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Weekend GOP debates focus on gays
News posted Sunday, Jan. 8, 2012
by Lisa Keen, Keen News Service
2012-01-11

This article shared 2739 times since Wed Jan 11, 2012
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There were two debates for the major Republican presidential candidates the weekend of Jan. 7-8, and a question about same-sex marriage seemed inevitable. The events were taking place in New Hampshire—one of only six states with marriage equality. The most anti-gay candidate among the major GOP hopefuls—Rick Santorum—had just made significant gains in Iowa and some subsequent polls, making him seem a more viable contender for the nomination than ever before. However, the gay-related questions came fast and hard.

On Jan. 7, national ABC reporter Diane Sawyer pressed the candidates for a heartfelt, "personal" response to a question from a gay viewer in Virginia who wanted to know "what do you want gay people to do who want to form loving, committed, long-term relationships?" On Jan. 8, Boston NBC reporter Andy Hiller challenged Santorum and frontrunner Mitt Romney to say how they had ever "stood up for gay rights."

Their answers broke little news but demonstrated the candidates' awareness that they had to adopt a kinder, gentler tone toward gays in order to win more votes in the Jan. 10 New Hampshire primary and, eventually, in the general election. However, longshot candidate Newt Gingrich, the former Speaker of the U.S. House, bared his teeth against the time spent discussing the rights of gays, claiming it showed a bias by the media for gays and against religious institutions.

Sawyer read a question submitted to the Jan. 7 debate via Yahoo.com by a 30-year-old man named Phil in Virginia. The man's question was: "Given that you oppose gay marriage, what do you want gay people to do who want to form loving, committed, long-term relationships? What is your solution?"

"What would you say personally sitting in your living rooms to people who ask questions like this?" asked Sawyer. She directed the question first to Gingrich.

"I think what I would say is that we want to make it possible to have those things that are most intimately human between friends occur. For example, you're in a hospital, if there are visitation hours, should you be allowed to stay? There ought to be ways to designate that. You want to have somebody in your will? There ought to be ways to designate that.

"But it is a huge jump," said Gingrich, "from being understanding and considerate and concerned—which we should be—to saying we're therefore going to institute the sacrament of marriage as though it has no basis. The sacrament of marriage was based on a man and a woman, has been for 3,000 years, is at the core of our civilization and is something worth protecting and upholding.

"And I think that protecting and upholding that doesn't mean you have to go out and make life miserable for others, but it does mean you have to make a distinction between a historic sacrament of enormous importance in our civilization and simply deciding it applies everywhere and it's just a civil right. It's not. It is a part of how we define ourselves and I think that a marriage between a man and a woman is part of that definition."

Sawyer prodded former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman to talk about his support for civil unions.

"Well, personally, I think civil unions are fair. I support them. I think there's such a thing as equality under the law," said Huntsman. "I'm a married man. I've been married for 28 years. I have seven kids...and I don't feel my relationship is at all threatened by civil unions.

"On marriage, I'm a traditionalist," added Huntsman. "I think that ought to be saved for one man and one woman. But I believe that civil unions are fair, and I think it brings a level of dignity to relationships. And I believe in reciprocal beneficiary rights. I think they should be part of civil union rights as well."

Local ABC reporter Josh McElveen then directed the discussion to Rick Santorum, noting that 1,800 same-sex couples have obtained marriage licenses in New Hampshire under that state's two-year-old law, "and they're trying to start families, some of them."

"Are you going to tell someone that they belong as a ward of the state or in foster care rather than have two parents who want them?" he asked.

"Well, this isn't a federal issue; it's a state issue," said Santorum. "The states can make that determination, and New Hampshire—my feeling is that this is an issue that—I believe that the issue of marriage itself is a federal issue, that we can't have different laws with respect to marriage, we have to have one law. Marriage is, as Newt said, a foundational institution of our country and we have to have a singular law with respect to that. We can't have somebody married in one state and not married in another. …

"If we don't have a federal law [ banning marriage ] , I'm certainly not going to have a federal law that bans adoption for gay couples when there are only gay couples in certain states. So, this is a state issue, not a federal issue."

