Nicole LeFavour

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In February 2012, LeFavour announced that they would not be seeking re-election to the state legislature, [18] but announced their candidacy for the United States Congress in Idaho's 2nd District the following month. [19] They challenged seven-term Republican U.S. Congressman Mike Simpson, [20] whom they debated twice [21] [22] [23] and criticized as being only superficially moderate, citing his vote against discrimination protections for women in the workplace. [24] Had LeFavour been elected, they would have been the second openly lesbian member of the U.S. Congress, [25] but polled 34.8% of the vote. [26] This was in and of itself the strongest showing of any Democratic candidate against Mike Simpson as an incumbent: Craig Williams got 25.9% of the vote in 2000, [27] Edward Kinghorn 29.0% in 2002, [28] Lin Witworth 29.3% in 2004, [29] Jim D. Hansen 34.43% in 2006, [30] Deborah Holmes 31% in 2008, [31] and Mike Crawford 24.4% in 2010. [32] LeFavour noted after the election on the campaign's Facebook page that, as a candidate, they had received the most votes in eastern Idaho of any Democrat who had run against Simpson as an incumbent, and that "last but not least, we've put to rest the question of whether Idahoans will actually vote for a gay person." [33]

Continuing advocacy

A co-optation of the Keep Calm and Carry On meme on behalf of the LGBT Add The Words, Idaho human rights campaign IDLGBTKCandADDTHE4WORDS.jpg
A co-optation of the Keep Calm and Carry On meme on behalf of the LGBT Add The Words, Idaho human rights campaign

After their service as a public representative, LeFavour has remained active in LGBTQ affairs. [34] They were one of 44 activists arrested [35] [36] on February 3, 2014, at the Statehouse on suspicion of misdemeanor trespassing, having blocked the Idaho Senate's entrances for more than two hours in a silent protest [37] two months in the planning [38] on behalf of the Add The Words campaign, an act of civil disobedience [39] which they had organized. [40] [41] Three of those arrested were juveniles, and LeFavour was, unexpectedly, [42] the last person to be arrested after the Idaho Senate voted to suspend its rule which allows former members to be on the Senate floor. [43]

By the end of February, following other protests, 122 arrests had been conducted (with some protestors being arrested for than once, and all of whom are being represented pro bono [44] ), and negotiations between LGBT-rights advocates and religiously conservative legislators had tentatively begun. [45] By early March, LeFavour had been arrested four times in five weeks, [46] and in mid-March, was discovered in an act of political theater during a direct action protest after having literally hid in a closet in the Idaho Senate lounge for hours. [47] Ultimately LeFavour has been arrested ten times; [48] at a court hearing in late July 2014 LeFavour took a plea deal and was sentenced to seventy hours of community service and fined $70 plus additional court costs. [49]

Awards

Personal life

LeFavour's partner more than a decade, Carol Growhoski, was in the later years of LeFavour's service in the legislature invited to participate in the "Legisladies," [51] a social organization of female legislative spouses. [52] (The two had married in Idaho's Custer County in July 2017, and had previously been civil unioned in Vermont in 2006). LeFavour was the first ever openly gay member of the Idaho Legislature; [18] their election campaigns have won the backing of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund. They made a personal "It Gets Better" video, [53] in which they noted, [14]

When I first walked into this building [the Idaho Statehouse] fifteen years ago to talk to lawmakers about what it was like to be a gay person in Idaho, many didn't think they had ever met anyone gay; sadly, some were cruel... Today, I serve in the Senate next to some of the same people and some have changed... Together, with time, you and I and this world we live in, will work together to make sure it gets better.

LeFavour is featured in the documentaries Breaking Through (2013) [54] and Add the Words (2014). [55]

In April 2013 they were denied unemployment benefits, inasmuch as elected officials are not eligible. [56]

LeFavour's papers have been collected in Boise State University's Special Collections archives. [57] Audio and video interviews are collected at Boise State University, [58] the Idaho State Historical Society, [59] and the Outwords Archive. [60]

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References

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Nicole LeFavour
NicoleLeFavourCampaignTrailShoshoneIDII.jpg
Member of the Idaho Senate
from District 19
In office
December 1, 2008 December 1, 2012