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Posted: Nov 18, 2022 / 08:44 AM PST

Updated: Nov 18, 2022 / 08:44 AM PST

Posted: Nov 18, 2022 / 08:44 AM PST

Updated: Nov 18, 2022 / 08:44 AM PST
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Carol Leigh, a San Francisco activist who is credited with coining the term “sex work” and who sought for decades to improve conditions for prostitutes and others in the adult entertainment business, has died. She was 71.
Kate Marquez, the executor of her estate, said Leigh died Wednesday of cancer, the San Francisco Chronicle reported Thursday.
A former prostitute, Leigh devoted herself to campaigning on behalf of those in the “sex work industry,” a term she coined as the title for a panel discussion she attended at a feminist anti-pornography conference in 1978, according to an essay she wrote.
The term has become generally used by public health officials, academic researchers and others.
“Carol defined sex work as a labor issue, not a crime, not a sin,” Marquez said. “It is a job done by a million people in this country who are stigmatized and criminalized by working to support their families.”
“Ultimately, Leigh argued that until sex workers are included in the conversations about feminism, sexuality and legality -– conversations from which they have historically been excluded -– sex workers will remain fragmented rather than collective, and stigmatisation will abound,” said a tweet Thursday from SWARM (Sex Worker Advocacy and Resistance Movement), which describes itself as a sex worker-led collective founded in the United Kingdom in 2009.
Leigh co-founded BAYSWAN, also known as Bay Area Sex Worker Advocacy Network, which according to its website works with human rights activists to address problems such as human trafficking in the industry as well as labor and civil rights violations.
Leigh was deeply involved in advocacy for and aid to sex workers both in the United States and overseas and her concerns ranged from decriminalization to poverty, drug use and HIV. She also was a video artist and produced award-winning documentaries on “women’s issues and gay/lesbian issues,” according to her BAYSWAN biography.
She wrote and frequently performed a one-woman political satire play called “The Adventures of Scarlot Harlot,” and wrote a 2004 book titled “Unrepentant Whore: The Collected Work of Scarlot Harlot.” She also helped produce the San Francisco Sex Worker Film and Arts Festival.
Born in New York City, Leigh had a bachelor’s degree in creative writing when she moved to San Francisco in 1977. She began working as a prostitute to earn money but her focus changed after she was raped by two men at a sex studio in 1979, she told SFGate in a 1996 interview.
She couldn’t file a crime report because her workplace would have been closed.
“The fact that I couldn’t go to the police to report the rape meant that I was not going to be able to protect other women from these rapists,” she said. “And I vowed to do something to change that.”
Leigh’s papers will be archived at Harvard University’s Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Marquez said.
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Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer speaks to reporters after a meeting with Senate Democrats at the U.S. Capitol on Nov. 15, 2022.
MORE: House passes bill codifying same-sex marriage right, with some Republicans joining Democrats
Activists carry a rainbow flag on the West Lawn of the US Capitol Building during a protest Oct. 11, 2009.
Brendan Smialowski/Getty Images, FILE
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Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer speaks to reporters after a meeting with Senate Democrats at the U.S. Capitol on Nov. 15, 2022.
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Twelve Republicans joined Democrats to start formal debate on the bill.
The Senate is poised to soon pass landmark legislation to federally enshrine both same-sex and interracial marriage rights , amid what Democrats call a worry that the Supreme Court's conservative majority could overturn protections for both.
The first key test vote was Wednesday to start formal debate on the bill.
That procedural hurdle was cleared with a 62-37 vote, with 12 Republicans joining the 50-member Democratic caucus.
While that had set the measure on a track to pass as early as Thursday, ahead of the the week-long Thanksgiving recess, a Democratic leadership aide told ABC News that a final vote has since been postponed until after the holiday.
Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Thursday that the Senate would take another procedural vote on the proposal, though its supporters had hoped to expedite or surpass this step after Wednesday's vote showed a filibuster-proof majority backed the bill. It wasn't not clear how many or which Republicans were forcing this additional vote.
The 12 Republicans who voted yes on Wednesday were Susan Collins of Maine, Rob Portman of Ohio, Thom Tillis of North Carolina, Mitt Romney of Utah, Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia, Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming, Dan Sullivan of Alaska, Roy Blunt of Missouri, Richard Burr of North Carolina, Joni Ernst of Iowa, Todd Young of Indiana and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska.
