Mike Pompeo Plans to Push His Anti-LGBTQ Commission at the UN [View all]
Two months after a controversial State Department commission elevated religious freedom at the expense of LGBTQ equality and reproductive rights, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is planning to promote its findings at the United Nations, Mother Jones has learned.
During the UN General Assembly, which begins on September 15 in New York, Pompeo is expected to lead an event centered on human rights and, specifically, the report from the Commission on Unalienable Rights, which he formed last year. Meanwhile, on September 16, the commissions chair and secretary are staging a virtual event with the US ambassador to the UN office in Geneva to present its report to the international community.
Since its formation, the commission has been a Pompeo project through and through, stacked with anti-LGBTQ scholars and headed by his former boss. Its ostensible purpose, which Pompeo outlined in a Wall Street Journal op-ed, was to distinguish between unalienable rights, which are by nature universal, and ad hoc rights created by politicians and bureaucrats. That argumentand the extremely public, anti-LGBTQ views held by its membersled the human rights advocacy community to disavow the commission and its report, which unsurprisingly turned out to prioritize religious freedom while labeling abortion and same-sex marriage as divisive social and political controversies.
The harsh response has not deterred Pompeo in the slightest. Within weeks of the draft reports publication in July, it had been translated into six languages, including Farsi. (Given the Trump administrations increasingly hostile stance toward Iran, that was certainly no accident.)
It just shows this is Pompeos pet project and hes not going to let it go, Mark Bromley, chair of the Council on Global Equality, told me. In an effort to blunt Pompeos broad promotion of the report, Bromleys group and several other advocacy organizations, including Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, Equity Forward, and Human Rights First, have been emailing foreign diplomats urging them to reject the report and not support Pompeos UN event.
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