Born in Ross, California, Benton earned a degree in English from Westmont College in 1965. After college he was a reporter and sports writer for the Santa Barbara News-Press. He obtained a master of divinity degree in 1969 from the Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley, California. He became a contributor to the underground newspaperBerkeley Barb, helped found the Berkeley Gay Liberation Front and wrote the first editorial for the newspaper Gay Sunshine. Others active in Berkeley Gay Liberation Front included Mike Silverstein, Konstantin Berlandt, Winston Leyland, Michael Itkin, Smedley Ambler, Gary Alinder, Tom Brougham, Leland Traiman, Jim Fishman, and Pat Brown. In 1970, Benton was involved in to get the White Horse Inn to loosen its restrictive policies toward expression of gay identity. Also in 1970, Benton became the first Gay Liberation spokesman to address a major anti-war demonstration. In 2005, Benton founded the "Nicholas F. Benton Diversity Affirmation Education Fund" for the Falls Church City Public Schools. In November 2009, Benton was unsuccessful in a bid to acquire the Washington Blade in the wake of the bankruptcy of the Blade's parent company. In December 2010, he was elected to the newly created Stonewall LGBT Caucus of the Virginia Democratic Party. Benton founded the Falls Church News-Press in March 1991, and in July 2010 celebrated the periodical's 1,000th edition. He has served twice as the president of the localChamber of Commerce, been named Falls Church's "Pillar of the Community" twice and "Business Person of the Year" once, and had his enterprise named "Business of the Year" twice. He has authored a weekly national affairs column in his periodical since 1997.
Benton worked for the Lyndon LaRouche organization from 1974 until the late 1980s, first as a political organizer, and later as the Washington D.C. bureau chief and White House Correspondent for LaRouche's Executive Intelligence Review. In 2007, Benton wrote that he had left the LaRouche movement in the 1980s.
Benton hired Helen Thomas after her allegedly anti-semitic comments in 2010. Benton repeatedly defended the decision to hire her despite her controversial comments. He said in 2011 that he was "outraged" when the Society of Professional Journalists voted on retiring a scholarship award named for Thomas. Benton denied Thomas was anti-Semitic, by saying that Thomas "is herself a Semite" and was "expressing a political point of view , and not a bigoted racial sentiment."
Personal life
Benton has been married and divorced three times; he has no children. His third wife lives in Falls Church.
Works
Length: 344 pages.
An 11-page mimeographed pamphlet. Several sources ascribe this work to 1971, although Benton himself