McElveen followed up, asking what would happen to the marriages of the 1,800 New Hampshire gay couples if a federal ban on same-sex marriage is instituted.

Santorum responded as he has when asked the question in other forums.

"If the constitution says marriage is between a man and a woman,then marriage is between a man and a woman," Santorum said. "And, therefore, that's what marriage is and would be in this country and those who are not men and women who are married would not be married. That's what the constitution would say."

Sawyer then asked Mitt Romney to explain what he would say in his living room to a gay couple "who would say, 'We simply want the right to,' as the person who wrote the e-mail said, 'We want gay people to form loving, committed, long-term relationships.' In human terms, what would you say to them?"

Romney replied, "The answer is, 'That's a wonderful thing to do,' and that 'There's every right for people in this country to form long-term committed relationships with one another.' That doesn't mean that they have to call it marriage or that they have to receive the approval of the state and a marriage license and so forth for that to occur. There can be domestic-partnership benefits or contractual relationships between two people, which would include, as Speaker Gingrich indicated, hospital visitation rights and the like.

"We can decide what kinds of benefits we might associate with people who form those kinds of relationships, state by state. But to say that marriage is other than the relationship between a man and a woman, I think is a mistake. And the reason for that is not that we want to discriminate against people or to suggest that gay couples are not just as loving and can't also raise children. But it's instead a recognition that society as whole—the nation—will presumably be better off if children are raised in a setting where there's a male and female.

"And there are many cases where that's not possible—divorce, death, single parents, gay parents and so forth. But, for society to say we want to encourage, through the benefits that we associate with marriage, people to form partnerships between men and women and then raise children, which we think that will be the ideal setting for them to be raised."

The discussion had gone on for about six minutes, when Gingrich apparently signaled that he wanted to speak, and Sawyer gave him the floor.

"I just want to say, since we spent this much time on these issues—I just want to raise a point about the news media bias. You don't hear the opposite question asked," said Gingrich. "Should the Catholic Church be forced to close its adoption services in Massachusetts because it won't accept gay couples—which is exactly what the state has done."

"Should the Catholic Church be driven out of providing charitable services in the District of Columbia because it won't give in to secular bigotry? Should the Catholic Church find itself discriminated against by the Obama administration on key delivery of services because of the bias and the bigotry of the administration?

"The bigotry question goes both ways," said Gingrich, "and there is a lot more anti-Christian bigotry today than there is concern on the other side, and none of it gets covered by the news media."

The audience, which had been silent throughout the gay-related discussion, suddenly burst into applause, and Romney gained the floor.

"As you can tell, the people in this room feel that Speaker Gingrich is absolutely right," said Romney, "and I do, too. And I was in a state where the supreme court stepped in and said marriage is a relationship required under the constitution for people of the same sex to be able to marry. And John Adams, who wrote the constitution, would be surprised. And it did exactly as Speaker Gingrich indicated.

"What happened was Catholic Charities, that placed almost half all the adopted children in our state, was forced to step out of being able to provide adoptive services. And the state tried to find other places to help children—We have to recognize that this decision about what we call marriage has consequence which goes far beyond a loving couple wanting to form a long-term relationship that they can do within the law now. Calling it marriage creates a whole host of problems for families, for the law, for the practice of religion, for education. Let me say this, 3,000 years of human history shouldn't be discarded so quickly."

Actually, talhough none of the reporters on the panel mentioned this—perhaps because they did not know—the state of Massachusetts did not "force" the Catholic Church to close its adoption services. The state required that Catholic Charities, a separate, non-profit organization, to obey state laws if it wished to receive state funding for its provision of adoption services. The group said it could not obey the state's human rights law, which prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation. Thus, Catholic Charities chose to stop receiving state funds, rather than provide adoption services to gay couples, the same as straight couples.

Fewer than 12 hours later, the six candidates were back on stage in New Hampshire, this time with a special edition of NBC's Meet the Press.

