[LINK] "Glass closet"
Oct. 4th, 2012 06:59 pmXtra!'s Matthew Hays covers the story of high-profile Conservative MP and Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird, almost certainly gay but not out. Not exactly. It makes an interesting commentary on the theme of last month's post about the Conservative Party of Canada's efforts--sincere ones, I'd argue, if perhaps belated--to reach out to GLBT voters if someone like Baird isn't fully out.
Just to set the record straight, it was not some nasty commie queer activist who outed Baird. It was another Tory. On Feb 2, 2010, Conservative candidate Pamela Taylor, who was then running for Ontario provincial office in a by-election, was asked, while on a morning radio chat show, if she could name a single gay Tory. “Openly gay? John Baird,” she responded.
Baird had long been identified as gay in the blogosphere, where, it seems, such things dare speak their name. Up until that point, the mainstream media had avoided the issue.
The response to the outing was odd. Xtra ran it as a lead story online, eliciting a steady stream of reader comments. According to a 2010 Google traffic report, it was xtra.ca’s most-read story of the year. But the mainstream media, perhaps once again inadvertently proving their dinosaur status, chose not to touch the story.
Aside from one article that detailed the outing in La Presse, all the mainstream dailies and radio and TV stations steered clear. (According to the mainstream media, Baird’s is a linguistically lopsided outing; apparently he’s gay in only one official language.) In fact, reporting on the high-profile Baird is hilarious — I haven’t seen this much coded language for “he’s gay but we can’t say it” since I read what gossip columnists wrote about Rock Hudson in the 1950s. When Baird was named Parliamentarian of the Year by Maclean’s in 2010, reporter Aaron Wherry called him “the charming Conservative” (a phrase some might consider a contradiction in terms). Wherry pointed out that some MPs consider Baird “an enigma of sorts.” The article hints at a split personality, quoting Liberal MP Rob Oliphant, who asks, “Who is the real John Baird? Is he the charming, boyish kind of person who is trying to win over the hearts of people? Or is he the pit bull?” Why, he’s the Talented Mr Ripley!
In their defence, Canadian journalists have attempted to maintain a certain ethic on the private lives of politicians. In order to avoid a Clinton/Lewinsky-esque carnival atmosphere, journalists have (for the most part rightly) deemed such issues unnecessary to cover. The emphasis, they point out, should be on the job performances of politicians, not on their personal lives. It could be seen as a twist on the famous Trudeau-ism: the nation has no place in the bedrooms of the state.
But proponents of outing — that is, the act of pushing public figures out of the closet against their will — have long suggested that such acts are entirely justifiable where hypocrisy is involved. Simply put, if you’re working against the rights of queer people, you’ve abdicated your right to remain in the closet.
This question becomes more complicated with Baird, seeing as he is now criticizing governments in other parts of the world for their homophobic policies. Since fighting homophobic laws abroad seems to be part of his agenda, isn’t it then fair to bring up his sexual orientation? To ask Baird how he works within the Conservative Party, given that we know many of its MPs and supporters are hostile to queer rights?
If we had a government that was known to be anti-Semitic, for example, wouldn’t it be fair to ask a prominent Jewish member of that government how he or she managed to make sense of such an apparent contradiction? These are questions that seem imperative.