Chief Change Officer - #342 Brian Sims: From State House to Soul Work—Driving Change With Smarter Tools — Part One
Episode Date: May 4, 2025From a military childhood to a college football captain, Brian Sims didn’t exactly grow up in activist circles. But a fiercely independent mother and a slow-burning coming-out story set the stage fo...r something bigger. In Part One, Brian, the CEO of Agenda PAC, opens up about finding his voice, leaving law for civil rights work, and eventually winning his first election—becoming the first out gay man elected to Pennsylvania’s state legislature.Key Highlights of Our Interview:Raised by Leaders“Both my parents were lieutenant colonels. I grew up on army bases, but my mom was always the only woman in uniform.”Confidence Is Contagious“She wasn’t arrogant. She just always knew who she was.”Coming Out Through Brotherhood“My football teammates asked if I was gay… and then wrapped me in the most awkward but beautiful kind of love.”A Gay Job and a Day Job“I had a law firm paycheck. But my soul work? LGBTQ civil rights.”Why He Ran“I couldn’t change their minds. So I ran to change the people holding the power.”David vs. Goliath“She’d been in office since I was three years old. I beat her by 233 votes.”_______________________________Connect with us:Host: Vince Chan | Guest: Brian Sims --Chief Change Officer--Change Ambitiously. Outgrow Yourself.Open a World of Expansive Human Intelligencefor Transformation Gurus, Black Sheep,Unsung Visionaries & Bold Hearts.EdTech Leadership Awards 2025 Finalist.15 Million+ All-Time Downloads.80+ Countries Reached Daily.Global Top 3% Podcast.Top 10 US Business.Top 1 US Careers.>>>150,000+ are outgrowing. Act Today.<<<
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Hi, everyone.
Welcome to our show, Chief Change Officer.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host. OSHO is a modernist community for change progressives
in organizational and human transformation from around the world.
Today's guest is Brian Sims, former Pennsylvania state representative, civil rights attorney,
and LGBTQ plus advocate who sees both the inside of power in ways that shuts people
up. Brian and I met in Hong Kong
about two, three years ago
at one of the city's largest LGBTQ plus events.
A powerful moment for visibility, inclusion and connection.
In this two-part series, Brian shares what it was really like to make history, to get
silenced mid-speech, but to keep showing up anyway. He has traded the might for a new kind of efficacy,
one that is built on strategy, data, and a little less ego.
Let's dive right in.
Good morning to you, Brian. I haven't seen you in person for like how long?
Two, three years?
About two years.
Good morning or good evening, Vince.
Well a lot of things have happened in two years' time.
Brian, how are you?
How have you been?
It always feels like such a loaded question.
And I'm at least here in the United States, especially where minute by minute, hour by
hour things seems there's a lot of change, often change for the bad.
I find myself asking people how they are today.
How are you this moment?
To answer your question, in the two years since we've seen each other in person, I've
gotten married.
I actually, right about the time that we were meeting, I proposed to my then boyfriend.
And we've been planning a wedding for this upcoming September for quite some time with
friends and family.
But with the recent political changes in the United States, I'm extremely fearful that
a marriage equality won't exist for LGBTQ people by the time that
we had our wedding planned for.
So we went ahead and got married just about two months ago.
And so to answer maybe more of your question, I'm personally good.
I'm in love and I'm living with the person that I love.
And those things are important.
But I also, I not only work in politics, I work where politics meets civil rights.
And here in the United States, those two things are colliding right now
in ways that we've never seen before.
You are a trained lawyer.
You studied business, politics, and law.
Then at some point, you entered politics,
serving as a House representative.
We'll dive deeper into each of those roles, but first give us a
quick overview of your journey, what you've done professionally. Then we'll
trace things back to your roots, your family, your upbringing, and circle back
to the different roles you played throughout the year and the
rights you've been fighting for. I started my career, my career as a lawyer
in Philadelphia. I moved to Philadelphia after law school and practiced first
disability law and civil rights law. I became what's called the in-house
counsel for the Philadelphia Bar Association, the sort of collective of lawyers in Philadelphia, which was the, and still
is the oldest in the country, and really began my career around lawyers, being a lawyer for
lawyers in addition to doing civil rights work.
And as is often the case with people trying to pay off student debt and student loans,
there was work I needed to do to earn an income
and there was work I needed to do to sleep well at night.
And those two things happened.
I had a day job and a gay job, as I like to describe it.
And ultimately at some point, I had the privilege
or the benefit of being able to make a decision
between doing work that was more morally important to me,
that was more ethics and value driven than
income driven.
