Los Angeles - Gay rights took centre stage in the Democratic
Party's presidential campaign as the leading candidates gathered
Thursday night in Los Angeles for a live, televised forum sponsored
by a gay-oriented website and TV channel.
The unprecedented event features leading candidates Hillary
Clinton and Barack Obama, both US senators, and former senator John
Edwards, who are all anxious to win political support in the gay
community, a constituency that disproportionately supports the
centre-left party.
In fact, all the Democratic presidential hopefuls except Senator
Joe Biden are scheduled to appear in the forum, which will be
broadcast on Logo, a gay-oriented cable channel affiliated with MTV.
In the first-ever presidential event to focus on gay, lesbian and
transgender issues, some of the topics sure to come up are the repeal
of the military's so-called Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy and the
recent signing of a civil-unions bill in New Hampshire. Other forum
issues will include same-sex marriage, HIV/AIDS, hate crimes and job
discrimination.
The very fact of an event attended by so many Democratic hopefuls
is a sign of how far the gay community has progressed in recent
years, according to activist David Mixner.
'In 1992, we were begging Bill (Clinton) to say the word 'gay' at
the (Democratic nominating) convention, and that was considered a
major victory,' he said. 'Here we have every candidate for the
Democratic nomination showing up to the debate, all supporting civil
unions, two of them supporting marriage and all of them trying to
figure out how they can support marriage and get away with it.'
Congressman Dennis Kucinich and former senator Mike Gravel, both
considered fringe candidates, have outright endorsed gay marriage,
something a majority of Americans oppose.
Forum panellists will be Human Rights Campaign President Joe
Solmonese, singer Melissa Etheridge and Washington Post editorial
writer Jonathan Capehart.
The candidates will appear sequentially at 15-minute intervals
during the two-hour forum, never sharing the stage with one another
in an event that falls short of a debate.
All of the candidates support a federal ban on anti-gay job
discrimination, favour the repeal of the Pentagon's Don't Ask, Don't
Tell policy barring gays from serving openly in the military, and
support civil unions that would at least extend marriage-like legal
rights to same-sex couples.
Logo general manager Lisa Sherman said that the network offered a
separate forum for candidates from the centre-right Republican Party,
but none showed any interest.
That's not surprising, according to polling expert Peter Brown,
who points out that in three swing states - Florida, Ohio and
Pennsylvania - most voters regard the endorsement of a gay-rights
group as a reason to vote against, rather than for, a candidate.
That is especially the case among independent voters - often the
key to winning these critical states - and much more so among men
than women and conservative Republicans than Democrats, he said.
© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur
Jolly RogerAug 10th, 2007 - 01:11:41
Since the presidential candidates are concentrating on 'gay issues,' I guess that means we won the war, the troops are coming home, the economy is fine, and the constitution has been taped back together. That must be the case or else people might think that this is just a distraction from the sad state of affairs this country has fallen into.
Actually, polls show that the gay marriage issue ranked seventh in order of importance to Americans, and I'm beginning to doubt that most Americans can name even five issues. In other words, Americans don't care about gay issues, and with all that's happening to this country, I doubt that even gay people want to hear about gay issues right now. It's all just another distraction. Bread and circuses.
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