July 4th, 2009
 

365 Gay: News

GOP platform to call for anti-gay amendment


(Washington) Republicans are debating an election platform that differs in at least one striking way from the past - it’s purged of the dear-leader tributes that turned statements of party principles into an incessant hailing of the chief.

In fact, a draft of the document going to the GOP platform committee today mentions 2008 presidential candidate John McCain and President Bush not at all. They’ll be worked in later, in a section or two to be added.

It’s nothing personal, party officials hasten to say. Rather, they’ve put the platform on a crash diet.

The 2004 platform ran over 40,000 words, many of them turgid. It found 80 things to “applaud,” 17 to “hail,” a dozen to “commend” and several hundred opportunities to say what a great job Bush was doing and would continue to do. It was more than twice the length of the Democratic platform.

Now it’s been cut roughly in half.

The GOP platform co-chairmen, California Rep. Kevin McCarthy and North Carolina Sen. Richard Burr, told AP on Monday they wanted the party principles to be about the actual party. And in the past, Burr said, “there was a lot of Washington-speak.”

Despite the stylistic change, familiar divisions are back as Republicans debate the principles over two days and strive for a united front behind McCain. That means bridging some differences, detouring around others.

The platform draft calls for constitutional bans on abortion and gay marriage, two steps McCain does not support.

It would put the party on record as accepting that economic activity contributes to global warming, in line with McCain’s views.

But the platform is loaded with caveats about the uncertainty of science and the need to “resist no-growth radicalism” in taking on climate change.

It warns that empowering Washington on the matter would have painful consequences, a less-than-rousing endorsement of McCain’s ambitious plan for mandatory federal emission cuts in a cap and trade program.

Sharp divisions still exist in the party on social issues, but there appeared to be little taste for complicating McCain’s chances by mounting a symbolic platform fight as the document is hashed out in Minneapolis.

“This isn’t a hill we’re going to die on,” said Scott Tucker, a spokesman for the gay rights group Log Cabin Republicans.

“Unlike previous years,” said Gary Bauer, a social-conservative veteran of platform struggles, “I just don’t see deep divisions within the party.”

Bauer, an evangelical Christian who is advising McCain, said the focus is on emphasizing Republican unity on the issues.

Ann Stone, national chairwoman of Republicans for Choice, said her abortion-rights group won’t go to the wall this time trying to overhaul the anti-abortion plank. The platform takes a typically hard line against abortion rights and calls again for a constitutional ban on abortion as well as on gay marriage.

“This is not going to be the year that we make big changes,” she said. “We know that we can’t get major things done.”

The 112-delegate platform committee meets as the Democratic National Convention unfolds in Denver. The platform will be adopted during next week’s GOP convention in St. Paul, Minn.

Democrats adopted their platform Monday, mostly following candidate Barack Obama’s prescriptions but going beyond his proposals in calling for guaranteed health care for all, in a compromise both with Hillary Rodham Clinton’s supporters and with activists who wanted government-run health care.

Party platforms are not binding on candidates or the next president and tend to be largely forgotten once they’re in place.

Even so, candidates want to make sure the document doesn’t drift too far from their own agenda and the GOP in particular has seen platform fights over a variety of social issues in the past.

Tucker said his group is “more interested in substance than symbolism” and believes McCain to be an “inclusive candidate who understands that our party needs to reach out to all Americans to win this election.”

McCain opposes gay marriage but also a constitutional amendment against it and has expressed limited support for the rights accorded couples in same-sex civil unions. Apart from opposing a constitutional amendment to ban abortion, he is against most abortion rights and says he would favor overturning the Supreme Court decision affirming those rights.


Comments (17)
  • nurmi Said: August 26th, 2008 at 11:06 am
    • Republicans officially opposed to gay marriage and abortion? Who knew? I’m shocked I tell you - shocked! What IS this world coming to. Oh, yeah. We’re already there. Sorry.

  • John Said: August 26th, 2008 at 11:36 am
    • Don’t worry, I’m sure the right-wing GWMs will find some illogical and irrational excuse to vote for McCain and the Republicans anyway.

  • Joe Millraney Said: August 26th, 2008 at 11:42 am
    • The GOP’s platform may be largely forgotten on the ride to the election, but it is the philosophy of the Republican Party, what they truly think. It always seems as though side issues that largely don’t concer most Americans are more important than those that do. This is a Party that hankers for days long gone that never existed in the first place. Maybe, they should stay stuck in the past!

  • Peter-Nicholas Said: August 26th, 2008 at 12:12 pm
    • I hope all you log cabin republicans are hearing and reading this news. How can
      you intelligently vote for these
      archaic, closed-minded people?
      We can’t and mustn’t live in the past.

