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Republican Congressman David Dreier's closeted gay
life has been zealously guarded by Southern California
newspapers for more than a quarter of a century. MARK
CROMER explores the broadsheets policy of protecting
Dreier even while the GOP wages its legislative Holy
War on gay Americans.
First in a series of columns
on the media and Congressman David Dreier
When congressional Republicans selected
Rep. John Boehner from Ohio as their House Majority
leader last week, newspapers throughout Southern California
quickly filled with details about the back-slapping,
party-insider the GOP had turned to amid a growing corruption
scandal.
Pundits pondered whether Boehner
was a wise choice for a majority party that's deeply
mired in a vote-selling scheme the Republicans brazenly
called 'The K-Street Project,' aptly named after Washington's
fabled lobbyist row.
Yet the real story-the real indication
of just how hopelessly infected the beltway has become
with hypocrisy, secrecy, dirty deals and an unbridled
lust for power that permeates within both parties-was
not Boehner's come-from-behind ascent to the leadership
position in the GOP.
Dreier's Gay Shame
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No, the real story was who didn't
get the job, even as a temp.
That story's name is David Timothy
Dreier, and it was nowhere to be found in the newspapers
that serve Dreier's district, as usual. From the arrogant
powerhouse Los Angeles Times to the backwater hack-sheets
of the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin and San Gabriel
Valley Tribune, nary a mention of what happened to Dreier-or
what didn't happen to him-made the papers.
Granted, that Dreier didn't get
the nod from his party is not a huge story per se, but
why he was never honestly being considered is one hell
of a story, one brimming with sex, money, power and
bigotry. As journalists like to say, it's "a good
read."
Why Dreier's hometown newspapers
continue to religiously ignore this story is an even
bigger headline, one that illustrates just how cozy
under the covers some journalistic institutions have
become with a government they are supposed to keep honest.
Writers like Robert Novak, Judith Miller and Matt Cooper
are just the tip of the iceberg in a malignant confidence
game that rewards personal access over professional
integrity. It's a game that has spread far beyond Washington
and New York.
Dreier, the sun-tanned, Tele-slick,
12-term Congressman from the 26th District in California
who was a young protégé of President Reagan
in 1980, has lived as a semi-closeted gay man who has
shown no compunction whatsoever in joining the Republican's
cultural war against gays. Dreier's friends, family
and close associates know that he is gay, so do the
newspaper reporters that cover him.
Yet the average voter in Dreier's
district is likely unaware that he is gay, which is
just the way Dreier-and the newspapers-wish to keep
it. The prototypical Betty Bluehair Republican isn't
likely to research the issue on the Internet between
teas at the Ritz-Carlton.
Dreier's political paradox finds
him simultaneously cavorting with his chief of staff
and long-time companion Brad Smith (reportedly living
with him as well) while making common cause with his
party to strip gays of basic protections, from employment
law and hate crimes legislation to the GOP's kamikaze
attacks on the radical notion of allowing homosexuals
to say 'I do.'
Thus, Dreier's unflinching loyalty
to the Republican platform and his skill at publicly
living a charade has served him well in the GOP, just
as he long as he never seriously hoped to reach beyond
representing a safe congressional seat. The party leadership
has been quite comfortable to allow him his seat and
to chair the powerful House Rules Committee, but that's
where the leash ends.

Dreier & party-arranged arm-candy
in the mid-1990s |
This inner-party glass ceiling was
blatantly on display again last September when Dreier
was knocked out of the box after Majority Leader Tom
DeLay stepped aside following his indictment over alleged
campaign finance violations. Though Dreier was initially
named as a potential (and obvious) temporary successor
to DeLay, he was quickly shunted aside by GOP leaders
who were eager to avoid provoking the radical Christian
Right by naming a gay man, even a closeted one, as an
interim majority leader.
Instead, House Speaker Dennis Hastert
gave Dreier the 'go away' job of fronting the Republicans
efforts to confront-or paste over-the blossoming corruption
scandal. The plum stand-in role went to Majority Whip
Roy Blunt, who Boehner eventually outfoxed for the position.
A staffer at the Daily Bulletin
called me up right after Blount had been named interim
leader and sardonically laughed that the newspaper's
readers were treated to a now well-established magic
routine: Now you see Dave, now you don't. The newspaper,
he noted, reported that Dreier was a serious contender
for the leadership post, but in the ensuing shuffle
Dreier's supposed candidacy simply evaporates and little
if any contextual explanation is offered.
