Many shocked by Harrisite’s Egale prize.
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Egale's gay gaffe
Common Sense revolutionary Jaime Watt cops Egale’s top gay award and has activists stunned

As a queer teenager, I cut my activist teeth fighting cuts to youth programs during the Mike Harris years. So imagine my surprise when I discovered that LGBT advocacy group Egale Canada was giving its inaugural Leadership Award to one of the architects of the Common Sense Revolution.

At a gala fundraising dinner at the King Edward Hotel on June 5, Egale Canada honoured Jaime Watt, the openly gay senior communications adviser to Harris and Ernie Eves, for his “outstanding contribution to LGBT human rights in Canada.”

What? How did an operative for a government so hostile to the rights of minorities score a top gay prize?

“I make no apologies for it,” says Egale executive director Helen Kennedy. “We are a non-partisan organization.”

Kennedy credits Watt with ensuring the passage of Bill 5, which changed provincial statutes to give same-sex couples the same rights and responsibilities as opposite-sex common-law couples.

It is described in the gala program as “the most significant piece of equality rights legislation in Ontario’s history.”

All right, but let’s get the history straight. The Harris government was forced to pass Bill 5 after it appealed a same-sex alimony case all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada. 

In May 1999, the court ruled that the definition of “spouse” in Ontario’s family law was unconstitutional and gave the provincial government six months to change it. Five months later, the Tories introduced Bill 5, named An Act To Amend Certain Statutes Because Of The Supreme Court Of Canada Decision In M. v. H.”

“Jaime Watt spent his entire political career working for politicians who fought against us,” says queer activist Stephen Seaborn, who attended the gala and was shocked by the award.

Indeed, most gay activists remember the Harris years as a time of cutbacks that most affected programs for vulnerable communities.

“There was an erosion of public infrastructure” in those years, says Gilles Marchildon, former executive director of Egale. “This disproportionately affected people who were already marginalized.”

In 1998, for example, the Harris government closed Wellesley Hospital, widely seen as the most welcoming hospital for LGBT people in Toronto, with one of the best HIV/AIDS treatment programs in the country.

The same year, the Tories delisted sex reassignment surgery from OHIP. Some trans people were forced to stop in the middle of transitioning.

As well, says Seaborn, a member of the Campaign for Public Education, “anti-homophobia education programs were pretty well first on the chopping block when the Harris government slashed school board budgets.

“This year’s dinner was billed as a fundraiser for safe schools, and here we are honouring a Harris operative whose efforts totally gutted these initiatives,” he says.

But it’s not just Watt’s activities in the 90s that Kennedy refers to. She also points to his contributions to Egale when the organization found itself losing financial and volunteer support after same-sex marriage was legalized.

Watt, who runs the public relations firm Navigator, provides Egale with free space in its office on Wellington.

Could the fact that he’s Egale’s landlord and benefactor have played a part in the award?

“No, not at all,” responds Kennedy.  “Why would it?” The decision to present the award, she says, was made by the gala committee.

In addition to Kennedy and another Egale staffer who both work in space donated by Watt, the gala committee of nine included a Navigator staff member.

Watt himself bristles at the suggestion that his donations to Egale might have had a bearing on the award. “If I believed that were the reason, I would return it, ” he says, adding that he has helped in governance and organizational development of charities like Casey House and the Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives. 

In his acceptance speech, Watt credited Egale’s courage, acknowledging that some people were “not happy” about his receipt of the award. He attributed their objections to partisanship and joked about how difficult it was to “come out” as a Conservative within the LGBT community.

He wasn’t the only conservative at Egale’s dinner.  Also in attendance was MP John Baird.

Despite Baird’s vigorous applause for same-sex marriage, when he was Treasury Board president in 2006 he cancelled the Court Challenges Program that allowed citizens to fight discriminatory treatment in the courts, the very program Egale relied on to mount its legal challenges.