And I left my work as an attorney to run our LGBTQ equality organization in the state that
I lived for some time.
And in doing so was required to interact with the politics of my state.
I was living in a state that had very little civil rights for LGBTQ plus people like myself,
even though I was living in a city that had almost all
of the equality that we could ask of a municipal government.
And I existed in that space for a little while
trying to impact equality through an equality
organization and hoping that we could have an impact
on our elected officials, on our decision makers.
And at some point, after being unable to change those minds, I decided I needed to change
the people whose minds we're focusing on.
I focused a little bit more on electoral politics for several years.
And at some point, my close friend sat me down and said that I was the person that I
had been looking for to run.
And I ran for office when I was 31 years old.
I ran against the 28 year incumbent.
She had been in office since I was three years old and I won my very first race on a very small margin, 233 votes.
And I was the first out LGBTQ person ever elected to my state legislature, which came with both
a lot of responsibility and a ton of opportunities, and tried to avail myself of both of those
as often as I could for the 10 years that I served in office.
At the end of it, I retired from my seat in the House of Representatives and actually
supported a close friend who ran for my seat.
I also ran for Lieutenant governor of my state,
a race that I was not successful in.
I, during that whole time,
I spent a lot of years teaching colleges and companies
how to be active in LGBTQ equality and civil rights.
And so I did that for my career for the first year
that I was out of office, which is when we met.
And now for the last six months or so,
I've run an organization that uses a lot of data
and campaign information to focus on elected officials
that are attacking civil rights the most
and to try to knock them out of office.
We'll save those stories for later,
especially the part about knocking them out of office.
But let's go back to your roots. You mentioned growing up in a fairly disciplined environment.
Both of your parents were military officers.
I've always believed that who we are today, what we do, and what we strive for tomorrow
are all shaped by our past.
And I think your origin story plays a big role in who you are and what drives you.
What was your childhood like?
I certainly agree. I think good behaviors and bad behaviors often have a lot of roots in how we were
raised. In my case, I was lucky enough to be raised
by two incredible parents. They were both still alive. They were both still in love.
And my mom and dad are retired lieutenant colonels in the army. In the 1960s, the United
States was involved in the war in Vietnam, and my father was drafted and sent to Vietnam.
And my mother left college and transferred,
went and joined the army as a nurse.
And my parents met soon thereafter
and stayed active duty in the army
for most of their adult lives,
which meant for me as one of their children,
there's four of us, I have a twin brother,
an older brother and a younger sister,
that we got to grow up all over
the continental United States, from Kansas in the very middle of the country to Alaska and the sort of wilderness of Alaska.
And I think when people hear that my parents are milled parried, they assume that there was a lot
of discipline, which there was, but there was also a ton of creativity. There was a ton of love in
my household. There was music in my household. There was good food and bad food in my household.
And in one of the ways that I know it shaped me aside from that I'm very,
I'm very proud to be an adventurer like my siblings are.
I think we're very comfortable being in places that are new to us and that we
don't, that we don't exactly understand. But I, my,
my mom was by and large one of the only women in women
officers that I ever was around as a young person,
that I was ever around on army bases.
Most of my friends' fathers were soldiers or officers, but not ever their mothers.
But of course mine was, and it was very apparent to me from a very young age, how
in my household, my parents had a wonderfully co-equal relationship and they each had
tasks and chores that aligned with their tastes and their likes, not necessarily with their genders.
And outside of the house, I knew that my mom was treated differently than other mothers.
And I didn't exactly know what that meant as a young person, but the older and older
that I got, and the more that I began to focus on public policy in my life, it became easier
for me to, luckily,
to draw from my own personal experiences
to understand what not just equality looks like,
but being proactive about equality,
why what being an ally means
as about the things you do, not who you say you are.
Can we go deeper into your mother's story?
We know she was a military officer and a practicing nurse. And I love to hear
more about her from your perspective beyond the titles. Growing up, how did you see her
as different from other typical American mothers around you?
My sister likes to joke that when my mom passes away
on her tombstone will be engraved,
I bet I could do that.
My mom was someone who had a confidence
that was based upon her output.
It was based upon her experiences. It was based upon her experiences. It was not misguided.
It was not arrogance. But my mom always knew who she was. And it was always very clear to us as her
children. I can remember very finite, very specific examples of male soldiers not recognizing that my mom was a, an officer.
