of who
  • I was, then there was at least one safe place in my life that
  • I didn't always have to feel this sense--
  • whether it was self-imposed or externally imposed--
  • this sense of defending who I was.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: So let's go back a little further, then,
  • before you came out to your parents and your family--
  • long before you came out publicly.
  • What was life like for you?
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yeah.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: What was it like being gay before,
  • was it a reluctance there?
  • Were you leading a difficult life?
  • HARRY BRONSON: Well, I grew up in a rural part of New York
  • state.
  • And aside from one other person--
  • as I was a young person, one other person I
  • knew who was gay.
  • I really did not know any gay people.
  • And so I generally felt that somehow I was different.
  • And at that point, growing up in the 70s and the 80s,
  • there was a lot of gay slurs and things of that nature.
  • Whether they were meant maliciously or not,
  • they were there.
  • And so I resisted the coming out process.
  • I probably knew very early on that I was gay,
  • but I did not come out until I was around 24, 25 years old,
  • which wasn't real long.
  • But it's later in life.
  • And so even though there was a point during law school
  • and a point during my beginning years as an attorney,
  • I had friends who knew I was gay, people who were
  • close to me who knew I was gay.
  • But my public persona was not a gay man.
  • And that, like many people I suspect,
  • created this internal struggle of wanting
  • to be a person of integrity, wanting
  • to be a person who was honest with himself
  • and with other people.
  • Yet the ongoing questions that would come up
  • in conversation of, what did you do
  • last night, who were you with, who are you dating, are you
  • married--
  • we all face those questions at some point.
  • And how do you answer those?
  • And at one point, quite frankly, I
  • answered them with total misinformation.
  • Then later on, I moved into an era
  • when I answered with everything was gender neutral, and giving
  • truthful information, but not quite accurate information,
  • if you can understand the distinction.
  • And the real turning point actually happened a year
  • before I moved to Rochester.
  • And that's when a partner in the firm that I was at found out I
  • was gay.
  • He was actually my mentor, and it was his job
  • to make sure that I was making the transition into a very
  • large firm, firm that has offices in five large cities.
  • And I practiced in Buffalo and in Manhattan, New York.
  • And it was his job to make sure I was making that transition.
  • And I don't know exactly how he found out,
  • but he found out that I was gay.
  • And he confronted me in my office.
  • He came into my office one day, closed the door,
  • sat down and said that he knew this information.
  • And I confirmed it.
  • And then he said, well, it's OK with me that you're gay.
  • But if other partners in the firm find out you're gay,
  • there will be no place for you in this firm.
  • And with a hint of courage, I told him to get the hell out
  • of my office.
  • And then I struggled for two weeks with that information
  • and what I was going to do with it.
  • And it occurred to me that that probably
  • was not the place for me to be.
  • And two weeks later I resigned.
  • That was before SONDA--
  • Sexual Orientation Nondiscrimination Act--
  • was passed.
  • So there were not any direct statutes or laws that gave us
  • protections in the workplace.
  • There were some arguments that because of the ethics
  • rules for lawyers--
  • there were some people who were starting
  • to make cases of anti-discrimination
  • on the basis of sexual orientation.
  • But I chose a different route and decided
  • that it wasn't worth my time or my effort
  • to try to fit into a place that didn't want me to fit in,
  • at least as he had expressed it to me.
  • Whether or not that was the case, I'm not sure,
  • but I think he probably knew.
  • So I resigned from the firm.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Is that when you came to Boston?
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yeah.
  • And then shortly thereafter, I moved to the Rochester area.
  • And that's when I joined another firm which I became partners
  • with, and they were accepting and it all
  • turned out very well.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: So let's move forward a little bit.
  • HARRY BRONSON: OK.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: All of a sudden, you're now the president
  • of the Gay Alliance.
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yes.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Talk to me about that particular time
  • for the Gay Alliance.
  • What were the kind of things that were going on?
  • What were some of the challenges that the Gay Alliance were
  • faced with, both internally as an organization,
  • but also what they were trying to do in the community?
  • What was it like?
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yeah.
  • I was president of the Gay Alliance from October of '96
  • into May of 1999.
  • So it was almost a three year term,
  • because I had taken over for the vice president,
  • finished that term, and then was elected
  • for two year terms in a row.
  • And at that point, the Gay Alliance
  • was going through a transition.
  • We were trying very hard to move as an organization from a board
  • run organization to an executive director run organization.