With friends like these, does Egale need enemies?

news@nowtoronto.com

NOW | June 16-23, 2009 | VOL 28 NO 42
Copyright 2010 NOW Communications
Comments
Posted by derek on 06/18/2009, 12:38 AM
What a desecration of the history of gay activism. If Egale wanted to honour those responsible for Bill 5, they should have honoured the people who fought the Ontario government Jaime Watt was part of all the way to the Supreme Court. Helen Kennedy has made Egale effete, ineffective, unprincipled, and irrelevant. Perhaps Jaime Watt can arrange for his right wing friends to give Kennedy an award in honour of this service to their cause.

Posted by Former Egale Supporter on 06/18/2009, 09:53 AM
The honouring of Jaime Watt is revolting to all those who were real activists in the 90s fighting for equal rights. I used to donate monthly to Egale, but as soon as I heard of this disgraceful award to Watt, I immediately called them up to cancel my donation plan. Egale obviously has lost its focus and perspective. Let's honour the real fighters and activists.

Posted by Bert on 06/18/2009, 01:54 PM
I'm sure the writer is not surprised, and others shouldn't be either, at Egale's disappointing prize-giving. Egale has never been a radical organization. It was founded primarily to fight for same-sex marriage - an important right, but certainly not a radical one. They are a liminal group, not quite activists, not quite lobbyists, who have always attempted, as far as I know, to work with rather than against governments and other mainstream organizations. It's one of the reasons they've been as successful as they have been, one of the reasons they can afford to put on galas and give awards to opportunistic homosexuals like Jaime Watt who become outspoken only when they have nothing to lose. Who's next? Mark Tewkesbury? And I expect Baird himself will be up for something similar after the next election.

Posted by GH on 06/18/2009, 07:00 PM
Egale. The very name gives away their tawdry little game. Equal? When did we start wanting that? Too-too shame-making. Please, Egale, leave now and take Jaime Watt with you.

Posted by Lopsided coverage on 06/18/2009, 11:52 PM
What kind of journalist quotes fired ex employees. It is no secret that Egale paid Gilles Marchildon a lot of money to leave after he drove Egale into the ground. Why do you think they need the Navigator office space. What kind of source is he. Like him or hate him Jaime Watt has done a lot and if you think because he is a Tory he doesn't deserve recognition fine but this is not the litmus test for the value of the work of Egale.

Posted by Here come the anonymous Watt/Egale defenders on 06/19/2009, 11:38 AM
Lopsided? Great article. Seemed to cover the issues. What's remarkable is how little attention this right-wing shift in the gay community is getting in the mainstream press. I wonder if Obama noticed. 'The gay community got ours and now it's time to join the Conservatives' is the message Egale is sending with this award. I'm sure the Republicans in the US are excited about it.

They could have acknowledged Watt's admirable generosity with a special award but they gave him a "Leadership Award". There's no spinning that. It sends a message that the future leaders of the gay community are more concerned with cutting services for the poor and the Trans community. Wow, Egale, what are you even about? Safer Private schools?

Posted by Sick of this Bullshit on 06/20/2009, 11:08 PM
What other paid work excludes you from recognition in the Gay Community? Just curious. I don't see a name at the end of your post. Egale is doing amazing work for Queer refugees and Queer kids in schools. They are busy lobbying on many issues and I don't see them knocking anybody else out of the way. Non partisan is only offensive to someone who feels so empowered they can take shots at people actually making change that has a real postive impact on the lives of Queer and Trans Canadians.

Posted by nfitz on 06/22/2009, 12:36 AM
How come the version that was printed in the paper says "He wasn't the only gay conservative at Egale's dinner. Also in attendance was MP John Baird." but the version that is on the website says "He wasn't the only conservative at Egale's dinner. Also in attendance was MP John Baird.".

Has there been a correction? Our is Now really outing the Conservative minister of Transport?

Posted by Correction? on 06/22/2009, 08:41 AM
John Baird is in the closet? Says who?

Posted by nfitz on 06/23/2009, 08:20 AM
There isn't a single verifable source on Baird's sexuality that could ever be quoted, with the exception of the print version of this article. Not that I'm aware of at least ... so yes, he would appear to be in the closet - even if the door is wide open

Posted by Derek on 06/23/2009, 09:44 AM
If Baird is in the closet, he needs to try harder.

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