Posted on 03/30/2010 11:37:39 AM PDT by Maelstorm
DES MOINES With the Iowa legislature moving toward adjournment, the year-long battle to overturn the Iowa Supreme Court decision establishing same-sex marriage is moving to a new venue the campaign trail.
Party leaders insist the 2010 election will be about the economy, jobs and protecting Iowans priorities: education, health-care, safe communities.
The effort to overturn the April 3, 2009, decision legalizing same-sex marriage is unlikely to be the issue of the campaign, campaign operatives say, but it will be an issue that, in some races, may influence the outcome.
We dont have to go out of our way to make it an issue. It is an issue, said Bryan English, of the Iowa Family Policy Center Action and The Iowa Family PAC.
The state supreme courts year-old decision on same-sex marriage will be a flashpoint because Iowa Family PAC represents people who are in the core activist of the Republican Party, according to Drake University political science professor Dennis Goldford. Their concerns are first and foremost social and religious issues.
Hard-line conservatives have always had their demons, Goldford said.
For the longest time, it was the communist threat, he said. Now its the, quote unquote, homosexual threat.
However, Brad Clark, political director for One Iowa, the states largest lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender advocacy organization, isnt sure most Iowans care as deeply as the Iowa Family PACs supporters.
Politically, public opinion polling shows this is increasingly a moot issue, Clark said. The sun still rises, life goes on, it really hasnt had an impact in that regard.
Same-sex marriage is a divisive debate that pits neighbor against neighbor, he said. Thats not what we need.
But the issue animates so much of (conservatives) political passion right now, Goldford said. In mid-term elections, he said, anything that fires up the base will have a big impact. Thats a problem for Democrats because angry people vote.
Republican candidates will benefit from the efforts of the Christian Right as well as the overall anti-incumbent mood and distrust of government, Goldford said.
Youve got two different groups, the Tea Party types and social and religious conservative types, Goldford said. The Tea Party types are fixed on health care, the budget, the deficit. The social conservatives are focused on gay marriage and abortion and things like that.
Youve got two intensely motivated groups. They double the problem for the Democrats. The Democrats, as the incumbent majority, have to deal with two incensed groups.
Republican gubernatorial candidate Bob Vander Plaats said the same-sex marriage issue is brought up at every one of his political events.
Vander Plaats said that although he believes marriage should be between one man and one woman, the issue has changed somewhat.
Its transformed a little bit from a one woman-one man marriage issue to a freedom issue, he said. The Iowa Supreme Court did what many believe they cant do, which is make law from the bench, execute law from the bench and amend the Constitution from the bench.
Iowas next governor, he said, needs to hold the states highest court in check and let the process play out where it is supposed to.
You may agree with the opinion of the court on this issue, but there may be another issue in the future where you dont agree with the courts ruling, he said.
Every freedom you hold dear is up for grabs if you allow the courts to make law, execute law and amend the Constitution, Vander Plaats said.
Health care is a prime example, he said.
Many people are seeing it as another one of our freedoms being taken away, he said. The federal government passed health-care reform without listening to the people in hometown meetings.
As far as same-sex marriage issue, he said, People are seeing it as a freedom issue probably more than anything else at this point.
Democrats are fired up, too, motivated by their victories in 2008 and, more recently, by the health-care victory. However, a lot of groups religious conservatives, Tea Party activists, fiscal conservatives are firing up the political right.
Richard Clewell, of Davenport, a Democrat who is taking aim at the state Senate seat held by Republican Sen. David Hartsuch, said the people he has talked to have put the same-sex marriage issue on a back burner or have dismissed it altogether. They are more concerned about the economy than anything else, he said.
Trying to get our economics back in line, trying to get economic stability and sustainability, that is the priority right now, Clewell said.
There is an interest in the same-sex marriage issue, and in time, the legislature will deal with that issue, he said. But the emphasis now has got to be straightening out our own economic outlook.
Clewell said he was in San Antonio, Texas, when he learned the Iowa Supreme Courts decision that it is wrong to discriminate against people.
I heard that, and I thought, Im from Iowa and Im proud they came up with that conclusion, he said.
There is a role for government in the workings of the state and nation, Clewell said.
I think the role of government is to be an honest broker on issues, he said. But to tell people they cant marry someone of the same sex is not what government should be doing, and I think the Iowa Supreme Court ruled correctly on that issue.
Gay rights activists may have a personal stake in the 2010 election, Goldford said, but my suspicion is they are not as big a group as those who oppose same-sex marriage.
That doesnt necessarily mean Democrats will lose the governors office and their legislative majorities. Republicans face an ideological divide between Main Street Republicans and Church Street Republicans. Iowa Family PAC has gone on record saying it wont support former Gov. Terry Branstad as the Republican nominee. It has endorsed Vander Plaats. If he doesnt get the GOP nomination, he could run as a third-party candidate or the Christian Right could sit out the election.
The Iowa Family PAC might not be big enough to win elections on its own, English said, but theyre big enough to determine who will win.
Even if it means Democrats win, English said.
We dont have a compelling motivation to violate our core principles that we are called to stand for in order to elect some politician, English said. We answer to God, not to a political party.
That philosophical chasm between the pragmatists and the purists may be the biggest obstacle Iowa Republicans face, Goldford said.
The pragmatists view is that it is their job to win elections and the party is a coalition, he said. The purist says, Our party is a church, and our job is to circle the wagons and burn the heretics and damn the consequences.
(Times reporter Thomas Geyer contributed to this story.)
We’ll probably find out they legalized gay marriage in the health bill.
It’s failed in every state where it was put to a public vote, no?
The Communist threat is still genuine. Plenty of human rights abuses in Cuba, Venezuela, North Korea, China,...
And the Lavender Mafia denies that there is a homosexual agenda. But here they are trotting out same sex marriage.
I was about to say - the “NO on 8” people in California were pretty darn surprised at the outcome. Turns out the Hispanic Catholics and Black Christians in Northern and Southern California outnumbered the looney libs in Hollywood and San Francisco.
Who knew?
I wouldn't put it past the Democrats to try such things but marriage laws (age of consent, etc.) differ from state to state.
While the Rats always trot out "racism" when someone mentions States' Rights, some undeniable examples of things that the Federal government CANNOT dictate are drinking age, DUI blood alcohol levels, speed limits, etc. The Federal government blackmails states into compliance by withholding highway tax dollars.
And why do we let Iowa pick out presidential candidates again?
I was shocked when Iowa legitimized homosexual “marriage”. MA, Vermont - no surprise but Iowa???
And marrying your goat, as my daughter says.
They also wanted a foothold in the heartland to flout their perversion in the faces of the most conservative of Americans - on their own doorsteps.
This is the nature of homosexualism - it can't be kept to itself.
A person can also not say they are for liberty if they are going to force everyone to celebrate and write support into law for a behavior they do not believe is correct. Gay rights is just one more leftist route to tyranny over those they fear.
That’s true. Just wait. I’m surprised polygamists in particular haven’t cottoned on to this already.
Well, technically, the goat is not an adult and can not consent to the marriage like a blood relative or multiple wives can.
It’s probably the libertarian in me speaking, but seriously, who cares? Marriage is a union before God, not before the state of Iowa.
Anyone here know where these “plaintiffs” were from?
Civilization vs anarchy. NAMBLA’s still about.
It is still "the communist threat". All these degenerating irritants such as the homo agenda, open borders, etc., are just more tentacles of the "long march through the institutions".
The people have spoken, damn them
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