  • By that, I mean day-to-day operations.
  • And so we worked an awful lot about getting state funding
  • so that we could get enough funding for the organization
  • so that we could hire the very first executive director, which
  • actually happened.
  • But what was happening at the state level is all of a sudden,
  • there was more and more funding for LGBT issues.
  • The AIDS movement, or the response to the AIDS crisis,
  • had happened in the early part of the 80s,
  • and then the real response happened later
  • in the 80s and the early part of the 90s.
  • And now state organizations, including New York state,
  • were starting to realize, well, there
  • is an aspect of our citizenship that we need to address.
  • And that was the gay community.
  • And so they were starting to find funding
  • streams that were non AIDS/HIV related.
  • And with the help of statewide political organizations,
  • the Gay Alliance linked into a network.
  • And we were able to get additional funding
  • and hire an executive director.
  • So that's from an operational standpoint.
  • From a programmatic standpoint, many of the issues
  • that the GAGV addresses today we were addressing then,
  • with the exception of one which I'll talk about in a minute.
  • And that is the whole self-esteem, hopefulness,
  • wanting young people to celebrate who they are and not
  • feel like they're being oppressed
  • for being gay or lesbian, bisexual or transgender.
  • And we offered a lot of youth programs at that point.
  • And we really were expanding those youth programs
  • and the whole coming out.
  • And then for older individuals, we
  • were offering, for the most part,
  • social groups so that people could come together and have
  • a sense of community and things of that nature.
  • And much of that's going on today.
  • I think it has expanded a lot more since I've left the GAGV.
  • Even though we had a speakers' bureau,
  • now I think that the GAGV is hitting a lot more schools,
  • a lot more agencies across the county,
  • and a lot more community groups across the counties,
  • just to help educate folks about our community.
  • But the one area that the Gay Alliance is involved in now
  • that we really were not involved in at all
  • is working with older LGBT members and seniors who
  • are looking for a place where they
  • can have a sense of community, a sense of gathering,
  • and being able to meet with folks and enjoy who they are
  • and things of that nature.
  • And I know that GAGV is doing a lot of that work now.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: When you look at Rochester, the size city
  • that Rochester is-- and oftentimes I say,
  • Rochester is really just a big town that
  • likes to think it's a city.
  • But how significant is it that we have
  • an organization like the GAGV?
  • HARRY BRONSON: It's huge.
  • And you cannot understate how important it is that the Gay
  • Alliance is here.
  • It helped me come out in a full way.
  • Not only because of the necessity of me coming out,
  • but the way I got involved in the Gay
  • Alliance was by attending one of the groups.
  • And it was a coming out group that
  • was run by the then program director.
  • And I got to meet so many different people
  • and realize that I might be different than some folks
  • in our community, but there was a lot
  • of folks who are a lot like me.
  • And that helped me understand that we really
  • should be celebrating our differences
  • and acknowledging them, but to also realize that deep inside,
  • most of us are very much alike.
  • I think the vast majority of us really
  • have the same desires in life.
  • We want to be happy.
  • We want to be loved.
  • We want someone to love.
  • And we want to feel like we're part of a community.
  • And the Gay Alliance helped me to do all of that.
  • And I think that it continues to date
  • to do that for our young people and to do that for other people
  • throughout our community.
  • And without the Gay Alliance, I really
  • can't see that happening.
  • And merely having the social outlet that the Gay Alliance
  • offers to people--
  • if it's one time a year to go to some pride event,
  • that is so priceless for so many people.
  • And it gives them an opportunity to maybe wave
  • the pride flag or hug somebody or kiss someone in public.
  • All those behaviors are symbols of saying,
  • I'm proud of who I am.
  • And I think we all need that from time to time.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: I want to broaden
  • the question a little bit.
  • Same kind of question in regards to Rochester and who we are.
  • But beyond just the Gay Alliance--
  • I know you weren't born and raised here,
  • but what you know of Rochester, what
  • does it say about our community who has really
  • been at the forefront of a lot of gay issues and legislation?
  • Again, what does it say about Rochester
  • and who we are as a community, beyond just the Gay Alliance?
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yeah.
  • I think there's a lot of things that contribute to that.
  • We're a relatively highly educated community.
  • We're a community where because of the three
  • large manufacturers in town brought a lot of folks
  • into this area from other areas.
  • So the diversity in the general public had already existed.
