November 21st, 2009
 

365 Gay: News

Washington, Maine up in the air…goodnight for now


We’re leading now in Washington, though the vote is very preliminary; and over in Maine, the vote is so close – 53 percent against gay marriage, 48 percent for – that there’s speculation that there might be a recount.

So with everything up in the air – and our readers steadily dropping off – James and I are going to call it a night.

But we’ll be back first thing tomorrow with whatever results have come in.


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  • Budbud Said: November 4th, 2009 at 5:59 am
    • Well, we LOST, just like I predicted. We always lose when we are suposedly “tied” in the polls, close to the election.

      People respond to negative ads. When the opposition has the luxury of simply making up outlandish, scary, horrible chicken little stories…I don’t see how we can win.

      I really hope that YET ANOTHER loss with the public is key in eventually proving to the FEDERAL COURTS that WE are indeed a “disfavored minority”! We are not currently viewed as a “disfavored minority” in the eyes of the court system.

      A positive ruling for us in the current federal challenge to the constitutionality of Prop 8 will largely hinge on whether or not we are deemed to be a “disfavored minority”, the judge in the case has pretty much said so.

      It is traditionally the courts role to step in and protect a “disfavored minority” from mob tyranny.

  • Adam Dale Smolinski Said: November 4th, 2009 at 3:35 am
    • Ummm, actually, it’s been almost 90% of precincts in for a couple hours, with a roughly 5.5% spread. It should have been called for the “yes” side hours ago, which the New York Times did at roughly 1AM EST.

  • Ryan Said: November 4th, 2009 at 2:17 am
    • Kind of a poorly-worded article to have up there. If a person is just now checking in and relying solely on this site, they probably figure it’s going to be very close either way and there’s no sense trying to get more information tonight.

      The only thing worth watching now is whether this does worse than Prop 8. With 86% of precincts reporting, equality in Maine is doing even worse than California. Perhaps Maine isn’t nearly as liberal as they let on.

      Lastly, at no point did it ever appear a recount would be necessary. With less than 40% of precincts reporting it was fairly close but by the time 50+% reported the race wasn’t even close (more than 20,000 votes difference does not necessitate a recount).

  • Benjamin Sitzer Said: November 4th, 2009 at 1:20 am
    • It’s a four point spread with 75% of the precincts reporting to be precise, but yes, it’s not ‘too close to call’. It never was. None of the exit polls ever showed a lead for ‘No on Question 1′.

      It’s a real shame that a civil rights issue gets put up for a vote. Why would the state even allow gay marriage to be put up for a vote? Does the state not consider it a civil rights issue? If so, how ISN’T it a civil rights issue?

      I blame the campaigners in Maine. You have the facts on your side–irrefutable, unassailable facts–it’s not a matter of opinion or emotion, it’s simple, hard facts, legal precedents, every medical and psychological institution supports gay marriage, social workers, and you have about half the voters on your side, too; you only needed to convince an extra four, five percent. And you still blew it. You blew it in California, too, where I’m from.

      Lame.

  • bystander Said: November 4th, 2009 at 12:55 am
    • A five point spread is not close… time to call it

 
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