“Individuals in same-sex marriages and interracial marriages need and deserve the confidence and the certainty that their marriages are legal and will remain legal,” Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wisc., a lead co-sponsor of the bill and the first openly LGBTQ woman elected to Congress, has said. “These loving couples should be guaranteed the same rights and freedoms as every other marriage.”
“I know passing the Respect for Marriage Act is as personal as it gets for many senators and their staffs, myself included,” Schumer said this week. He noted his own daughter and her wife, who are married, are expecting a baby in February.
Schumer has argued that the concurring opinion issued by Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas overturning Roe. v. Wade this summer, in which he said the court “should reconsider” the case granting the nationwide right to gay marriage, put the rights of LGBTQ Americans in jeopardy.
Other justices on the high court had taken pains to distance Thomas' view from the majority opinion reversing Roe.
The Respect for Marriage Act would “require the federal government to recognize a marriage between two individuals if the marriage was valid in the state where it was performed,” according to a summary from the bill’s sponsors, including Congress’ first openly bisexual woman in the Senate, Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., along with Susan Collins, R-Maine, Rob Portman, R-Ohio, and Thom Tillis, R-N.C.
The bill would not require any state to issue marriage licenses contrary to its laws but would mandate that states recognize lawfully granted marriages performed in other states, including same-sex and interracial unions.
For Portman, whose son came out to him as gay several years ago, it’s about giving people “security in their marriages.”
“It’s important to give people comfort that they won’t lose their rights as they move from state to state. It’s a pretty simple bill,” he previously said, adding that the American people have evolved to support the issue and Congress should too.
But ahead of Wednesday's vote, some Republicans called the legislation unnecessary.
“I think it’s pretty telling that Sen. Schumer puts a bill on the floor to reaffirm what is already a constitutional right of same-sex marriage, which is not under any imminent threat, and continues to ignore national security and not take up the defense authorization bill,” said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, referring to the annual defense policy bill that has yet to be passed by the chamber this year.
Sen. John Thune, R-S.D., in charge of the vote operation for the GOP conference, has said he would not support the legislation but also made clear he would not be whipping against the measure.
Notably, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., steadfastly refused to say how he would vote on the proposal before. He ultimately voted "no" on Wednesday.
A similar bill passed the House in July with 47 Republicans voting in favor, but its Senate sponsors, in order to garner enough GOP support for final passage, had to amend the legislation to add specific religious liberty and conscience protections.
Schumer also pushed off a vote past the midterms, hoping to draw more conservative votes in the Senate once the political considerations of the campaign had passed.
The bill, once through the Senate and then approved by the House for a second time, would be sent to President Joe Biden for his signature.
ABC News' Alexandra Hutzler and Allison Pecorin contributed to this report.
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Updated: Nov 18, 2022 / 08:44 AM PST. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Carol Leigh, a San Francisco activist who is credited with coining the term " sex work" and who sought for decades to improve ...
The Senate is poised to soon pass landmark legislation to federally enshrine both same- sex and interracial marriage rights, amid what Democrats call a worry that the Supreme Court's conservative ...
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The 10-episode comedy is streaming exclusively on HBO Max. If you don't already have a subscription, plans start at $9.99 per month or $99.99 per year with ads, and $14.99 per month or $149.99...
6 days ago The steamy, NSFW trailer for the new Cara Delevingne sex documentary, "Planet Sex ," dropped on YouTube on Saturday. The BBC series will stream on Hulu.
Updated: Nov 18, 2022 / 08:44 AM PST. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Carol Leigh, a San Francisco activist who is credited with coining the term " sex work" and who sought for decades to improve ...
The Senate is poised to soon pass landmark legislation to federally enshrine both same- sex and interracial marriage rights, amid what Democrats call a worry that the Supreme Court's conservative ...
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Stay protected and informed with our privacy newsletters.
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We’re carbon negative! Read our climate pledge.
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