- James K. Dressel
James K. Dressel (1943–1992) was a state representative in the
Michigan legislature in the late 1970s and early 1980s.As a pragmatic but conservative Republican and a decorated
Vietnam War veteran still active in theAir National Guard , he surprised his constituents in Ottawa County by sponsoring an amendment to the state's Elliot-Larsencivil rights law to prohibitdiscrimination based on "sexual orientation ". He refused to confirm or deny to the media whether he wasgay himself, citing the principle he was trying to demonstrate: that it shouldn't matter.He was soundly defeated in the Republican primary for re-election in 1984, by a candidate he had easily out-polled in the previous primary. He proceeded to be more open about his orientation, and became active in advocating civil rights protection for gay and
lesbian people, including a stint leading theMichigan Organization for Human Rights . He died ofAIDS -relatedpneumonia in 1992. [cite news | first=Todd | last=VerBeek | url=http://rzero.com/diffangle/JimDressel.html | title = Jim Dressel (Oct. 14, 1943 - Mar. 27, 1992) | work = Network News | date= May 1992 | accessdate = 2007-07-22 ]He was profiled in
Randy Shilts ' book "Conduct Unbecoming " in the chapter "Heroes".References
* [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/draves-drexler.html Dressel, James K. (1943–1992)] at
The Political Graveyard
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.