by leo Schuman
POLITICS
Secretary Of State
K ate Brown
T
Oregon’s Secretary of State, Kate Brown, is the highest-ranking openly bi-sexual person holding an elected
office in the United States. She faces a strong Republican opponent in her re-election bid in November.
wenty years of yoga will tone anyone’s biceps. Add wit, feminist insight, deep
legislative experience, and a passion for concrete results, and you’ll start sketch-
ing Oregon Secretary of State, Kate Brown.
In Oregon, the Secretary of State serves effectively as Lieutenant Governor,
and oversees seven divisions, including Archives, Audits, Corporations, and
Elections. Asked if her title means she’s Oregon’s mini-Hillary, Brown laughs,
“only in my dreams!” It’s a good dream, though.
In her first term, Brown has focused attention on fiscal and performance auditing for State agencies — seeking “alligators,
not mosquitoes”, in her terms — with significant results: for every dollar her office spent on auditing in 2008, Oregon
brought back eight; for every auditing dollar spent in 2010, Oregon brought back sixty-four. One clear example of the
results is “an audit of the Department of Revenue collection practices, which identified 66,000 Oregonians who were pay-
ing Federal, but not State, income taxes, amounting to one hundred million dollars” in lost revenue for Oregon. “That's a
lot of teachers.”
But, the audits Brown directs are not always fiscal. “I'm a recovering lawyer who used to represent children and parents
in the foster care system.” This experience gave her direct insight into the hard realities of unemployment, poverty, ad-
diction, and mental illness which impact thousands of Oregon families every single day. “We just completed an audit of
this system, specifically looking at what the agency can do to be more successful at reunifying children with their parents
safely. We made some very specific recommendations, and I'm going to partner with the legislature to make sure they are
implemented.”
Since coming out in 1995 as openly bisexual, Kate Brown has helped carry Salem for Oregon’s LGBT communities, while
advocating for all Oregon families, including her own (she and her husband, Dan, have two children). She is the highest
ranking openly bisexual elected official in the United States. In 1991, she was appointed to an open legislative seat, subse-
quently elected, and served for sixteen years in the House and then Senate, including serving as Senate Democratic Leader
from 2004 to 2007. In 2008, she won the race to become Oregon’s Secretary of State.
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JustOut.com
October 2012
Photo by Horace long
Brown has also championed streamlined business registration and compliance processes in the Corporations division,
including major technology improvements (business.oregon.gov), now used by two-thirds of Oregon businesses, through
the Secretary of State’s new Business Oregon program. Her office is also among the first nationwide to roll out task-focused
mobile phone and tablet tools to help make doing business easier in Oregon. Earlier in her career, she played a key leg-
islative role helping roll out Oregon’s highly transparent election information and campaign finance reporting system
(oregonvotes.org). This is a critical tool given Oregon’s virtually unlimited campaign spending laws. But, some of her
proudest moments to date arrived five years ago when, standing on thirty-two years of collective LGBT political shoulders,
she led a Democratic majority in Salem to pass the Oregon Equality and Family Fairness Acts of 2007, ensuring fair treat-
ment and legal equality for LGBT Oregonians and our relationships.