And that moment where my mom, you know, let them know that she was an officer and their recognition of what was going on in that situation as a very little
kid taught me a lot about, about knowing your worth, knowing your value, knowing
who you are and why you are.
And those are very elusive lessons, by the way, I don't even know if
I've ever fully learned them. But I did know with my mom that my mom was confident enough to not let,
for example, bad actors around her behave poorly in front of us. I remember multiple times as a kid,
my mom stopping somebody and saying, absolutely not with that behavior, especially in front of
my children. And I learned that the difference between the sort of confidence it takes to intervene. I am, I serve on a board of an
organization that fights bullying. And one of the words that they often use is an upstander.
That you're the different between a bystander is somebody that watches something happen and
does nothing. An upstander is somebody that watches something happen and decides to do
something and gauge. And my mom was, is the consummate upstander in my life.
And that came from having to decide for her.
She had to be, she was one of the only women of her kind
on any base she was ever on.
My mom has a short haircut,
has her whole adult professional life.
I'm sure she was accused of being a lesbian
at least once a week in her career in the military
in the eighties and the nineties.
And it didn't harden her, it strengthened her.
Yeah, it's really funny that you mentioned the haircut.
Ever since I was a kid, I've always had short hair.
Thinking back to those times, it wasn't exactly the norm.
So people check me out, stare at me when I enter the ladies' washroom, for example.
So, anyway, that's the experience for having short hair in the era when long hair for women, for female, was still the main dream.
Or it still is.
Especially in those days for a woman,
and I don't even, to be honest with you,
I'm not even certain that she was allowed to have long hair
as a woman in the military.
But I also know without question that silly bigots
who think that a haircut has a gender
would have thought that my mother's haircut
was inappropriate.
And it's just a simple, tiny thing.
And I've never asked her and I have no idea.
Um, but I, I now I've been doing this work long enough and I know where the
root of a lot of people's silly bigotry can be placed and, and I know that I am
certain that she had to deal with men that did not think that she was equal to
them because she was a woman, men that didn't think that her experience as a
combat nurse was as important as their
experience as a combat soldier.
And I'm happy to say I never confused the two.
Yeah, exactly.
There were and still are so many stereotypes.
The whole image of the ideal woman being someone with long, blonde hair, blue eyes, and if not the housewife type,
then the polished, corporate woman in a tailored suit with that cookie cutter ash-word.
And I was like, well, that's not me. This is-
Which have nothing to do with substance or success.
Totally agree.
Now, you mentioned that you grew up moving across
different parts of the US.
And within one country,
that you get exposed to a wide range
of cultures and communities.
I can see how that shaped your lens on diversity, and why the seeds of DEI were planted so early
in your life.
Part of DEI is also the LGBTQ plus experience.
I was wondering, when did you decide to come out?
And what was that conversation like when you did?
I like to say that I didn't exactly get to decide. It was decided for me, but in a really wonderful way.
I was a much bigger person when I was a teenager
and when I was in my early 20s
and I played American football in grammar school
and in high school and then I played in college.
And my college football team went to a national championship
and I was the captain of that football team and we lost.
And about a week and a half later,
I was visiting another college,
a college where my twin brother attended,
with some of my teammates,
and they'd used that sort of private moment
to ask me if I was gay.
I think they had, these were my closest friends,
these were people that I had lived with or around
for the better part of four years,
and I think they were waiting for a moment
when it wouldn't put me at risk to ask me.
And I was honest with them.
They were honest with me.
We had a lot of questions for one another.
And it was one of the most uplifting,
not moments because it was extended over months,
but for months of my life in my early twenties,
after 22 years in the closet,
my closest friends really wanted me to know how important I was in their lives,
how close we all were.
In the years that followed,
when I was first getting into LGBTQ civil rights,
I often would say,
I want everybody's experience to be like mine.
Yes, I was still in the closet and I heard I was an athlete
and I heard lots and lots of awful things in my teens and I guess I had lots of insecurities.
But when I did finally come out, I did so to the support and love and kindness of a
bunch of people who often hear I even now joke they didn't know how to offer love and
support and kindness, but they did in their own ways.
And these are people that I'm still close with 25 years later because of it.
You were raised in a household founded
in both love and independence.
And if I'm hearing you right,
your mother played a big part in that.
She stood up for herself, lived on her own terms, and didn't let the
expectation of her era dictate who she was. And that example shaped you. When your turn
came, in a time of change, you stood up for yourself too, openly, honestly. And I imagine that same
foundation is what drew you to study law, to focus on civil rights, and to use your
skills to support others who may not have had the same resources, protection, or voice that you did. Would you say that's
part of what guided your path?
