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Romney changed his position on gay marriage

Page history last edited by PBworks 16 years, 11 months ago

Romney changed his position on gay marriage

Reasons to agree:

  1. Some people say that he changed his tone, even if he didn't change his policy.

 

Reasons to agree:

  1. When Romney said he would be a better advocate for gay rights than Ted Kennedy, gay marriage was not as big a deal as it is now. You think I'm making this up, but it wasn't a big deal in 1994. Look it up. Romney never said he was going to advocate for more gay rights than Ted Kennedy, just that Mitt Romney, as a republican, would help mainstream some basic gay rights, in a way that Ted Kennedy never could.
  2. Romney did not leave the gay community the gay community left him.
  3. When he ran for governor in 2002, Romney declared his opposition to both same-sex marriage and civil unions. "Call me old fashioned, but I don't support gay marriage nor do I support civil union," said Romney in an October 2002 gubernatorial debate. He also voiced support for basic domestic partnership benefits for gay couples. His position is the same today.
  4. In 1994, he wrote a letter to the Log Cabins saying that he thought that legal discrimination - and he specifically mentioned things like housing, don't ask-don't tell military policies, and credit - should be ended against gay people. MARRIAGE was on NOBODY'S agenda at that point, only a couple of years after Stonewall.
  5. Romney originally tried to work with the gay community, in 1994, when they were not interested in gay marriage. In 1994 they were interested in not being discriminated against in the work place. Now the gay community is advocating different things, that Romney does not support. So saying Romney supports or supported the gay community is a vast over-simplification. Which gay community, and how did he support them?
  6. On the day the decision went into effect, dozens of gay couples descended on Massachusetts’ city and town halls to get married. The TV cameras sought out Governor Romney for his response to the day’s events. The media no doubt expected him to toss some red meat to the knuckle-dragging conservatives that Romney was courting in anticipation of a presidential bid. Instead, Romney pleaded that the public and gay marriage critics in particular bear in mind that this was a happy and joyous day for many individuals, and act respectfully and accordingly.

This campaign flyer from 1994 shows that Abortion is the only issue that Romney has changed.

 

Romney has always advocated respect for gays, but been against allowing gay marriage and civil unions.

Reasons to agree:

  1. On the day the decision went into effect, dozens of gay couples descended on Massachusetts’ city and town halls to get married. The TV cameras sought out Governor Romney for his response to the day’s events. The media no doubt expected him to toss some red meat to the knuckle-dragging conservatives that Romney was courting in anticipation of a presidential bid. Instead, Romney pleaded that the public and gay marriage critics in particular bear in mind that this was a happy and joyous day for many individuals, and act respectfully and accordingly.

 

Romney's comments in 1994, regaurding gays, and his comments now are not in conflict.

Reasons to agree:

  1. When he ran for Senate in ’94 against Ted Kennedy, the opinions of Mitt Romney’s church was a recurring subject of discussion, thanks largely to the efforts of the Boston Globe. One of the things that the theologians at the Globe noticed is that the tenets of Mormonism regarding homosexuality weren’t particularly accepting or tolerant. The Globe kept implicitly pressuring Romney to make the choice – gays or his church. (Oddly, Ted Kennedy’s Catholic faith didn’t trigger any similar demands or curiosity on the Globe’s part.)

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