Clinton liberty gay
Holding star Clinton Liberty was 'so nervous' meeting Graham Norton on set - and he was in Paul Mescal's class
Clinton Liberty was 'so nervous' encounter Graham Norton on arrange of ITV drama Holding during film in Cork last year.
The player, who is a rising star of the scene, was in Paul Mescal's class in Dublin's Lír academy and he was a huge fan of the Normal People celebrity.
Liberty, aged 23, also played Kiernan in Normal People, a friend of Mescal’s character Connell, before landing for the starring roles in Holding alongside stars Derry Girls’ Siobhan McSweeney, Brenda Fricker and Charlene McKenna.
Read more: Paul Mescal opens up about about relationship with co-star Daisy Edgar Jones
Clinton told RSVP Live: “The day Graham came to visit, we had ice cream that day, and everybody was in a great mood. It was really lovely to connect him.
“Oh my god I was so nervous that day. I tried to keep a poker face, but it wasn't just me. I had never such an electrifying feeling that went through every single person on the cast and crew it was like, 'Oh my god, Graham Norton's here'. Even the other stars were like, 'Oh my God, he's here&apos
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Lauren Gambino, The Guardian
When then-Arkansas governor Bill Clinton strode onto the stage at a fundraising event in Los Angeles in 1992, Rick Zbur swelled with emotion.
There under the national spotlight for what many said was the first time in history, a presidential candidate openly courted the sapphic and gay community.
“I hold a vision of America,” the charismatic young Democrat told the crowd. “And you are a part of it.”
“I wrote a $1,000 check for the first time in my life at that event,” recalled Zbur, at the time a young attorney who still wasn’t expose about his sexuality at work. “I remember I recognized how symbolically dominant the moment was, and I felt like I was a part of history.”
It was in part the desire to elect a president who was not afraid to include the LGBT community that drove Zbur to unite the increasingly visible political movement, one that had been born out of the urgency of the Aids crisis and a deep anger at the government’s silence during the early years of the epidemic. The rallying weep then was “silence equals death”.
More than two decades later, the once-marginalized constituency has grown into a political force – and De
Timeline: Bill Clinton’s evolution on gay rights
The president who signed the Defense of Marriage Act into rule in 1996 is now urging the Supreme Court to strike it down. Here’s a look support on Clinton’s evolution on gay rights. As you can see,Clinton has elongated tried to have it both ways--courting the male lover community while also governing as a centrist.
Bill Clinton, who signed the Defense of Marriage Execute into law in 1996, is now urging the Supreme Court to strike it down.
In an op-ed in the Washington Post on Friday, the former president said when he greenlighted DOMA—which defines marriage as between a male and a woman–it was a “very different time,” noting that no states recognized gay marriage. He argues that at the time, legislation to explain marriage would fend off a movement that would have been even worse for gay Americans.
How did Clinton go from pro-DOMA to anti-DOMA? Let’s accept a trip down memory lane…As you can observe, the former president has long tried to contain it both ways–courting the gay community while also governing as a centrist.
1991: Clinton, the governor of Arkansas, meets with LGBT advocates in Hollywood, making him the first major presidential candidate
Does New Hillary Clinton LGBT Kissing Ad Raise Religious Liberty Concerns?
By Ray Nothstine, Christian Post Whistleblower
A new ad released by the Hillary Clinton campaign showing gay couples kissing suggests that that the fight for equal rights for the LGBT people is far from over.
The ad released on YouTube Sunday with Clinton narrating over kissing same-sex couples, where she notes that "gay rights are human rights, and human rights are gay rights."
Clinton said it was outrageous that in 2015, "you can still be fired for being gay, you can still lose your dwelling for being gay, and you can even be denied a wedding cake for being gay."
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Clinton vowed to "end discrimination wherever it occurs," and boasted that she "helped to make it easier for transgender Americans to change the gender listed on their passports."
Clinton, who in 2004 gave an impassioned speech in defense of traditional marriage, officially changed her position in a 2013 video.
"I trust marriage is not just a bond but a sacred bond between a man a
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