  • And then we have a tradition of promoting and advocating
  • civil rights, whether it was the abolitionists
  • or whether it was women's suffrage.
  • Two historic figures--
  • Frederick Douglass and Susan B Anthony--
  • who, at one point in their careers,
  • had their home based here.
  • So that's all part of who we are.
  • And then also in the 60s with the civil rights
  • movement-- huge in the city of Rochester,
  • for a city of our size, as you pointed out.
  • And I think that there were folks who were here
  • who came from those different backgrounds
  • and who realize that it is activism
  • and it's advocacy that will change the world.
  • And they wanted to see that happen.
  • So there were many, many, many people
  • in our community who decided that they were not
  • going to be silent.
  • They were going to speak out and help educate the general public
  • about what it's like to be gay and what
  • it's like to feel like you're not
  • part of the broader community.
  • And I'll digress just slightly, if you'll let me.
  • When I was first involved in the Gay Alliance--
  • and I was there for six years, so I worked at the Alliance
  • for a long time.
  • And it was really interesting, because there
  • was a struggle at that point with some folk who
  • feared that the lesbian and gay community
  • were going to assimilate into the general public.
  • And that if we did that, then we were
  • going to lose our identity, lose our culture,
  • lose who we were as a community and who we are as a community.
  • And so I remember having really in-depth conversations
  • with some of the folks who are many years
  • my senior about that issue.
  • And some of them really did not want us to go in the direction
  • that we were starting to go into in the mid-90s.
  • And I, on the other hand, I always
  • knew that that was a risk.
  • And I still think we've got to be cognizant of that risk.
  • And that's why having the gay parade and the festival
  • and all those events that--
  • ImageOut-- all of the events that we
  • have that celebrate our community,
  • we've got to continue to do that.
  • Because that keeps our culture intact.
  • But at the same time, as more and more of us
  • are becoming families who are raising families,
  • more and more of us are becoming out--
  • and now that we have marriage equality.
  • I mean, all those things-- we really
  • have become much more assimilated
  • into the general public.
  • And I think that the visibility and the assimilation
  • is what allowed us to have those victories.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Here's an interesting question.
  • And I'm not even sure it has an answer to it.
  • But what is our community?
  • Who is our community?
  • Like you said, we could so easily get assimilated now,
  • and as you said, lose our cultural identity.
  • What is our cultural identity?
  • HARRY BRONSON: That is a very good question.
  • But I don't think it's much different than asking
  • the question, what is the Italian culture, what's
  • the German culture--
  • in America, that is.
  • Our culture is grown out of the depths of oppression.
  • Our culture is grown out of the depths of hatred.
  • Our culture is grown out of the depths
  • of struggling with our own self esteem because
  • of those external pressures.
  • That creates individuals who have a strength
  • that I don't think, with all due respect, folks who haven't
  • gone through that understand.
  • But to put that in a more concrete way
  • would be as difficult, I think, as having
  • a woman in our culture say, why is it
  • different to be a female in the American Society.
  • It's very hard to put into words,
  • but there is a difference.
  • And I think that when I was referring
  • to celebrating our culture and make sure we have our identity,
  • I think what I'm referring to is making sure that we are all
  • comfortable enough to exhibit behaviors to say who we are,
  • to be happy about that, and even if there's
  • this little voice in the back of our minds reminding us
  • of times when things may have happened that were not
  • so comfortable when you did that, but there's
  • a louder voice that says be proud of who you are
  • and it's OK if you're holding hands with your boyfriend going
  • down the street right now.
  • And if negative things happen because of that,
  • it's not because of who you are and it's not
  • because of what you're doing.
  • It's because of the response that the other person
  • is giving.
  • And making sure that we continue to have folks
  • within the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and trans community
  • understand that we need to manifest our behaviors
  • and our attitudes in that direction,
  • but also to understand that just like every other community,
  • there is a effeminate men and there are masculine men.
  • There are effeminate women and masculine women.
  • There are people who struggle with their sexual identity.
  • So our culture doesn't mean that each one of us
  • isn't very different.
  • It just means that we have a commonality,
  • and that's what we should be celebrating.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: So let's talk a little bit
  • about your business life.
  • HARRY BRONSON: OK.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: You're a partner at a law firm.
  • What role, if any, did your identity as a gay man
  • play in your business life, or did you ever
  • find it to be a hindrance in some of your business affairs?
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yeah.
