This guy has a bad history regarding gay rights.
ETA: A little info. on this douche from another thread earlier this month that I looked up:
Google this guy if you have a chance and the little dust up with money to charities going to his family?????
Here's one:
http://www.timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=... Funds followed senator's kin
Charity lost taxpayer money after it stopped employing relatives of Ruben Diaz Sr.
>>By JAMES M. ODATO, Capitol bureau
First published in print: Friday, April 21, 2006
ALBANY -- In the past three years, Sen. Ruben Diaz Sr. and his son Assemblyman Ruben Diaz Jr. cut off state funding to a Bronx charity that stopped employing their relatives.
Afterward, they steered hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxpayer money to a different organization created by the senator and directed by his wife, according to state records and interviews.
The senator and presumably his son, Assemblyman Diaz, provided $940,000 to Christian Community Benevolent Association in the Bronx from 2003 through last year, the documents show.
Sen. Diaz, a minister, may have violated Senate guidelines for use of the funds, which are so-called "member item" expenditures. Member items come from a lump sum in the state budget each year of $200 million split among the Legislature and governor. The funds are shrouded in secrecy. Earlier this month, Gov. George Pataki vetoed the latest $200 million pot and lawmakers are planning to override him next week.<<
Also:
http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2008/11/state_sen_tom_duan... >>Tom Duane, the only openly gay New York state senator, says that Ruben Diaz Sr. is being "a little bit of a bully" by demanding that Democrats swear to him in writing that they won't try to pass a gay-marriage bill. Earlier this week, Diaz said he wouldn't caucus with them if they didn't. But Duane says that this simply is no longer the way to get things done in Albany, now that Malcolm Smith is in charge.
"It's absurd that Sen. Diaz thinks he can bully his way on this issue," Duane said. "I guess he thinks he hasn't been getting enough attention, so he feels need to bully his way to the forefront, but that's not going to fly in the Senate anymore. He'll get used to things running in a more democratic way."<<
.........
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruben_Diaz >> Opposition to same-sex marriage
In 2007, as his party, led by Governor Eliot Spitzer and Lt. Governor David Paterson, sought to recognize gay marriage and expand rights for the LGBT community, Diaz was a vocal opponent of the gay marriage bill and was highly critical of Democratic support for the bill.<9> Senator Diaz's opposition to same-sex marriage continued in 2008, when he vowed to vote against same-sex marriage legislation <10> and participated (along with hundreds of clergy) in a pro-traditional-marriage "Power in the Pulpit" rally held by New Yorkers for Constitutional Freedoms<11> in the Legislative Office Building;<12> at the rally, Sen. Diaz was reportedly presented with over 15,000 petitions in support of traditional marriage.<13>
Gay community controversies
Opposition to Gay Games
In 1994, while on the Civilian Complaint Review Board, Diaz was critical of the city hosting the Gay Games, claiming that doing so would lead to an increase in AIDS cases and to wider acceptance of homosexuality by young people.<14> Diaz wrote that hosting the Games would lead children "to conclude that if there are so many gay and lesbian athletes then there is nothing wrong, nor any risks involved."<14> The other members of the Board issued a unanimous rebuke of Diaz’s comments.<14>
Criticism of Harvey Milk School policy
In 2003, Diaz filed a lawsuit to stop the expansion of the Harvey Milk School (a school for gay students who suffer discrimination in traditional settings), claiming that the school infringed the rights of heterosexual students.<15><16> The lawsuit was settled in 2006 after the school agreed not to discriminate against heterosexual students and not to restrict admission to students who identify as homosexual, and after the City of New York agreed that the school would be open to all students.<17><<