Hattoy, Former White
House Aide, Dies
By AP from the
NYTimes on the Web, March 7, 2007
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Bob
Hattoy, an advocate for gay and lesbian issues who accused the former President
Bush of doing nothing about AIDS during a nationally televised speech at the
Democratic National Convention, has died. He was 56.
Hattoy, president of the California Fish and Game Commission, died Sunday of
complications from the disease, said Adrianna Shea, a special assistant to the
commission.
Hattoy, the son of a mechanical engineer and a school registrar, became
politically active protesting the Vietnam War and dropped in and out of college.
He worked at Disneyland and for a Los Angeles city councilman before joining the
staff of the Sierra Club at age 28. He was regional director for the
environmental group in California and Nevada.
In 1992, just after learning he had AIDS, Hattoy delivered the convention
speech.
''I don't want to die,'' he said. ''But I don't want to live in an America
where the president sees me as an enemy. I can face dying because of a
disease, but not because of politics.''
In 1993, he went to work for President Clinton as a deputy in the Office of
White House Personnel, and was the White House liaison to the Department of
Interior from 1994 to 1999. Clinton also appointed him to the Presidential
Commission on HIV/AIDS, where he served as chairman of the commission's research
committee.
He was also a vocal advocate for gays and lesbians in the Clinton
administration.
''Bob was an agitator in the best sense of the word,'' said Richard Socarides, a
special assistant to Clinton on gay and lesbian policies. When Clinton
said he would consider limiting the deployments of gays and lesbians in the
military, Hattoy said it amounted to ''restricting gays and lesbians to jobs as
florists and hairdressers.''
Former California Gov. Gray Davis appointed Hattoy to the state Fish and Game
Commission in 2002. He was reappointed in 2003 to a six-year term.
Last month, he was elected president of the five-member commission, which adopts
policies for the Department of Fish and Game, and regulates hunting, fishing and
species protection efforts.
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