  • It sometimes benefited, other times it didn't.
  • There's a client that I used to have when I was at the law firm
  • and who did not know I was gay, and there
  • was no reason for me to have that conversation with them.
  • When we talked, we talked about his preparation
  • to become a witness in a grand jury proceeding.
  • And he was a regular client, so I represented him
  • in a lot of different litigation matters--
  • his organization.
  • But after I ran for public office, when
  • I ran for county legislature the very first time,
  • I ran as an openly gay man.
  • He called my law partner and said,
  • how come you never told me Harry Bronson was gay?
  • And I love the response that he gave.
  • According to him, his response was,
  • the same reason I didn't tell partner so-and-so
  • is married and has two kids.
  • What difference does it make?
  • The reality is you hired us to be good lawyers,
  • and that's what we try to do is be good lawyers for you.
  • But most of the time, it's been positive.
  • It's helped with marketing.
  • Obviously there's lots of people to market within our community.
  • And being gay and marketing and the community has been helpful.
  • I handled a lot of anti-discrimination litigation.
  • So it also helped me when I would
  • talk to clients who may be discriminated
  • for other reasons-- racial discrimination,
  • religious discrimination, disability, other reasons.
  • It was helpful for me to sometimes explain to them
  • that I, too, had experienced discriminatory practices.
  • And so it's not that I was coming
  • from this with no knowledge of what they were going through.
  • I had some knowledge, although I always put out that caveat.
  • For instance, if I was talking to a black man,
  • I will never understand what it's like being a black man,
  • as you will never understand what it's like being a gay man.
  • We can have some appreciation for it,
  • but we will never have a full appreciation for that.
  • So it was helpful for me in those anti-discrimination
  • matters where I would represent folks
  • to be able to share sometimes that I, too, had experienced
  • that type of discrimination, that type of oppression,
  • and understood what they were going through to some degree.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: So then we get to politics.
  • HARRY BRONSON: OK.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: You decided to run for, first,
  • county legislature, right?
  • HARRY BRONSON: Well, first I ran for state Senate,
  • was unsuccessful, and then county legislature.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Why?
  • Why politics?
  • HARRY BRONSON: Well, I just went to my undergrad alma mater
  • where they were celebrating their 150th anniversary.
  • And I was presenting a proclamation from the New York
  • State Assembly.
  • And the president of the university
  • looked at my degrees and my degrees
  • in Public Justice, which I took as a pre-law program,
  • and minor in political science, and she's looking at it
  • and she's like, oh my god.
  • You did exactly what you went to school here for.
  • And I had to laugh.
  • And then I had that constant urge to be fully honest.
  • I said to her, well, the pre-law public justice thing--
  • that was totally planned.
  • The political science minor was when
  • I went into my curriculum counselor
  • and she said, you know you're only two
  • courses short of getting a poli sci minor,
  • would you like to get one?
  • I'm like, yeah.
  • Yeah.
  • Let's do it.
  • Which courses?
  • So that's how I started that.
  • But ultimately, the getting involved in politics
  • has been an absolute natural extension of my entire life
  • and my entire work career.
  • I knew when I was eight years old I wanted to be a lawyer.
  • I told my mom I wanted to be a lawyer then,
  • and she just laughed at me.
  • And I did that.
  • And I ultimately got into anti-discrimination law
  • and representing people on civil rights issues,
  • and representing folks because of feeling a need that offering
  • opportunities and offering solutions to problems
  • was really what was necessary.
  • And getting involved in politics,
  • getting involved in government is just an extension of that.
  • It is a peace of giving back.
  • It's creating opportunities for other people
  • and making sure that the opportunities
  • exist so that if somebody works hard and challenges themselves
  • and tries to be successful, that they have
  • the opportunities to do that.
  • And so that's the primary reason of getting
  • involved in politics.
  • And I see myself as a problem solver.
  • And we have a lot of problems in our government.
  • And we need people who are willing to roll up
  • their sleeves and try to solve those problems.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: I have one or two more questions.
  • HARRY BRONSON: OK.
  • CREW: I'm going to have you kind of blot yourself a little bit.
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yeah.
  • It's getting warm in here.
  • That fan has been off long enough.
  • CREW: Just take that and just blot yourself a little bit.
  • HARRY BRONSON: I noticed it on YouTube, by the way.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Yeah.
  • HARRY BRONSON: But you don't have the camera.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: You know, I am dying.