Since the newspaper's reporters
and columnists are absolutely forbidden to address the
issue, even obliquely, Dreier's supposed promotion ends
up looking like a bad Christmas decoration that is left
hanging outside long after December: everyone sees it,
no one says anything and then one day it's just gone.
It's a trick the Daily Bulletin
and Tribune have been playing on its readers for years.
Every time Senator Barbara Boxer comes up for reelection,
the newspapers float Dreier's name as a serious contender
for her seat. Dreier nails his stage marks like a pro,
coyly "not ruling out" a run he knows he will
never make. The Republicans come up with another sacrificial
goat and Dreier goes back to counting the mountains
of cash in his epic campaign war chest.
The reasons for protecting Dreier's
sexual identity differ between the Los Angeles Times
and the smaller Tribune and Daily Bulletin, but there
are common threads that connect them.
In the Times case, the primary issue
seems to be one of shielding Democratic sacred cow Art
Torres, chairman of the California Democratic Party
and himself a closeted homosexual.
Art Torres
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This was explained to me recently
over dinner with a former Times writer and a veteran
Los Angeles journalist who covers both Sacramento and
Washington. She explained that the editors at the Times
fear that by exposing Dreier, the newspaper could set
off a chain-reaction that might force them to 'out'
Torres, or risk being seen as hypocritical.
Since Torres is a Latino and a Democrat,
the Times is loath to expose his sexual identity, a
revelation that could seriously erode his support in
the Latino community and ultimately force him to give
up his chairmanship of the party.
"It basically comes down to
Torres," she said. "If they go after Dreier,
they are afraid of what might happen to Art."
The Daily Bulletin and Tribune,
both owned by Texan GOP contributor Dean Singleton,
harbor no such concerns about the political fate of
Torres when they consider the subject of Dreier's sexual
identity verses his congressional voting record.
The dynamic between the newsrooms
at these newspapers and Dreier is much more personal
and, in many respects, far easier to understand.
Voters first sent Dreier to Washington
in 1980, a time when the Daily Bulletin was a backwater
operation owned by the rabidly rightwing Don-Rey Media
as two separate newspapers: the morning Daily Report
in Ontario and the Progress Bulletin, an evening newspaper
in Pomona.
By the time Don-Rey merged the newspapers
into the Daily Bulletin in 1990, the beaming mug of
David Dreier hung on the office walls of publisher Dave
Caffoe and Executive Editor George Collier.
The Tribune, meanwhile, was run
by F. Al Totter; a red-faced, vein-popping Republican
so bitterly partisan in his editorial slant that for
a time he forbade any news photo to appear in the newspaper
that depicted union pickets or protestor signs-lest
the paper become a shill for some Leftist rabble. Totter
was known for firing staff writers for not keeping their
desks tidy and, at least in one case, fired a reporter
for not wearing a tie to work.
Dreier was Al's boy.
When Totter finally died on May
19, 1997, Dreier took to the House floor a few days
later and recited a tribute to the former publisher,
hailing him as one of the San Gabriel Valley's "most
eloquent and reasoned voices." Dreier read into
the Congressional Record his own remarks that had been
published in the Tribune's front page obituary of Totter,
gushing the Totter was "the conscience of the Valley,
and that really does describe him."
Like the suits who ran the Bulletin,
Totter could tolerate Dreier's sexual identity as long
as he hid it while voting solidly against what Totter
used to thunder was a "homosexual agenda"
out to rob businesses the right to fire queers.
From 1980 through the mid-1990s,
reporters at the Daily Bulletin, the Tribune and its
sister newspapers, the Whittier Daily News and Pasadena
Star News, simply could not touch the issue of Dreier's
sexuality and hypocrisy. As a former reporter for all
of those newspapers at various times during those years,
I can say that we didn't need a memo to understand what
the consequences would be if we even broached the subject
with the congressman.
The framed photo of Dreier hanging
in the publisher and editors offices was truly worth
a thousand words.
Next: With the Flynt Report pending
in 1998, Dreier's team taps his assets at the Tribune
to find out what Larry had cookin' and a closer look
at the one question the newspapers have never asked-just
asked-in twenty-six years.
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