Shared from the 10/17/2019 Houston Chronicle eEdition

EDITORIAL

Kubosh should be pick for At-Large Position 3

He’s best choice, despite his misconceptions.

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Kubosh

In the last municipal election cycle, this editorial board endorsed Michael Kubosh for City Council At-Large Position 3 with a significant caveat: His opposition to Houston’s equal rights amendment (HERO) and his use of fear-mongering rhetoric gave us pause.

“If HERO were the only issue on the agenda for City Council’s next term,” we wrote in 2015, “Ku-bosh’s actions would be reason enough to boot him from office.”

As reasons to look past his wrongheaded views on the gay and transgender community, we pointed to the political skills that helped him pass an amendment to the mayor’s budget, his success in getting the funds needed to fish abandoned cars from the city’s bayous in a joint project with Harris County and his knack for constituent services.

Four years later, we are again torn. Ku-bosh kept his promise to retrieve submerged cars, a project that has removed more than 80 vehicles from Sims and Brays Bayou. He has been spearheading an effort to bring an AstroWorld-like theme park to Houston, a project that Mayor Sylvester Turner hinted in a recent tweet may be on the horizon. He has advocated for distribution of Harvey relief funds to the victims most in need.

However, in a candidate screening, Ku-bosh several times expressed opinions that re-troubling, especially for a council member who represents all Houstonians — including members of the gay and trans-gender community.

As one of Kubosh’s challengers, Janaeya Carmouche, rightly pointed out, being a city council member is “not just simply the day-to-day minutiae of the job or the machinations of the job. It is understanding that you have a platform and your voice and your opinion will be amplified.“

Both Carmouche, a communications specialist who has worked as community engagement director for Harris County Commissioner Rodney Ellis, and Marcel McClinton, an 18-year-old shooting survivor-turned-gun reform advocate, impressed us with their passion, energy and desire to see change. McClinton, especially, left us optimistic about his future public service. But both lack the seasoning to be effective council members. A third challenger, Jose Carlos Gonzalez, a homeland security consultant, spoke earnestly about flood mitigation and sewage challenges, but did not evidence interest in the wider issues facing the city.

As we have done twice before, we recommend Kubosh for city council — with the hope that he will shed misconceptions and biases and work on behalf of all Houston residents. minded us powerfully of the caveats the board felt when recommending him last time. He said it is wrong to fire someone because they are gay or transgender and cited his hiring of a gay lawyer as proof that he doesn’t hold anti-gay sentiment, yet he also maintained — misleadingly — that the city’s nondiscrimination ordinance would have allowed any man to dress up as a woman and go into a women’s restroom.

“At the very end I couldn’t vote with them to allow a woman’s privacy to be violated not by a transgender person but by a possible predator who learned that Houston will now let you in their restrooms if you dress as a woman,” he told the editorial board. The conflation of transgender women with predators is not only offensive, it has been thoroughly debunked. And to state the obvious: There are already plenty of laws making it a crime for anyone to sneak into a bathroom to harm or harass anyone.

Kubosh, 68, also described Drag Queen Storytime at the Houston Public Library as a showcase for “adult entertainment” that could potentially harm children. That mindset is

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