  • So I know he's even worse.
  • (laughing)
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yeah.
  • OK.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Still rolling?
  • CREW: Still rolling.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: OK.
  • So with politics, you had to make that decision
  • to run as an openly gay man.
  • Talk to me about the process of making that decision.
  • I have to imagine there had to be some debate back and forth
  • whether or whether not you should do it.
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yeah.
  • There was a lot of debate.
  • I think I mentioned early on in our conversation
  • about the coming out process being an ongoing process,
  • and you constantly have coming out experiences.
  • And this was another one of those.
  • It was taking the coming out situation
  • and expanding it to many, many, many people
  • I may or may not ever speak with,
  • because it's so very public.
  • And I had mentioned that my mom was very cautious about that
  • and was concerned and raised the topic
  • of why do you want to put yourself out there,
  • and are you sure you really want to do this.
  • And that helped me to think about it
  • and ultimately make, what I think, was the right decision.
  • And that is that as much as we have worked with young people
  • so that they can develop their own self-esteem
  • and we work with people in the coming out process and things
  • of that nature, I am thoroughly convinced
  • that there is no better way than to be visible yourself
  • to help other people.
  • Because as folks get to meet you and know you--
  • and this can be in any occupation,
  • but politics is very public--
  • then they start to be educated about who
  • and what gay folks are all about.
  • And so I struggled with it and I was concerned about it.
  • And I and I prepared myself for the negative campaigning
  • against someone who is openly gay
  • and all those kind of things, and ultimately decided
  • that the reward was going to be much greater than the risk,
  • and that I was comfortable enough in who I was
  • and where I was in my life, and comfortable enough
  • in what I had to offer the general public that
  • becoming an elected official was right for me.
  • And so I ran for the county legislature
  • and was successful in doing that.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Then you eventually run for assembly.
  • Was it your first year in assembly that gay marriage
  • passed in New York?
  • Were you in assembly by then?
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yes.
  • Yes.
  • It was my very first year in the assembly.
  • And an interesting story about-- well, first of all,
  • let me jump back to the county legislature just for a second,
  • and say there were actually two points there.
  • One was becoming a county legislator
  • where I represented a particular district.
  • And then the second was when the then minority
  • leader of the democratic legislative caucus
  • decided she was going to seek a position as a city
  • councilwoman, which she was successful at.
  • And I then threw my hat in the ring
  • to become the next minority leader.
  • And quite frankly, that was not well received
  • by many people in my party.
  • They were concerned about an openly gay person
  • being the minority leader and being
  • the spokesperson for the Democrats
  • in the county legislature.
  • And that was another experience where
  • the backlash of being openly gay was
  • really felt, and really hurt--
  • hurt more than probably any of the other scenarios,
  • because these were my friends.
  • And these were folks who I had developed a deep respect
  • for in our mutual goals as a party.
  • And to have them suggest that having a gay man as a minority
  • leader that the county residents weren't ready for that,
  • and that was not going to be good for the Democratic caucus.
  • And all I can say is that it hurt
  • a lot, which also made me more determined to make it happen.
  • Which, fortunately, it did happen.
  • And fortunately, the people in the conference
  • who are the people who are in charge of voting unanimously
  • supported me in that effort.
  • But it just goes to show you some of the people
  • that you think are your closest allies,
  • sometimes the manifestations of stereotypes and oppression
  • come out.
  • And I don't think they were doing it maliciously.
  • I don't think they meant to be hurtful to me.
  • But the reality was in their narrow understanding
  • of what it meant to be openly gay
  • and being a representative and elected official prevented them
  • from taking that next step forward and allowing an elected
  • official who is openly gay be a leader
  • in a particular political setting.
  • But back to your question.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: But eventually it happened
  • and they got over it, right?
  • HARRY BRONSON: It happened.
  • And once again, it goes back to that visibility
  • and that exposure.
  • Not only did they get over it, but immediately
  • realized that this actually was a good thing.
  • And it actually turned out to be not--
  • the fears that they were expecting
  • did not manifest themselves at all.
  • And at one point with Harry Bronson standing on the county
  • legislative floor where Fox national news was there
  • covering an event, and the appropriate time came
  • to talk about hurtful language that
  • involved the disability community.
  • And I shared my own story about being openly gay,
  • and how whether intentional or not intentional
  • hurtful language or offensive language can really
  • be problematic, and what happens to the individual
  • when you hear that.
