NBCNEWS.COM - An Army wife, denied full membership at a Fort Bragg spouses club
because she's married to a female Army officer, was named Fort Bragg's
2013 "spouse of the year" Friday after an annual, national vote that
spanned nominees from all military branches, NBC News has learned.
In the online election held Tuesday, Ashley Broadway captured
the Fort Bragg vote "by a country mile," said Babette Maxwell, founder
of Military Spouse magazine and the Military Spouse of the Year award.
Ballot totals were not revealed. As one of the 154 base-level winners, Broadway now is eligible to be nominated for Army "spouse of the year."
"A lot of people who voted never me met or talked to me or knew me
from Adam. I know it was a statement to the Obama Administration, to
Secretary (of Defense Leon) Panetta, to Senator (Chuck) Hagel — if he is
confirmed (as defense secretary) — to the Pentagon and, really, to
America that, yes, she is a military spouse and she needs to be
recognized," Broadway told NBC News.
"There are things the government can do right now to make life a hell
of a lot easier than what it is currently for those who are in same-sex
marriages in the military," she added. "It was a lot of people saying,
‘Enough's enough.' "
Broadway's rejection from the Fort Bragg
officers' spouses club sparked the U.S. Marine Corps to issue on Jan. 9 a
pro-gay, branch-wide directive. On Jan. 16, her bid drew the Pentagon's attention. The next day, the on-base spouses club offered Broadway a "special guest membership" – an invitation she declined, calling it "extremely demeaning."
Broadway married her 15-year companion, Lt. Col. Heather Mack, in November — their first chance to hold a formal ceremony after the 2011 repeal
of "Don't Ask Don't Tell," the policy that kept gays from openly
serving in the military. The couple has a 2-year-old son and Mack gave
birth to their second child, a daughter, on Tuesday.
"People got
one vote per email address — one ballot for the person you wanted to
represent you. I think people would be unwilling to, quote-unquote,
throw their vote away on simply doing what was popular," Maxwell said.
"There was a significant amount of meaning in what they were doing when
they voted for Ashley.
"Removing her a bit from the press and
recognition she's received the last few months, Ashley — more
importantly — has a platform to benefit a large number of spouses, and
that's what people want to see happen," Maxwell added. "The winners are
chosen based on their merits, their accomplishments and what they intend
to do for the community in the year to come."
Broadway has
volunteered to tutor soldiers' children in reading, briefed inbound Army
families on local school districts, and helped transferring soldiers
with housing-location decisions.
"When I was denied membership, I
asked to speak to the club's board. I was convinced that if they'd just
sit down with me for half an hour, if I could talk to them about what
I've been doing, what I'll be doing in the future, they would see what
an asset I would be to the group," Broadway said.
The meeting was not granted.
"That was the most frustrating thing," she said.
The club's board maintains Broadway was never rejected because "a formal
application was never filed," and that she simply had inquired about
the eligibility of a same-sex spouse and was told the club would need
"time to look at the issue."
Online voting for the next round of the 2013 Armed Forces Insurance
Military Spouse of the Year — the branch level — will take place Feb. 5.
The overall winner, elected from the branch finalists, will be revealed
May 9.
"I never thought in a million years I would be the one to
advance the cause. If that's what it's going to take to get attention
for all the military same-sex spouses, then so be it," Broadway said.
"But I do take this (Bragg 'spouse of the year' award) very seriously.
And we'll see where it goes from here."