Gay Marriage and the 2008 Election
The latest Pew poll shows that support for gay marriage has risen over the last year and a half, growing from 29% in January 2004 to 32% last summer to 36% now. (This was in August of 2005 it is now 48% April of 2006.) At this rate, it's possible that a majority (or at least a near-majority) of Americans will support gay marriage in 2008. (Most likely it will be 60-65%)
While Democratic activists and donors will probably overwhelmingly support gay marriage in 2008, there doesn't appear that there will be a major Democratic candidate who will. Hillary Rodham Clinton supports civil unions, but not gay marriage. And she's sensitive enough about her culturally polarizing image that she's not likely to go out on a limb on this. (She is just waiting for part of the the country to grow up.)
By contrast, gay marriage will loom large in the Republican contest. First of all, Republican primary voters and (especially) caucusgoers strongly oppose gay marriage (and most probably still will in 2008). Not only that, but much of the GOP base is intensely hostile to homosexuality in general. According to a 2003 Pew poll:
72 percent of conservative Republicans believe that there are too many gays depicted in the media. 84 percent oppose gay marriage.
69 percent of white evangelicals have an unfavorable view of gay men (almost half have a "strongly unfavorable" view. Over half believe school boards should be able to fire gay schoolteachers. About two-thirds believe gays can change, almost three-quarters hear about homosexuality in church (almost always negatively).
These numbers may have softened over the past two years, but probably not by much. Iowa caucusgoers and South Carolina primary voters won't have much use for anyone who doesn't wholeheartedly oppose gay marriage - and they're not likely to be sympathetic to civil unions either.
Secondly, there are significant differences among potential Republican candidates on gay issues. Rudy Giuliani supports civil unions, signed a generous domestic partnership bill as mayor, and famously lived with two gay men. John McCain opposes the Federal Marriage Amendment and attacked Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson during the 2000 campaign. By contrast, George Allen, Bill Frist and Sam Brownback are all staunch backers of the FMA; Brownback will probably base his presidential campaign to a great extent on this issue. Mitt Romney became a national star by opposing gay marriage, but has been ambiguous on civil unions. Unlike the Democratic contest, there will be fireworks on gay issues among Republicans. And given the conservative views of the GOP base, most of the talk will come from the anti-gay side. It's quite possible that the Republican nominee will be someone locked into opposition to both gay marriage and civil unions, firm support for the FMA, and who has a record of launching anti-gay attacks during the primaries.
This could be a real problem for the GOP. Independents are much closer to Democrats than to Republicans in their views of gay marriage and civil unions. By 2008, a majority of Americans may support gay marriage; 53 percent already back civil unions. Already, many voters compose what Ramesh Ponnuru calls an "anti-anti-gay" bloc hostile to anything that smacks of intolerance. A militantly anti-gay Republican nominee could have real problems. By contrast, Hillary (or whomever else the Democrats run) will have positions in line with the electorate, and no record of participating in angry exchanges on gay rights during the nomination contest.
This is from Adolf Dobson's Website: "Focus on the Faggots"
N.H. Civil Unions Imminent
The Democrat-led New Hampshire Senate, on a strictly party-line vote
(Democrats=anti-Discrimination, Republicans=Pro-Discrimination),
approved legislation Thursday to create civil unions for same-sex couples, Fox News reported.
The House passed the measure earlier this month. It now heads to Gov. John Lynch, who has indicated he will sign it into law.
Fergus Cullen, chairman of the state Republican Party, said after November's election put Democrats in control, they immediately tossed a recommendation from a state-advisory panel that endorsed a constitutional amendment to define marriage as the union of one man and one woman.
"It is an example of the Democrats over-reading their mandate," he said.
Republican Sens. Jack Barnes and Robert Letourneau voted against civil unions.
"Let's just call it what it really is - no sugarcoating: This creates same-sex marriage," (oh no, the sky is going to fall......)Letourneau said. "There is no right to (same-sex) marriage in either the New Hampshire Constitution or the federal Constitution."
(No, but the state constitutions and the federal constitutions state that everyone deserves the same rights.....including gay people. If you won't offer marriage than you have to offer unions.)
Barnes said the new civil-unions law is going to create "one heck of a mess."
New Hampshire will join New Jersey, Connecticut, and Vermont in allowing civil unions. (The caveman is going extinct!!!!!!)





















