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The Lavender Scare: The case against homosexuals

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President Dwight D. Eisenhower delivering a speech sponsored by the National Newspaper Publishers Association in 1958. (Photo: The U.S. National Archives)
President Dwight D. Eisenhower delivering a speech sponsored by the National Newspaper Publishers Association in 1958. (Photo: The U.S. National Archives)

There is perhaps no more critical election in US history than the one on Nov. 5. Vice President Kamala Harris has said repeatedly that former president Donald Trump poses a threat to democracy as well as to a myriad of aspects of Americans' daily lives. The specter of Jan. 6, 2021, remains vivid for most Americans, so it's not a hyperbolic statement or mere electioneering.

In addition, Harris has cited the Heritage Foundation's Project 2025, a plan to remake the American government. It will also deeply threaten historically marginalized communities, notably immigrants and LGBTQ+ people.

While Trump claims to know nothing about Project 2025, members of his former administration were among its authors and architects. Harris has it up on her website, so voters can see what it would do, and she referenced it in the Sept. 10 debate.

Yet since the debate, Americans have also witnessed firsthand the impact that rumor and innuendo — an important element in the Project 2025 playbook — can have on whole communities after Trump asserted that Haitian immigrants in Ohio are kidnapping pets and eating them. That false claim, debunked in real time by ABC moderator David Muir and many times since by various Ohio officials, including law enforcement and even the Republican governor, has shown the nation how a fast-moving rumor can impact both a small community like Springfield, Ohio, and take over an entire country.

HUAC hearings, the Red Scare, and homosexuals
That's what happened when the Red Scare — the threat of Communists infiltrating American society at every level in the 1940s and 1950s — gave birth to the Lavender Scare, in which homosexual men and women were seen as "sexual perverts," "deviants," and a national security threat. Just as Trump and his running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, have made false accusations against Haitian immigrants, Wisconsin Republican Sen. Joseph McCarthy spread rumors about Communists in the US government decades ago.

Many of McCarthy's fellow Republicans at that time — including President Dwight D. Eisenhower — supported the senator's dogged work to weed out Communists in American society, but it was also a bipartisan effort. Democrats were also actively engaged in the purges that led to the Lavender Scare, in which McCarthy claimed that homosexuals were more vulnerable to blackmail by the Soviets, and were therefore a national security risk and posed a significant threat to the country as the Cold War ratcheted up.

In 1947, the US Park Police started its "Sex Perversion Elimination Program," which targeted Gay men for arrest and intimidation. In 1948, Congress passed an act "for the treatment of sexual psychopaths" in the nation's capital; that law facilitated the arrest and punishment of people who acted on same-sex desire and also labeled them mentally ill.

The subversive aspects of both homosexuality and Communism began to be linked. In 1950, even the Communist Party issued a warning about the threat of homosexuality.

McCarthy's efforts to eradicate Communists and his focus on homosexuals in particular brought a significant number of closeted writers, actors, and even politicians before his House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) hearings. Ironically, his main support for his work was his assistant, 26-year-old Roy Cohn, a closeted Gay man who would later become Donald Trump's attorney.

Executive Order 10450 fuels Lavender Scare
Eisenhower is often called "the last good Republican president" and a serious conservative who put country first over party. Yet he succumbed to the worst aspects of bigotry and propagated two of the most damaging policies in modern US history: EO 10450 and Operation Wetback (even referencing the latter by name can get you a timeout on X for using an ethnic slur).

The direct connection remains unclear between McCarthy, HUAC, and Eisenhower's Executive Order 10450, issued on April 27, 1953, which led to the expulsion of homosexuals from all levels of American government, but a link certainly existed. The policy was succinct and unforgiving: Anyone suspected of being a Lesbian or Gay man was summarily dismissed from their positions. There were no protections for these men and women from the revelation of their sexual orientation either.

The devastating impact of that policy reverberated for years and touched thousands of Gay men and Lesbians. Executive Order 10450 was not rescinded until 1995; it continued to bar Gays from the military until the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy, which in turn was not repealed until 2011. In his 2020 book The Deviant's War: The Homosexual vs. the United States of America, Eric Cervini reports the prosecution of around one million Gay or Lesbian people in the US from 1945 to 1960.

Eisenhower's "Operation Wetback" removed Mexican immigrants, including American citizens, from the US. Millions of Mexicans had legally entered the country through immigration programs in the first half of the 20th century. Many of these immigrants then became naturalized citizens. Operation Wetback sent them back to Mexico, in much the way Trump asserts he will do with immigrants if he is reelected (it is also a foundational tenet of Project 2025).

But this assault on homosexuals was not just about McCarthy, nor was it solely the purview of Republicans. The Subcommittee on Investigations, chaired by Democratic Sen. Clyde R. Hoey from 1949 to 1952, investigated "the employment of homosexuals in the Federal workforce." McCarthy embraced this theme in HUAC hearings, as the Hoey report stated that all of the government's intelligence agencies "are in complete agreement that sex perverts in Government constitute security risks."

The head of the Washington DC Metropolitan Police Department vice squad, Lt. Roy Blick, had testified that 5,000 homosexuals lived in the city and that around 3,700 were federal employees. This lit a fuse to weed out these men and women from the government.

Effects of the Lavender Scare
Eisenhower's association with McCarthy highlights how he was far from a benign leader and was in fact one of the most dangerous for Lesbians and Gay men, both at the time and historically. As renowned activist Harry Hay would later be quoted in the New York Times, "We lived in terror almost every day of our lives." The breadth of impact of the Lavender Scare has not been widely reported, but the 2017 documentary The Lavender Scare shows how even after men and women were purged from their government jobs, they were pursued by the policy.

One example is Madeleine Tress, 24, who was working as an economist for the US Department of Commerce when two investigators called her in, saying they had evidence of her lesbianism. She was asked to swear an oath. She asked for an attorney and was told she could not have one. Tress lost her job. Later, as the film details, she also lost her Fulbright award. (NPR posted an interview with her in 2023 and the transcript is chilling.)

The incidental aspects of Executive Order 10450 — one young Lesbian economist's life being upended and virtually ruined — exemplifies what the confluence of McCarthy and Eisenhower did to Gay men and Lesbians during the Lavender Scare. Many were labeled as deviants and ostracized in their professions. But the impact went far beyond job losses. Some people died by suicide after being outed, as the repercussions were so devastating on multiple levels that they couldn't bear the fallout.

Activist response
Frank Kameny was working for the United States Army Map Service as an astronomer when he was fired in 1957 for being homosexual. he tried repeatedly but was unable to find another job in the federal government, due to the Lavender Scare.

The impact that had on Kameny propelled him into becoming one of the most pivotal LGBTQ+ civil rights leaders, devoting his life to the Gay rights movement. He was instrumental in creating the Mattachine Society of Washington in 1960. In 1965, four years before the Stonewall Riots, Kameny picketed the White House for Gay rights. That same year, Kameny led a similar picket line at Independence Hall on July 4, which included veteran Philadelphia Lesbian activist Barbara Gittings.

As the 2024 election approaches, this history of what a seemingly benign president and an ideologue of a senator can do to threaten, terrorize, and even lead to the deaths of marginalized people is a lesson worth reviewing, one that continues to have ripples into the present day.

Victoria A. Brownworth is an award-winning journalist with the Philadelphia Gay News.

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