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Sunday, August 2, 2020

Polish towns pay a steep price for anti-LGBTQ views


DOUAI, France — At the entrance to the Lycée La Salle Deforest de Lewarde in Douai in Northern France, students are welcomed with a “bonjour” written on the wall in many languages: “guten tag,” “hello,” “buenos días.”

There used to be the Polish “dzień dobry” as well — but it got painted over during a recent renovation. “It was just a mistake, we will bring ‘dzień dobry’ back!” said Diego Mercier, the school’s headmaster. 

But while it shouldn’t be too difficult to repaint the greeting, re-establishing a good relationship between schools in Douai and the Polish town of Puławy could prove more problematic — especially after the Polish municipality signed an anti-LGBTQ pledge.

Since 2019, dozens of Polish towns, counties and regions have signed similar declarations and charters. In response, several European towns have ended twinning partnerships with their Polish counterparts.

Last week, the European Commission rejected grants for six Polish towns under a citizens' program for twin municipalities, linking the decision to the anti-gay declarations.

"Human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law and respect for human rights, including the rights of persons belonging to minorities, are fundamental EU values," Equality Commissioner Helena Dalli told POLITICO in a statement. "These principles must be applied transversally to all EU funding."

Decisions like that are putting a real price on the largely symbolic anti-LGBTQ declarations, with many international cultural programs and youth exchanges suspended or canceled.  

Take Douai — located in French Flanders, where many Polish people emigrated between the wars to work in the mines. It's had a twin partnership with Puławy in Eastern Poland since 1996.

In February, Frédéric Chéreau, the mayor of Douai, said he’d found out about Puławy’s declaration and decided to freeze the partnership.

“Many citizens wrote letters to me saying how stunned they were about Puławy’s decision. I really couldn’t sit and do nothing,” he told POLITICO. 

His immediate decision was to withhold invitations for Puławy’s officials to Douai. But he didn’t exclude that future exchanges between two high schools would also be suspended. 

Mercier, Douai's high school headmaster, said he understood the mayor’s position. “It’s unbelievable to declare a town an LGBT-free zone,” he said. “It’s crazy, it’s sad.” 

But he also stressed that schools had enjoyed a “perfect” partnership for four years. “I hope we’ll get there to separate the youth exchange and the exchange between two cities,” he said. 

The headmaster of the high school in Puławy, Marta Gładysz, has similar hopes. “We have put a lot of work in this exchange,” she said. “We should divide the exchange of young people from the [municipality’s] declaration,” she said. 

In July, the Dutch town of Nieuwegein also cut its ties with Puławy.

Similar things are happening to other Polish "anti-LGBTQ" towns. France's Nogent-sur-Oise ended its cooperation with Kraśnik (suspending the exchange of young footballers) and Germany's Schwerte withheld partnership with Nowy Sącz (threatening the tradition of school exchanges). 

‘LGBTQ-free’ Polish towns

Poland is the EU’s most homophobic country, according to a Rainbow Europe ranking out this year. The issue of the LGBTQ community regularly appears in political and public debates. Recently it was used by the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party to mobilize its most conservative support during the country’s presidential election. 

The trend of towns making anti-gay declarations was sparked by a decision last year by Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski to sign a city charter pledging support for LGBTQ people.

PiS and conservative organizations said that such initiatives would allow activists to “smuggle LGBT ideology into school” and will “sexualize children.” 

In response to Warsaw's liberal mayor, many smaller Polish towns — usually governed by right-wing mayors — staked out anti-LGBTQ positions. Some endorsed the “Regional Charter of Family Rights,” drafted by the right-wing, catholic NGO Ordo Iuris grouping, and others, like Puławy, came up with their own statements. 

The charter doesn’t mention LGBTQ explicitly but calls for the “protection of marriage, being a union of a man and a woman,” which is already safeguarded by the Polish constitution, and says that public funds shouldn’t be spent on “projects that undermine the constitutional identity of marriage.”

The statement endorsed by Puławy states that the town will aim to “stop the ideology promoted by the LGBT subculture.” The city council won't allow special provisions to help LGBTQ students and will protect public officials, like teachers, from the pressure of “homopropaganda.”

