Is This the Year Democrats Embrace Marriage Equality?
This could be the year Democrats officially embrace marriage equality.
By Michelle Garcia



As this summer’s Democratic National Convention approaches, all eyes
are on party leaders to see whether this will be the year Democrats go
all in for marriage.

In 2012 nearly 200 American mayors, including convention chairman and
Los Angeles mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, and several Democratic
leaders, including House minority leader Nancy Pelosi, have said the
party should lead on this issue rather than trail the electorate, who,
according to many polls, approve of marriage rights for all Americans.
While President Obama remains mum on this question, Freedom to Marry
is asking voters to push Democratic leaders and the president’s
reelection campaign to include marriage equality in the party platform
with its Democrats: Say I Do crusade.

The Democratic platform in 2008 was then considered the most
LGBT-friendly major party platform ever. Though it did not explicitly
call for marriage equality, the party established its support for
repealing the Defense of Marriage Act, passing antidiscrimination
laws, reversing “don’t ask, don’t tell,” and instituting
LGBT-inclusive hate-crimes prevention policies.

Four years later, though civil unions and domestic partnerships are
available to many same-sex couples, numerous studies show that these
arrangements fail to provide the same legal and societal benefits as
marriage. Since the 2008 platform was introduced at the Democratic
convention in Denver, the states of Washington, New York, New
Hampshire, Maryland, Iowa, Connecticut, and Vermont, and the District
of Columbia, have enacted marriage equality, either legislatively or
through the courts. The repeal of marriage equality in California via
Proposition 8 and subsequent legal battle over the repeal has been
eye-opening to many Democrats, who wonder if even one of the bluest
states can rescind civil rights granted to its citizens, isn’t federal
protection needed?

Marc Solomon of Freedom to Marry says this would be the perfect time
for Democrats to step up and lead on the issue; he cites the polling
indicating that 69% of registered Democrats support marriage equality.
He added that a bill to federally recognize same-sex marriages has had
unprecedented support in Congress.

“The Democrats traditionally lead on civil rights,” Solomon says. The
party will likely not finalize the platform until its convention in
September in Charlotte, N.C., but Solomon is confident. “I’m a huge
believer that we can get this done.”

Rep. Tammy Baldwin
Caroline Kennedy, President of the John F. Kennedy Presidential
Library & Museum
Sen. Barbara Boxer
Sen. Chris Coons
Sen. Russ Feingold
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand
Sen. Tom Harkin


Continued Here:

http://www.advocate.com/Print_Issue/Advance/Is_This_the_Year_Democrats_Embrace_Marriage_Equality/
-- 
Together, we can change the world, one mind at a time.
Have a great day,
Tommy



-- 
Together, we can change the world, one mind at a time.
Have a great day,
Tommy

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