Chrissy Gephardt

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Christine Gephardt
Alma materNorthwestern University
Washington University in St. Louis
OccupationsLGBT rights activist, social worker
SpouseChristina[1]
FatherDick Gephardt

Christine Leigh Gephardt is an American LGBT rights activist and former social worker who campaigned for her father Dick Gephardt during the 2004 U.S. presidential election.

Biography

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Gephardt worked on her father's political campaigns as a child[2] in St. Louis, Missouri.[3] She later became a social worker[2] after graduating from Northwestern University.[4] In her practice as a social worker, she helped abused and mentally ill women in Washington, D.C.[5] She married Marc Alan Leibole in 1997,[4][6] a man she later called "my best friend", according to the Los Angeles Times.[7] In the early 2000s, she attended Washington University, where she met Amy Loder.[8]

Gephardt came out to her family as a lesbian in April 2001.[2] She had fallen in love with another woman, Loder, while in graduate school[7] at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work.[June 30, 2003 1] She first came to public attention when NBC announced that she was gay. She had been married to Marc Alan Leibole[6] for three years before she fell in love with a woman, and came out to her husband and to her father. She was subsequently featured on the cover of The Advocate.[9]

In 2003, Gephardt quit her job as a social worker to campaign for her father full-time.[7] According to the Knight Ridder Tribune, Gephardt is the first prominent LGBT relative to promote a major political campaign in the United States.[8] Out magazine called her inclusion "a sea change in presidential campaigns: Not only are gay family members no longer considered a potential liability (see Mary Cheney), we are in fact a coveted constituency worth fighting for."[10] In 2004, she helped start up chapters of the Stonewall Democrats in Washington, D.C.[11] She is an activist.[12]

Gephardt was raised in a Catholic household.[13] She identifies as a Christian.[14]

Appearances

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She appeared on the Showtime reality show American Candidate in 2004.[15] Gephardt said that the "show is giving me opportunities to express myself. I wanted to inspire gays and lesbians, women and other minority groups, and basically everybody who gets left out of the process."[16] She also appeared on the February 1, 2007 (episode #1030), episode of The Daily Show.[17] She is interviewed in the 2007 documentary For the Bible Tells Me So, along with her parents,[18] where she describes her life and the encouragement she received from her parents after coming out.[19] The film's director, Daniel Karslake, wanted to feature the Gephardts because her "family really espouses the values of loving your children no matter what," according to Curve.[20] Gephardt was also featured on a cover of Curve in 2007.[14]

References

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