According to the Atlas of Hate project, which collects all the declarations, the towns and regions that have signed some sort of anti-LGBTQ document cover one-third of Poland's territory. 

Puławy says its declaration “doesn’t trigger any specific actions” against the gay community. “There has been no violence in the town,” said a spokesperson.  

The mayor also wrote a letter to Douai, in which he argued Puławy “was the object of the media and political attack” and that there’s “no law discriminating against people because of their origin, political opinions or sexual orientation.”

EU steps in

That stance is creating painful financial consequences.

Six Polish towns — the Commission didn't name them — won't get extra funds from a town twinning program. Grants range from €5,000 to €25,000.

Commissioner Dalli said the rules of the program are "very clear." They state that it should be accessible "to all European citizens without any form of discrimination on grounds of sex, racial or ethnic origin, religion or belief, disability, age and sexual orientation."

"It is my responsibility to ensure that EU values are respected in all our work and in all EU funds," she added. "It is our duty to protect European citizens from discrimination. Inaction was not an option and would have made the European Commission complicit."

Poland's Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro called Dalli's decision "groundless and illegal" and said the Commission had a duty to respect the traditions and views of member countries. He's asked Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki to intervene in Brussels.

In Tuchów, reportedly one of the six towns that didn't get the grant, the town's mayor asked the local council to reconsider its anti-gay decision.

"One can't calculate this image loss. It's not just €18,000 that we're losing," Mayor Magdalena Marszałek told Polish TVN24 television, adding she fears the town's international partners "won't treat Tuchów seriously."

"We won't have an annual meeting of twin towns ... we won't have the meeting, the talks, the concerts," she said.

But Andrzej Głaz, head of Tuchów's local council, isn't backing down. "I pity those EU actions. I'm waiting until somebody there wises up," he told the NaTemat website. "One can live poorly but with dignity," he added.



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Yoenis Céspedes suddenly gave up on the New York Mets amidst the coronavirus

Céspedes missed the last two seasons due to his injuries.

New York Mets outfielder Yoenis Céspedes has opted out of the 2020 Major League Baseball Series without any warning.

On Sunday, Céspedes did not show up for the team’s afternoon game against the Atlanta Braves.

Some fans and MLB players feared the worst, and it took hours before Céspedes’ agent sent word to the team.

Céspedes chose to leave his team in light of the coronavirus pandemic, according to Mets general manager Brodie Van Wagenen.

READ MORE: Two MLB games suspended after 14 Miami Marlins players and staff test positive for COVID-19

“It was surprising, without question,” said Van Wagenen. Céspedes’ decision to leave his team might have affected the Mets’ 4-0 loss against the Braves, one of the team’s rivals, The New York Daily News reported.

“He did not reach out to management with any explanation for his absence,” Van Wagenen said in a statement before the Mets had clarity on Céspedes’ status. “Our attempts to contact him have been unsuccessful.”

Céspedes missed the last two seasons due to his injuries. His return since has not been remarkable. In the last eight games this season, he was batting .161, with two homers overall, The New York Times reported.

The Mets are currently on a five-game losing streak.

READ MORE: Ian Desmond calls out MLB for racism as he opts out of 2020 season

“I think it’s disappointing for the fans, from my vantage point prior to this job and then since. Yo’s a great player that I think everyone enjoyed watching play when he was at his best. There was optimism for his return. I know how hard he worked in his rehab to get back to this point, and I know this is a disappointing end to at least his four-year agreement with the Mets. I know it wasn’t for a lack of work ethic on his part to try to get back,” said Van Wagenen.

Though they eventually lost, Céspedes helped lead the Mets into the 2015 World Series, something the team hadn’t not done since 2000.

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Frank Ocean’s brother, Ryan Breaux, is dead at 18

Frank Ocean’s brother, Ryan, hit a tree while driving a Tesla

Grammy award-winning musician and producer, Frank Ocean‘s brother, Ryan Breaux, 18, has passed away alongside Ezekial (Zeek) Bishop, 20, who is said to be his classmate.

Breaux died in a car crash near Skelton Canyon Circle in Thousand Oaks, California. The fatal crash happened around 1:30 a.m., with the fire department arriving at the scene soon after, according to Acorn.

