Oregon to swear in nation's first openly bisexual governor

Oregon Secretary of State Kate Brown will become the country's first openly bisexual mayor when she is sworn in on Wednesday. 

Brown, who is married to a man, will replace beleaguered Gov. John Kitzhaber following a scandal-ridden month in Oregon politics. 

Kitzhaber resigned on Friday after facing pressure from politicians and constituents. It was discovered that his fiancée was acting as an environmental consultant for his administration while also being paid by an environmental advocacy group. 

Brown called her entry into the gubernatorial office under such conditions bittersweet. 

"This is a sad day for Oregon. But I am confident that legislators are ready to come together to move Oregon forward," she said in a statement following Kitzhaber's resignation.

"As you can imagine, there is a lot of work to be done between now and Wednesday."

The 54-year-old joined the State House in 1991, and was elected to the Senate six years later. In 2004, she became the state's first female majority leader, and became secretary of state in 2008. 

Voters will decide in a special election in 2016 whether Brown will continue as governor until 2018. The 2018 election will determine whether Brown will serve at least a four-year term. 

Human Rights Campaign president Chad Griffin touted Brown's competency. 

"While she'll make history as the nation's first sitting LGBT governor, the more important truth is that she's supremely capable of leading the state to better days ahead," he said. 

Newsletter Stay up to date with Christian Today
News
Calls for an end to the sexualisation of children in schools
Calls for an end to the sexualisation of children in schools

The Coalition for Marriage is taking on a "summer of sex" campaign planned by a Labour MP at Westminster.

Free speech concerns surround proposed conversion therapy ban
Free speech concerns surround proposed conversion therapy ban

Any law banning "abusive conversion practices" would almost certainly infringe on freedom of speech.

Pope warns of ‘digital neocolonialism’ and calls on Church to defend human dignity in age of AI in first encyclical
Pope warns of ‘digital neocolonialism’ and calls on Church to defend human dignity in age of AI in first encyclical

Pope Leo XIV has used his first encyclical to warn that artificial intelligence and emerging technologies risk deepening global inequality, concentrating power in the hands of a few and creating what he described as “colonialism in another form". 

A growing number of Protestants say others don’t know they’re Christian
A growing number of Protestants say others don’t know they’re Christian

The honesty of churchgoers about gaps in living unashamed reveals large numbers have room for growth in this important aspect of discipleship,” said Scott McConnell, executive director of Lifeway Research.