Bay Area Municipal Elections Committee (BAYMEC)

Bay Area Municipal Elections Committee (BAYMEC) The BAYMEC is a four-county LGBTQ+ political action group, advocating for the civil rights of LGBTQ+ people since 1984. education curriculum.

The Bay Area Municipal Elections Committee (BAYMEC) is the only political action committee (PAC) dedicated to this purpose in the central coast counties of San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, and Monterey. BAYMEC is governed by a Board of Directors and is supported solely through private contributions. BAYMEC board members and associates meet with and educate candidates and elected officials; publ

ish an endorsement card for BAYMEC supporters, donors and the gay press; raise funds and develop volunteers for gay-friendly candidates; and help educate the community about candidates and their commitment to those issues that affect LGBT individuals, their families, and the community at large. BAYMEC partners with other constituencies, minority associations and labor unions to build understanding and common effort on equal justice issues. BAYMEC also maintains a practiced visibility at political functions held by other groups and organizations, and has two annual fundraisers, one in San José and one in the Monterey Bay area, in which candidates and elected officials participate as attendees and, alongside outstanding volunteers in the LGBT community, honorees. In the conduct of its business, BAYMEC sends out questionnaires to candidates for public office, the questionnaires include a number of questions regarding issues of immediate import to the LGBT community. The returned candidate questionnaires are reviewed to establish a priorities list for candidates, their positions on LGBT and social justice issues, their immediate chances to win the race, and to develop a judgment on the resources that will be extended to the candidate by BAYMEC. In the 1980s, and what would become the first decade of BAYMEC's existence, there was a rash of anti-gay sentiment and legislation. In Santa Clara County, founding members of BAYMEC fought tirelessly against the Moral Majority, Concerned Citizens Against the Sexual Orientation Ordinance, The LaRouche Initiative, Propositions 64 and 69, and Senator John Briggs' Prop 6 and Prop 102 (the AIDS quarantine initiative). In 1985, after the shooting of Melvin Truss by an officer, BAYMEC began training the San José Police Departments on LGBT sensitivity and in 1988, the San José Fire Department. In 1986, BAYMEC coordinated the organization of the AIDS Task Force in Santa Clara County and testified before the Board of Supervisors to allocate funds for the ARIS Project. In 1987, after lobbying from BAYMEC, Mayor Tom McEnery issued San José's first Gay and Le***an Human Rights Day Proclamation. In 1988 BAYMEC, won the First Amendment challenge allowing distribution of leaflets at Valley Fair Mall. In 1989, BAYMEC reversed the opposition of local Assembly members of Project 10, the program to include the reference to sexual orientation in the L.A. After the eighties, the direct attacks on the local LGBT community quieted for a time. In 1992, BAYMEC lobbied against the Vatican's document urging US Bishops to oppose legislation protecting LGBT civil rights. With fewer attacks on our community, BAYMEC was able to become pro-active and successfully lobbied the cities of Santa Clara and Sunnyvale, and various local school districts, on sexual orientation discrimination and AIDS/HIV status issues. BAYMEC lobbied the San José City Council to support the boycott on travel to Colorado in the wake of Amendment 2, the initiative to ban anti-discrimination policies for sexual orientation. BAYMEC continues to lobby for hate-crime legislation, transgender issues and to bring LGBT sensitivity to the forefront in the domestic violence field. Its work in a number of political campaigns around the central coast continues to grow. BAYMEC is represented in several community groups, helped build Monterey County's annual Pride since 1992, helped establish domestic partner insurance for county employees in Monterey County, contributed importantly to the development and leadership of that area's Hate Crimes Emergency Response Team, led in the defeat of public funding for a BSA troop requesting public monies for the repair of a facility being used by the BSA in the city of Monterey, provided workshops on LGBT history, and represented LGBTs in a number of grassroots initiatives and public forums. BAYMEC successfully lobbied the San José City Council to include bereavement leave for domestic partners and worked with cities and counties to implement domestic partnership coverage for their employees. BAYMEC joined in the community fight against Pete Knight's Proposition 22 and for Sheila Kuehl's AB222 and AB537.

1000 foot Progress Pride banners carried down Pennsylvania Avenue.
06/14/2026

1000 foot Progress Pride banners carried down Pennsylvania Avenue.

BREAKING🏳️‍🌈🚨 While lawmakers try to ban Pride flags from schools and city halls, an entire city answered back with a 1,000 foot rainbow and trans inclusive banner that you could see from the air.

On Friday night, Pride weekend in Washington D.C. opened with something you do not see every day. Organizers unfurled two massive 1,000 foot progress Pride banners and sent them down Pennsylvania Avenue and Constitution Avenue, held up by hundreds of volunteers. They were based on the Philadelphia Pride flag, with the traditional six rainbow colors plus black and brown stripes, and they also added the pastel blue, pink and white of the trans flag.

The size was not accidental. The fabric came from sections of the legendary “Sea to Sea” flag that Gilbert Baker created in 2003, a rainbow that once stretched more than a mile across Key West from the Atlantic to the Gulf. Pieces of that flag have been touring the world for years. For WorldPride and Capital Pride, activists stitched enough segments together to create twin 1,000 foot banners that could snake around the federal core of D.C.

The visual was jaw dropping. One banner flowed past the Capitol dome and the Supreme Court. The other passed near the White House. People in nearby office towers posted photos of a literal river of Pride colors moving between buildings. On the ground, families pushed strollers underneath, elders in mobility scooters rolled beside it, and kids reached up to touch the fabric. Organizers called it a symbol of hope at a time when q***r and trans people are under attack across the country.

That context matters. In the last two years, more than a dozen states have tried to ban Pride flags from government buildings. School districts have ordered teachers to strip rainbow stickers from classroom doors. Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” style laws have spread. Trans health care is being criminalized. In that climate, a banner this large is not just decorative. It is a refusal.