The two were driving in a Tesla which was consumed by flames, according to the sheriff’s office. Both passengers were pronounced dead on the scene and it was not currently clear who was driving the car.

READ MORE: Singer James Ingram dead at age 66

In the sheriff’s initial investigation, it was determined that the Tesla was approaching Skelton Canyon when the car left the road and collided with a tree in the center median, according to a statement released this morning. 

Many friends and classmates took to Twitter to confirm the news and mourn the death of their friends.

According to Clash Music, Ocean and his brother were extremely close. Breaux was a vocal supporter of his brother on social media.

The cause of the crash is currently being investigated and officials are calling all witnesses. Wendell Campbell , Ventura County sheriff deputy, says that the crash may have been caused by speeding. The road they were on has a speed limit of 45, according to KTLA.

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White House says coronavirus bill talks have stalled

Lawmakers will meet again on Monday, but many officials are not optimistic about finding a solution.

Negotiations for a coronavirus relief bill have come to a standstill. Republicans continue to push for a short-term measure that Democrats say delays progress toward much-needed financial relief for citizens who cannot pay their bills.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi noted that Democrats want $1 trillion for food assistance and election assistance so that states could provide mail-in voting due to the pandemic.

READ MORE: Despite virus threat, Black voters wary of voting by mail

As theGrio previously reported, President Trump is not a fan of mail-in voting. He suggested on Thursday that he’d rather postpone the November election, which he is not authorized to do without congressional approval.

Trump believes that allowing voters to send in their ballots by mail will encourage fraud. With Trump’s skepticism, it isn’t likely that Republicans will agree to pass a bill that advances the Democrats’ request.

The federal unemployment assistance of $600 per week expired on Friday, and it doesn’t look like additional funds will be going into the pockets of Americans that were hit hard by the pandemic any time soon.

Senate Republicans offered to extend the $600 benefit for one week or give states the choice of receiving $200 per week or sufficient funds to replace two-thirds of prior income through the end of the calendar year. Democrats rejected the offer, and the Senate adjourned until Monday.

READ MORE: Roughly 95% of Black-owned businesses shut out of coronavirus relief

At her weekly press briefing on Friday, Pelosi urged Republicans to sit down with Democrats and get the work done. “Let’s recognize people need $600. Let’s recognize state and local need help with allaying the money the they have spent fighting the virus and the revenue loss.”

Meanwhile, White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows accused Democrats of never attempting to counter GOP offers. Lawmakers will meet again on Monday, but many officials are not optimistic about finding a solution.

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Homeland Security official being reassigned for collecting data on journalists

Lower level officials carried out Brian Murphy’s order to gather and share information.

Brian Murphy oversaw the intelligence division as the undersecretary at the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Intelligence and Analysis. He will be reassigned to an unknown position after collecting information on two reporters.

The two reporters in question are Mike Baker, a New York Times reporter and Benjamin Wittes, the editor-in-chief of the blog Lawfare and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. 

READ MORE: Portland protesters file lawsuit against U.S. government

Wittes is responsible for publishing leaks regarding the unrest in Portland, Oregon. The relevant documents were not classified by the government.

Lower level officials carried out Murphy’s order to gather and share information on the journalists. Many on social media say that this is used as a scare tactic to silence critics and journalists.

Wittes, who is vocal about his dislike for President Donald Trump, says that the practice of collecting information infringes on Freedom of Speech.

Last Friday, Homeland Secretary Chad Wolf announced that Murphy would be moving another position.

“In no way does the Acting Secretary condone this practice, and he has immediately ordered an inquiry into the matter,” a DHS spokesperson said in a statement earlier this week, CNN reported.

READ MORE: NAACP sues Homeland Security over Haiti immigration policy

“[The department] will no longer identify US members of the media in our intelligence products…[there will be an] immediate review of the circumstances surrounding the collection and dissemination of intelligence on US members of the press,” said a statement obtained by CNN.

Chair of the House Intelligence Committee Adam Schiff said that he has been “conducting rigorous oversight.”

“In light of recent public reports, we are concerned that Murphy may have provided incomplete and potentially misleading information to Committee staff during our recent oversight engagement,” said Schiff.

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