  • And we have to be very cautious about that.
  • And we have to learn how our language can be hurtful.
  • And that was in front of Fox national news.
  • And nobody blinked an eye.
  • So it worked out well.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Good.
  • Yeah.
  • So let's move back onto the assembly then.
  • HARRY BRONSON: OK.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: And I just really
  • want to touch briefly on the passage of gay marriage in New
  • York.
  • Talk to me about your involvement
  • and some of the work that you did to help
  • get that moved along.
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yeah.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: And then bring it
  • around to how it made you feel when it finally passed.
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yeah.
  • Yeah.
  • As everyone will understand, marriage equality
  • was a very, very long process.
  • It took years and years and years
  • to get us to the point in 2011 when we actually passed it.
  • And my involvement was as a gay member
  • of the gay caucus, if you will.
  • There's five of us in the state legislature.
  • I'm the only one from upstate New York,
  • and the only one considered in a marginal district.
  • And what happened was really a very interesting experience
  • from my part, because immediately when
  • I became a member, Daniel Donald, who
  • was the sponsor of the bill, he called a caucus meeting.
  • We all got together and we strategized.
  • We looked at the number of votes that we
  • had lost in the assembly because of the previous election.
  • And we had lost, I think it was eight votes because
  • of the previous election-- eight yes votes
  • from the year before in the assembly.
  • And we had five vacancies in the assembly
  • as well, because of appointments or retirements.
  • Those were also yes votes.
  • So we were down a lot of votes in the assembly.
  • And so we were strategizing who to reach out
  • to in the assembly-- new members and people who
  • were on the fence who had voted no in the past who we might
  • convince to vote yes, so that we could get our numbers up
  • to as high as possible.
  • And so that was the assembly strategy.
  • And the Senate strategy, then we identified senators
  • that we think could switch from their no vote the year
  • before to a yes vote.
  • And then we tried to figure out who had connections
  • and what those connections was and what our message would be,
  • and all those kinds of things.
  • And all of this was in work with the governor's office.
  • So the governor's office was fully
  • aware of what we were doing in the legislative piece of this.
  • And mind you, I shared the story about the county legislature.
  • And what made me think of that actually when
  • you mentioned the marriage equality,
  • the same scenario happened in the assembly
  • when the leadership was making the proposal
  • that we put the marriage equality bill up
  • for another vote.
  • There were folks in our Democratic caucus
  • who had voted yes in the past, but they
  • didn't want to put themselves out there again
  • and vote yes unless the Senate was guaranteed to vote yes.
  • And so there was this constant struggle in the strategy.
  • Should the assembly continue to be the leader here, vote
  • on the bill again and take the risk
  • that the Senate doesn't happen?
  • Or do we get a commitment from the Senate
  • and then take the vote and be the leader in time,
  • but not necessarily-- it's a planned approach.
  • Or do we not take the risk at all and just hold off?
  • Wait for the Senate to vote for it, and then we vote for it,
  • we'll pass it, and then the governor
  • had committed to sign it into law.
  • Ultimately we decided in the assembly
  • we were going to pass the bill first,
  • and we weren't going to wait for the governor
  • to submit a program bill.
  • Because we were going up and down,
  • up and down on whether the Senate was going to pass it,
  • are they not going to pass it.
  • Three weeks of protest in the hallways.
  • It was phenomenal.
  • At one point, the assembly member who sits next to me
  • on the floor looked at me.
  • She goes, Harry, just get out of here and go over there.
  • You know that's where you want to be.
  • So I got up and just went over to the Senate chambers,
  • because outside of the Senate chambers
  • is where all the protesters were, both pro and con.
  • And so I could be part of it.
  • And so I was able to experience some of that
  • and get away from my duties as an assembly
  • member for a short while.
  • But ultimately, we were successful in getting
  • a lot of changes in the assembly to yes votes.
  • And on the Senate side, with a lot of help from the governor
  • and a lot of help from the advocates and labor groups,
  • business groups, religious groups, local officials--
  • I mean, the community--
  • I mean, there was such a coalesce
  • of folks who just came together and wanted to make this happen.
  • It was phenomenal.
  • But what a lot of people don't understand,
  • because the media just covered the flips on the Senate
  • Republican side to yes votes, there
  • were also three Democrats who decided
  • to flip and say yes this time.
  • And that's really what put the bill over the top
  • were those six votes that flipped from no to yes.