  • Rocco Said: August 26th, 2008 at 12:29 pm
    • Exactly what rights has John McCain expressed support for (same sex couples)? Details and dates please! I know this was written by the AP, but this has to be from around the time he realized we were actual people, and spoke at Mark Bingham’s funeral, because everything that has come out of his mouth since he clinched the Repub. nomination has been far right drivel.

  • Carl RavensWolf Slocum Said: August 26th, 2008 at 12:41 pm
    • With out reading the article, I wonder why every one is being side tracked by the GAY issue , Oh dont get me wrong I am GAY and Proud of it. However the Real Issues that should be addressed are The Environment, Dependancy on Foreign Oil, Self Sufficiency, and the Economy, Iraq War, ANY WAR. I dont see any of these issues or Hear many of those issues being debated. Right now in New York, Pa, NJ, WV , Virginia, all along the coal belt, Oil and Natural gas Co’s are pushing the “Fractured” drilling process that will pollute the land and drinking water tables for Centuries to come. Tak a look in Utah, Colorado Montana, Wyoming, Az, NV, there next and THEY sit on a HUGE AQUAFER! The EPA has been stripped of its laws and regulations put in Place to Protect the Environment; we only have 1 Earth . Where do we go when its polluted? The National Park Service has been Stripped as Heritage Keepers, now they are at the Mercy of the GOP administration’s whim to drill , Mine and Timber the Land.
      The Real Issues are being ignored. Now I’ll read the article;OK the GOP is definately Quazi Puritanical and needs to be brought up into the 21st centruy!

  • Roger Ramjet Said: August 26th, 2008 at 2:11 pm
    • We can tell you why, CARL:
      because Republican’s cannot get elected running on real issues, as you cite.

      They can only get elected by pandering to the majority of foolish, knee-jerked born-agains who think they’re gonna fly up with Jesus in a cloud before the world, that they have destroyed with their voting record, collapses.

      So instead, they pander to their ignorance and hate regarding LGBT issues with smoke-and-mirror arguments.

      It’s all they got left.

  • the monk Said: August 26th, 2008 at 6:08 pm
    • Questions to the pro-life people. 1) Since life starts at conception, does the woman take out life insurance in case something happens? and 2) since life starts a conception and the woman has a miscarriage, does she by law submit a death certificate?

  • the monk Said: August 26th, 2008 at 6:14 pm
    • Questions to the pro-life people. 1) Since life starts at conception, does the woman take out life insurance for the child in case something happens? and 2) since life starts a conception and the woman has a miscarriage, does she by law submit a death certificate?

  • Ross Hussein Obama Said: August 26th, 2008 at 6:34 pm
    • “Don’t worry, I’m sure the right-wing GWMs will find some illogical and irrational excuse to vote for McCain and the Republicans anyway.” –Isn’t that their M.O.?

      @ the monk: If you want to get right down too it before we’re conceived our egg is still in our mothers. So if you really wanna look at it, in some form we exist since our mother’s are born. Does that mean we should be holding funeral services whenever its “That time of the month?” Is masturbation murder then? I sure hope not… I’d be hosed.

  • Mojo_Risin' Said: August 26th, 2008 at 6:41 pm
    • I have a couple of questions for pro-lifers: If you’re pro-life then you must also be for universal healthcare, correct? I ask because hundreds of thousands of uninsured Americans die each year in this country because they cannot afford the proper/life-saving healthcare.

      Also, pro-lifers are also against the death penalty, correct?

      I’m interested in your responses…

  • Glenn Bates Said: August 27th, 2008 at 2:32 am
    • Let the Republicans continue their march into darkness. They can take the self hating queer boys with them.

  • Quasi Said: August 27th, 2008 at 3:44 am
    • While the pro-lifers insist on forcing women to have babies, they simply do not want to pay for the very children they forced into this world, especially the ones born into abject poverty. They do not want to pay for their education, and then somehow, expect these children to have jobs at minimum wages to work hard all their loves so the masses will pay high taxes to the already very filthy rich. I cannot stand this hypocrisy, because they are spew nothing but pure lies, deciept and want fiscal slavery of the masses. They and their holier-than-thou shenanigans literally make me sick each and every day.

  • ERIC Said: August 27th, 2008 at 8:29 pm
    • OBAMA AND MCCAIN HAVE IDENTICLE POSITIONS ON GAY MARRIAGE AND CIVIL UNIONS. GET YOUR FACTS STRAIGHT. I AM GAY AND I AM SUPPORTING MCCAIN…HE HAS THE EXPERIENCE TO LEAD. GAYS FOR MCCAIN IN 08.

  • Rick Said: August 27th, 2008 at 9:59 pm
    • This comes as no surprise, nor does the fact that their are Uncle Tom’s Cabin Republicans that will vote for McCain.