LGBTory (Canada)

LGBTory
Predecessor None
Formation February 2015
Founder Isaiah von Lichtenberg
Benjamin Dichter
Founded at Canada
Purpose LGBT conservatism
Conservatism
Economic liberalism
Progressive conservatism
Fiscal conservatism
Conservative liberalism
Location
Co-Founder, President & Treasurer
Doc von Litchenberg
Co-Founder & Chairman
Benjamin Dichter
Vice President of Communications
Eric Lorenzen
Arthur Conway
Director
Affiliations Conservative Party of Canada
Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario
Website Homepage

LGBTory is a Canadian LGBT conservative organization. The group was formally established in 2015, as an advocacy group for LGBT supporters of the Conservative Party of Canada and provincial conservative parties;[1] while officially open to all LGBT supporters of conservative parties across Canada, the group was founded in Toronto, Ontario by people associated with the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario.

Political views

LGBTory lists its core political beliefs as supporting limited government and personal and economic freedoms, opposing despotic governments and terrorist groups that persecute minorities including LGBT people, and supporting entrepreneurs and small business owners.

Activities

To date, the organization's most widely publicized activity has been its participation in several of Canada's largest Pride parades in 2015, representing the first time that an organized LGBT conservative group has participated in any of the events.

At Toronto's Pride parade in June, in addition to LGBTory members the marching contingent included federal MPs Kellie Leitch and Bernard Trottier,[2] Ontario Progressive Conservative Party leader Patrick Brown, MPPs Lisa MacLeod and Jack MacLaren[3] and party president Richard Ciano.[2] Ottawa talk radio host Nick Vandergragt subsequently criticized MacLeod on his CFRA talk show for her participation, although both MacLeod and MacLaren repudiated Vandergragt's comments.[4]

At Ottawa's Capital Pride in August, the group was faced with an online petition, signed by approximately 200 members of the city's LGBT community, demanding that the pride committee bar the group from marching.[5] The petition asserted that "by not distancing themselves from politicians who are actively dismantling our rights," the group was participating in "bad faith";[5] it also claimed that by using the T in the LGBT initialism to stand for "Tory", the group was erasing transgender identities and issues.[5] The group was not banned from the parade, and marched without further incident.[6] MacLeod was again among the marchers, although no other elected MPs or MPPs joined her.[7]

LGBTory did not directly organize a contingent at Vancouver Pride, although the party's federal electoral district association in Vancouver Centre applied to participate but then withdrew.[8] The withdrawal was tied to conflicting claims about whether the group had sought an exemption from having to sign a pledge committing participating groups to respect and defend transgender equality rights.[9]

On August 27, 2015, the cross-partisan advocacy group Proud Politics published an open letter on its website endorsing the group's right to participate in LGBT pride events, stating that "we look forward to working with candidates, groups, and parties of all stripes" and that "achieving ‘lived equality’ – our vision at ProudPolitics – means that LGBTIQ+ citizens should be accepted in all parties and in every walk of life."[10]

See also

References


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