  • And then there was one Republican that
  • was a new person who voted yes.
  • And then there was one Democrat who
  • was a new person who voted yes in the Senate.
  • So behind the scenes, it was phone call after phone call
  • after phone call, going to people in the hallways
  • and talking to them and trying to implore
  • them to do the right thing.
  • And the arguments were all different.
  • Sometimes the arguments were economics.
  • Sometimes the arguments were this is a civil rights issue.
  • Sometimes the arguments were it's
  • all about love and commitment, and why should we
  • deny anybody the ability to enter a loving and committed
  • relationship.
  • And sometimes the argument was it's going to happen.
  • Do you want to be on the right side of history
  • or the wrong side of history?
  • So there were all kinds of different messages
  • that we were using.
  • And ultimately, it was successful.
  • And quite frankly, we had already
  • passed it in the assembly.
  • And what a lot of people don't understand
  • is there is actually two bills that got passed.
  • One is the regular anti-discrimination bill.
  • The other was the religious exemption portion
  • of the bill, which was already included
  • in the original substantively.
  • And I say that as an anti-discrimination lawyer.
  • But that helped us to bring some more people onboard.
  • Substantively, it doesn't change anything.
  • It's just reworded slightly.
  • So there were actually two bills.
  • I was over in the Senate floor on June 24
  • as the vote was being called.
  • They were going to debate first and the rules
  • and all that kind of stuff.
  • And I was standing next to Deborah Glick,
  • the first lesbian elected to state legislative office.
  • And we had told each other we weren't going to cry,
  • but as soon as the vote was taken,
  • we just looked at each other and started hugging
  • and started crying.
  • And to this moment, it is pretty amazing--
  • pretty amazing to be part of that
  • and to know that lives have been changed because of something
  • you were involved in.
  • And I don't think there will be another experience like that
  • in my career.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Which leads me to my last question.
  • When history looks back at Harry Bronson--
  • Harry Bronson the openly gay, (unintelligible) politician,
  • business owner--
  • what do you want them to say about Harry
  • Bronson, about who you are and what
  • you've done for this community?
  • HARRY BRONSON: I don't think a lot about that, quite frankly.
  • I--
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Hold on.
  • Hang on one second.
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yeah.
  • Yeah.
  • It's not going to change it.
  • (laughing)
  • CREW: I'm rolling.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: So the same question.
  • What do you want history to know about Harry Bronson
  • and what you've done for this community?
  • HARRY BRONSON: I Would like people
  • to look at what I've done and just appreciate that I tried.
  • And there were some successes along the way.
  • Probably a lot more failures than successes.
  • And that I have tried very hard to dedicate my life to helping
  • people to have the opportunity to have
  • a productive, fulfilling, successful and happy lives
  • themselves.
  • And I do that for our LGBT community,
  • and I do that for the general public.
  • And some people may disagree with the policy approaches.
  • Some people may disagree with the decisions
  • that have been made.
  • But if they remember that I tried
  • and that was my goal, then that would make me very, very happy.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: I know I said that was the last question,
  • but one more just came up.
  • The challenges that we face ahead--
  • what are they?
  • What are they, and I already know the answer
  • to-- how do we confront them?
  • HARRY BRONSON: Yeah.
  • I think we have two large challenges ahead of us.
  • One is helping people to understand
  • that we've won some battles, we've been successful,
  • but there's a lot of discrimination and oppression
  • that still happens out there.
  • And that we can't stop the fight.
  • A clear example is gender expression and identity.
  • We don't have state wide protections for that.
  • The statewide marriage equality doesn't exist.
  • We have a law on the federal books that
  • is discriminatory by its language, by its intent,
  • by its spirit.
  • But those are just laws.
  • And laws are important, but more important
  • is trying to achieve the point when
  • people acknowledge that we're gay, lesbian,
  • bi, or transgendered.
  • But that's just a piece of who we are.
  • And the essence of who we are is we're fellow human beings.
  • And that battle is long, long from being fought,
  • and certainly we're not even close to winning that battle.
  • And so I think a real challenge ahead
  • is to keep people motivated so that we can ultimately
  • get to the point where we're fully
  • equal from a societal standpoint as well
  • as from a legal standpoint.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: And with that,before we both melt,
  • we're going to leave it there.
  • HARRY BRONSON: Excellent.
  • Good.
  • I hope that worked.
  • KEVIN INDOVINO: Definitely.