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MORE FROM THIS AUTHOR
DALE CARPENTE


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Dale Carpenter is a law professor. He can be reached at OutRight@aol.com.





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Letter to the Editor

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MORE OPINION

Love, friendship and the voting booth
Our families cannot truly respect us if they are supporting John McCain.

POINT: I ask for your vote
We need new energy, a full-time Council member and a strong gay rights advocate.

COUNTERPOINT: Working hard for you
Return me to Council and I will continue to be an activist for LGBT rights.


OPINION

Political perils of marriage support
For all the hype about hope, Obama is still a calculating politician.

DALE CARPENTE
Friday, July 18, 2008

IN A RECENT statement, Sen. Barack Obama said he rejects “the divisive and discriminatory efforts to amend the California Constitution” and similar efforts in other states. At the same time, Obama has repeatedly said that he opposes gay marriage. While his views are perplexing as a matter of logic, they remind us that Obama is a politician and say a lot about the state of the Democratic Party on gay rights.

Obama opposes the proposed amendment because, he says, it is “discriminatory.” But how is it any more discriminatory than his own position? He believes that marriage is between a man and woman; the proposed amendment says that marriage is “between a man and a woman.”

Is there any way to reconcile his opposition to gay marriage with his opposition to the California amendment? I can think of three possibilities.

First, you could oppose writing the traditional definition of marriage into the state constitution as opposed to state statutes. This would leave the state legislature and governor with the power to make the call at a later time.

The problem with that is that the state supreme court effectively wrote the new definition into the state constitution, removing this very power from the state legislature and the governor. If you oppose gay marriage on policy grounds, there is now no way to implement your view except to constitutionalize it by amendment. The state Supreme Court has left you no choice. And in California, because it’s so easy to amend the state constitution, you’re free to support a repeal at a later date if you change your mind on this issue. You don’t have to worry that you are erecting a supermajority barrier.

 Next, since gay marriages are a fait accompli for the next few months, even if you oppose them you might not want to undo the interim marriages (which is a possible effect of passing the amendment) or, more abstractly, “take away rights.”

THIS WOULD BE an incredibly generous reason for a real opponent of gay marriage to oppose the California amendment since the number of interim marriages will be small in absolute terms, the marriages exist only by mandate of four judges, they are entered with notice that they may be nullified in a short time, and the cost of losing the referendum will be many more such marriages into the indefinite future. But if Obama is such an anti-gay marriage altruist, he does not give this as a reason for opposing the amendment.

Finally, a gay marriage opponent who supports civil unions (like Obama) could vote against the California amendment on the grounds that it might also be interpreted to eliminate the state’s domestic partnership system. This risk might be intolerable if you weakly oppose gay marriage but strongly support domestic partnerships. I think it is unlikely that the amendment will be interpreted so broadly by the California courts if it passes, but the risk is above zero. However, once again, Obama does not offer this as a reason to oppose the amendment.

SO WHAT’S REALLY going on? There are two things happening. First, I don’t think Obama really opposes gay marriage deep down and I suspect he does see the exclusion of gay couples as a kind of discrimination. He has never been able to explain his reasons for opposing gay marriage — which is very revealing for a man who’s otherwise unusually thoughtful for a politician.

Second, and probably more importantly, this is an instance where politics necessitates cognitive dissonance. Gays and those who support gay equality are a critical constituency in the Democratic Party. Obama can’t keep the gay-friendly base happy and support the amendment, which is rightly seen by them as involving huge stakes for the gay marriage movement. But at the same time he figures that he can’t support gay marriage because that might mean losing the election.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m grateful for Obama’s opposition to the amendment. It might actually help sway some of his socially conservative black and Latino supporters, who will vote in large numbers in California in November. But then, I support gay marriage.

Obama’s explanation for why he opposes gay marriage and opposes the proposed California amendment banning it can’t be squared as a matter of logic. It’s a matter of politics, which reminds us that for all the hype about hope Obama is still a calculating politician.

 

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The following comments were posted by our readers and were not edited by the Washington Blade.  We ask that you treat others with respect; any post deemed offensive will be removed.

stephenclark on 7/23/08  12:44 PM:
Mr Chris, gay Republicans can agree with their party (and disagree with the Democratic Party) on dozens and dozens of other issues besides gay rights. That puts them in the uncomfortable position of having to choose which issues to base their vote on. Although I'm a Democrat and support Obama, I recognize that McCain has taken positions (like opposing the federal marriage amendment) that are not nearly as antigay as Bush's positions. Remember, Bush's 2004 campaign was a constant gay-bashing machine. McCain's isn't, even though his positions are still bad on most gay issues.
Mr Chris on 7/19/08  3:21 PM:

Stephen if you read this again. Help me out with something

How can Gays support someone who doesn't support them AT ALL especially marriage????

Don't you find that a little troubling????

stephenclark on 7/18/08  7:01 PM:
Although Dale supports same-sex marriage, he is also supporting John McCain for President. In fairness, he should have disclosed that fact to readers.
Mr Chris on 7/18/08  8:16 AM:

Well there always Hillary

.......

OH WAIT...........I FORGOT she oppooses it also!

Mr Chris on 7/18/08  8:16 AM:

Well there alwasy Hillary

.......

OH WAIT...........I FORGOT she oppooses it also!


 

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