NBC Boston reporter Andy Hiller tried to tackle Romney on his 1994 statement during the Senate campaign. He read Romney's quote to Bay Windows, a Boston gay newspaper, in which he said, "I think the gay community needs more support from the Republican party, and I would be a voice in the Republican party to foster anti-discrimination efforts."

Hiller asked, "How have you stood up for gay rights, and when have you used your voice to influence Republicans on this issue?"

Romney responded that he had appointed a gay person to his cabinet, appointed people to the bench, "regardless of their sexual orientation," and "made it very clear that we should not discriminate in hiring policies, in legal policies."

"At the same time, from the very beginning, in 1994," said Romney, "I said to the gay community, 'I do not favor same-sex marriage. I oppose same-sex marriage,' and that has been my view. But, if people are looking for someone who will discriminate against gays or will in any way suggest that people who have different sexual orientation don't have full rights in this country, they won't find that in me."

Hiller turned his question to Santorum.

"Sen. Santorum, would you be a voice for gay rights in the party?"

"I would be a voice in speaking out for making sure that every person in America, gay or straight, is treated with respect and dignity and has equality of opportunity," said Santorum. "That does not mean that I would agree with certain things that the gay community would like to do to change laws with respect to marriage, with respect to adoption, and things like that. So, you can be respectful—this is the beautiful thing about this country. James Madison called the First Amendment … the perfect remedy, and that is that people of all different backgrounds—diversity, opinions, faith—can come into the public square and can be heard, and can be heard in a way that's respectful of everybody else.

"But just because you don't agree with someone's desire to change the law doesn't mean you don't like them, or hate them, or that you want to discriminate against them, but you're trying to promote things that you think are best for society. And I do so, and I if you watched the town hall meetings that I've been doing all over New Hampshire, I do so in a respectful tone, I listen to the other side, I let them make their arguments, and then we do so in a very respectful way. And you know what, we may not agree. That's why we leave it open to the public to be able to elect members of Congress and the Senate and the President who support their ideas."

"What if you had a son who came to you and said he was gay?" asked Hiller.

Without hesitation, Santorum—who has four sons, the oldest of whom is 18—said, "I would love him as much as the second before he said it. And I would try to do everything I can to be as good a father to him as possible."

The audience applauded.

"Both candidates say they oppose discrimination yet they're also opposed to laws that would be make it illegal to fire LGBT people," said Human Rights Campaign President Joe Solmonese. "Both candidates profess inclusion, yet they also want to deny patriotic Americans the right to defend their country. You can't say one thing simply because it sounds good but yet continue to act in a manner that is completely at odds with that rhetoric."

Later in the Jan. 8 debate, second-place challenger Ron Paul, in a discussion of entitlements, interjected that he doesn't like to use the term "gay rights," as had been used by Romney and Santorum.

"I don't like to use those terms—gay rights, women's rights, minority rights, religious rights," said Paul. "There's only one type of right. It's your right to your liberty. And I think it causes divisiveness when we see people in groups. Because for too long, we punish groups, so the answer then was, 'Well, let's relieve them by giving them affirmative action.' So, I think both are wrong, if you think in terms of individuals and protect every single individual."

Huntsman, too, chastised candidates for playing "the blame game" in referring to gays and unions.

"Everybody's got something nasty to say," he said. "You know what the people of this country are waiting for. … They want a leader who is going to unify, who's going to bring us together. Because, at the end of the day, that's what leadership is all about. It's not about taking on different groups and vilifying them for whatever reason. It's about projecting a vision for a more hopeful tomorrow."

In all, there were about 13 minutes of discussion of gay-related issues in the 210 minutes of weekend televised debate.

"Gov. Romney and Sen. Santorum today provided thoughtful and constructive answers to the questions they were asked about gay Americans," said Solmonese in a statement. "If only they had been that thoughtful when they crafted their various policy positions."


This article shared 2739 times since Wed Jan 11, 2012
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