The point was simple. You can pass all the hateful bills you want. You can yank down flags from flagpoles. But you cannot stop thousands of people from flooding the streets with color and carrying a 1,000 foot declaration that says we exist, we are many and we are not going anywhere.

If you appreciate Gay News, it would mean the world if you followed my page. Thank you for being here.

City of Menlo Park Government  City Council issues Pride Month Proclamation.
06/13/2026

City of Menlo Park Government City Council issues Pride Month Proclamation.

🏳️‍🌈 🏳️‍⚧️ At the June 9 City Council meeting, the City of Menlo Park recognized June as Pride Month with a proclamation accepted by Lead Training and Peer Group Coordinator for the San Mateo County Pride Center, Ishani Dugar. We invite our community to honor the history of the Le***an, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Q***r, Intersex and Asexual (LGBTQIA+) liberation movement and join us in safeguarding residents’ rights to equality and freedom from discrimination.

During June, we raise the rainbow flag as a symbol of pride, celebrating all LGBTQIA+ residents whose contributions help make Menlo Park a vibrant community in which to live, work and visit.

📸 Pictured, from left to right: City Councilmember Drew Combs, Mayor Betsy Nash, Ishani Dugar, Vice Mayor Jennifer Wise and City Councilmember Cecilia Taylor.

Read the full proclamation in the City Council meeting agenda: https://docaccess.com/docviewer.html?url_hash=e438698fe7558c276330eb58ee93f9a2&domain=menlopark.gov

Oracle Park Celebrates Pride
06/13/2026

Oracle Park Celebrates Pride

EU Court Orders states to recognize trans citizens gender.
06/13/2026

EU Court Orders states to recognize trans citizens gender.

A major EU court ruled that member states cannot refuse to amend gender data when it interferes with free movement rights.

📷 Getty

“State of Firsts,” a documentary about Congresswoman Sarah Mc Bride.
06/13/2026

“State of Firsts,” a documentary about Congresswoman Sarah Mc Bride.

This week, a new documentary called State of Firsts is shining a spotlight on Congresswoman Sarah McBride — the first openly transgender person elected to the United States Congress.

For trans people, especially trans youth, representation matters.

Not because every trans person needs to become a member of Congress, but because seeing someone who shares your identity serving in public office sends a powerful message:

You belong here too.

Sarah McBride’s journey is filled with historic firsts. She has been the first openly trans woman to intern at the White House, the first openly transgender state senator in the United States, and now the first openly transgender member of Congress.

Whether people agree with her politics or not, her election is a reminder that trans people are part of every community, every profession, and every aspect of public life.

At a time when trans people are often the subject of political debate, it can be easy to forget that they are also our children, siblings, parents, friends, neighbors, and colleagues.

Every person deserves the opportunity to imagine a future for themselves.

Representation doesn’t solve every problem.

But it can help a person look at the world and think:

“Maybe there’s a place for me here too.”

❤️🏳️‍⚧️

Link to full story and trailer in the comments.

Sunnyvale Pride Fest 26, June 13, 2026 at Plaza Del Sol Park.
06/13/2026

Sunnyvale Pride Fest 26, June 13, 2026 at Plaza Del Sol Park.

Tomorrow (Saturday, June 13th) afternoon, Downtown Sunnyvale will be alive with color and community spirit as our annual Sunnyvale Pride Fest is happening at Plaza Del Sol! 🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍⚧️

Co-sponsored by the City of Sunnyvale and the Sunnyvale Presbyterian Church, this event is a beautiful reflection of our city's commitment to openness, diversity, and respect for all.❤️

Come out to enjoy live music, an incredible drag performance, and activities for all ages. Make a day of it by supporting one of our fantastic downtown restaurants before or after the festivities.

Everyone is welcome just as they are! ❤️
Let’s fill the downtown with pride. 🌈 Hope to see you there!



San Mateo County PRIDE Initiative celebrates Pride on Saturday, June 13th.
06/12/2026

San Mateo County PRIDE Initiative celebrates Pride on Saturday, June 13th.

🌈 It’s here!! San Mateo County Pride is TOMORROW! 🌈

Join us for the 2026 San Mateo County Pride Celebration on Saturday, June 13, from 11 AM to 5 PM at Central Park in San Mateo! 🎉

Come ready for a day full of joy, community, music, performances, food trucks, author talks, prize drawings throughout the day, and so much Pride energy! 🏳️‍🌈🏳️‍⚧️✨

This year’s theme is “Unite. Empower. Resist. PRIDE 2026.” We can’t wait to come together in a welcoming, inclusive, sober, family- and pet-friendly space where our LGBTQ+ community and allies can feel seen, celebrated, and connected.

📍 Central Park, San Mateo
E. 5th Avenue & Laurel Avenue
🗓️ Tomorrow: Saturday, June 13, 2026
⏰ 11 AM – 5 PM

Bring your friends, family, sunscreen, comfy shoes, and your Pride spirit — we’ll see you tomorrow! 🌈🎶💜

Happy Pride Month with Supervisor Betty Duong.
06/12/2026

Happy Pride Month with Supervisor Betty Duong.

Remembering Pulse.
06/12/2026

Remembering Pulse.

10 years ago today, 49 lives were stolen in an act of senseless violence at Nightclub.

As we remember the victims, many of whom were LGBTQI+ and Latine, we must all recommit to ending the epidemic of extremist violence so that all people may be free to live without fear.

Happy Pride Month!
06/12/2026

Happy Pride Month!

Address

PO Box 112316
Campbell, CA
95011

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Bay Area Municipal Elections Committee (BAYMEC) posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Bay Area Municipal Elections Committee (BAYMEC):

Share