Anita Bryant
Orange juice spokesperson who launched Save Our Children (1977) — the first organized anti-gay political campaign in American history.
View in the interactive map →Anita Bryant (born 1940) was a successful pop singer, beauty queen, and spokesperson for the Florida Citrus Commission when she became, almost accidentally, the founding mother of the organized Religious Right's anti-gay campaign. In January 1977, Dade County, Florida, passed a civil rights ordinance protecting gay and lesbian people from discrimination in housing and employment. Bryant, a Baptist, organized Save Our Children — a coalition of churches and parents — to repeal it. Her central argument was explicit: 'Homosexuals cannot reproduce, so they must recruit.' The campaign framed anti-gay politics as child protection rather than religious opposition, a rhetorical shift that would define the Religious Right's strategy for the next five decades. The Dade County repeal succeeded in June 1977 by a margin of more than two to one. Bryant traveled the country immediately afterward, running successful repeal campaigns in St. Paul, Minnesota; Wichita, Kansas; and Eugene, Oregon. In eighteen months, she had established the template: local ordinances as political battlegrounds, churches as organizing infrastructure, children's safety as the legitimizing frame. The national response to Bryant galvanized the gay rights movement. Harvey Milk, running for San Francisco city supervisor, used her campaign as a fundraising and mobilization tool — 'If it can happen in liberal Dade County...' He won in November 1977. The 1978 Briggs Initiative in California, which would have banned gay teachers from public schools, was defeated in part through a direct campaign against Bryant's national influence. Bryant's tactics had created the very opposition she feared. Jerry Falwell Sr. cited Bryant's campaign explicitly when he founded the Moral Majority in 1979. Save Our Children became the model for the Moral Majority's anti-gay organizing: religiously grounded, grassroots-organized, and activated by fear of children. James Dobson built on the same rhetorical architecture in Focus on the Family's materials through the 1980s and 1990s. Bryant's personal story was complicated. The Florida Citrus Commission fired her in 1980 under boycott pressure. She divorced her husband Bob Green that same year — an act of sin, by her own stated theology. Her post-1980 career was modest. But the campaign she launched outlived her influence over it. By the time she faded from public view, the machinery she built had been institutionalized by Falwell, Dobson, and eventually the Alliance Defending Freedom, the Family Research Council, and the National Organization for Marriage.
Documented themes
Connections from Anita Bryant
- influenced → Jerry Falwell Sr. (1979) — When Jerry Falwell Sr. founded the Moral Majority in 1979, he explicitly cited Bryant's Save Our Children campaign as the template. Bryant had proven that religiously grounded, grassroots-organized anti-gay politics — framed around children's safety rather than religious opposition — could win at the ballot box. Falwell adopted the rhetorical architecture wholesale: the same framing, the same church organizing infrastructure, the same appeal to parental fear. Save Our Children didn't just precede the Moral Majority; it blueprinted it.
Sources
- The Fear of a Queer Planet: Queer Politics and Social Theory — Michael Warner (ed.) (1993), pp. 1-37
- One Nation Under God: How Corporate America Invented Christian America — Kevin M. Kruse (2015), pp. 256-270