I sure hope so. I sure hope so. I believe that. I have a plaque that my parents gave
me when I was 22 years old when I got into law school, they mailed me this plaque. And
there's a quote by one of our former presidents and it's about law and human rights and kindness. But my parents bought it when
I was maybe 12 years old. They waited 10 years to give it to me. And I knew my whole from a very
young age, I told people I was going to be a feminist lawyer. And the little kid that was the
job, you know, some people wanted to be a firefighter, an astronaut. As I got older, I learned that I meant women's and reproductive rights and
civil rights, and I meant access and agency and autonomy.
And then, but at the time I knew what feminism was and I knew I wanted to be an
attorney. I took my entrance exams to law school when I was 16 years old the first
time, long before college.
And it was just, I knew I wanted to be a feminist lawyer.
And when I finally got to law school, months after I came out of the closet,
it had already begun my approach to what I wanted to do.
It already changed a little bit.
I was doing international law, largely international human rights law,
mostly European Union and South American law, along with what I was doing,
having to learn all the laws of the United States. mostly European Union and South American law, along with what I was doing,
having to learn all the laws of the United States.
And I think the language that I learned in feminism,
the approach to equality that I learned through feminism,
luckily for me was then the lens
that I got to look upon myself
when I finally came out of the closet.
When I fully realized that I was a gay man,
I had five, six, seven years of the language of feminism
to help me see myself through that lens.
It was a savior.
And it just reinforced that I wanted to do
that work professionally.
Back in 2012, you got elected and found yourself
as the only out person in the room.
as the only out-person in the room. That must have been a powerful moment,
but also a complicated one.
While the country was gradually becoming more open
towards LGBTQ plus issues,
it was still a very different climate from today.
What was the first term experience like for you? Being visibly out, navigating politics,
and holding space in a room where no one else shared that same lift experience.
I, it felt like a big responsibility, no question.
All of us have had big responsibilities in our lives
and some of them we recognized in the moment.
Some of them were we recognize in hindsight.
I was very aware from the moment I won my election
until I took office eight months or so later
that I was the out person there.
Now I served with over a dozen closeted elected officials, almost all of whom, 90%, 80% were
supportive of anti LGBTQ bills.
It wasn't just that they were not out, it's that they were actively hurting the community.
And so I knew I needed to focus on them first, which I did do. But to answer your question, what I remember thinking at the time was,
I've learned to be the advocate I am that just got me elected because of my work
with women's and reproductive rights and racial and ethnic justice.
Two things that need lots of work still in our Capitol.
And I look just like the people who attack women's rights and
racial and ethnic justice. And so I decided that my first term, especially
my first year, everyone knew I was LGBTQ, everyone knew I was an LGBTQ activist.
There were a couple of really bad moments. I'd been shut down on the house
floor from speaking because of it. I'd been discriminated against in front of
my colleagues a few times. And myself and my staff and my team, we decided to use that attention to show
people what an ally looked like and that I would, I introduced a whole bunch of
women's rights bills.
I signed onto every women's rights bill, introduced a bunch of ethnic intimidation
act bills and a bunch of racial and ethnic justice bills to show people.
Yes, I am gay.
Yes, that's a part of the reason I was elected here
and it informs the work I do.
But I can introduce these bills and show you why that matters.
And hopefully you will understand why the things that
impact my life matter.
And it did have that effect, which I was grateful for.
So on the one hand, your identity helped you get elected.
It was a source of strength, visibility, and representation.
But once inside the house, it also made you a target for disagreement, even exclusion. Did you consciously turn that tension into a strategy,
building alliances with those who didn't necessarily share your identity
but shared your policy interests,
so you could amplify your voice and make real progress?
It is. I'll give you a really good example.
Very early on in my first term,
before I had ever spoken on the House floor,
there was a good ruling from the Supreme Court came down
about marriage equality for LGBTQ people.
And at the end of session that day,
at the end of our legislative session,
a couple months into my first term,
there's a moment where legislators get to stand up and talk about major events and how
they will impact law and policy. And I rose to speak about that. And I got a half a word
out and my microphone was cut. That's it for today.
Ryan shared how he stepped into politics not because he wanted to be a politician, but
because he wanted different people in the room.
But in part two, we go inside that room, what it was like to get silenced,
and to learn how to fight smarter. Don't miss it.
Smarter. Don't miss it. Check out our website and follow me on social media.
I'm Vince Chen, your ambitious human host.
Until next time, take care.