Posted on 03/30/2015 2:30:13 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Only the most vicious partisans on either side of the aisle care a whit for the party platform. The outdated practice of defining a political partys ideals in writing so that they can be ignored by the institutions elected officials serves only the oppositions purposes.
For Republicans, the platforms codification of the GOPs support for banning of all legal abortion practices and legally defining marriage as an institution that exists only between a man and a woman have provided their Democratic opponents ample opportunity to frame the party as extreme. The Democrats, too, stumbled into a public relations nightmare when the debate over their party platform in 2012 devolved into a chorus of boos. Whether angry Democrats were booing God Himself or merely the fact that Israels capital city remains the undivided city of Jerusalem is a subject of some debate, but the conclusion remains the same. The episode demonstrated that the partisans who were tasked with drafting and ratifying the platform are generally out of step with the public.
The party platform served its purpose long ago, but the two parties have grown so personality-driven as the powers of the presidency have expanded that it might be time to retire that practice entirely. But if presidential nominating conventions are going to continue to compose a uniform set of principles to which party members are supposed to adhere, it would be ideal for those principles to alienate as few persuadable voters as possible. To that end, Republicans are reportedly going about ensuring that 2012 was the last year in which the issue of gay marriage appeared on the GOP platform.
The National Journals Alex Roarty observed on Monday that the GOP is evolving on the issue of gay marriage, albeit not as rapidly as the rest of the country. In the years since George W. Bush occupied the Oval Office, the legal barriers preventing gay marriages have disappeared in most states, and the majority of American voters support the right of gay couples to wed.
But public opinion has little or nothing to do with the drafting of a partys platform. That work is done by partisans on both ends of the political spectrum, and the document they draw up has become more of an activist positioning statement rather than an elucidation of broadly shared principles. Amending the partys platform means electing a new set of delegates to the platform committee, and those Republicans Roarty spoke with are ready to meet that challenge.
The urgency [Young Conservatives for the Freedom to Marry campaign manager Jerri Ann] Henry and others feel is rooted as much in politics as in values, The National Journal reported. The argument they are making to skeptical Republicans is blunt: If the GOP’s 2016 presidential nominee opposes gay marriage, he or she will lose to Hillary Clinton.
Opponents of same-sex marriage know the assault is coming. Even foes such as the Family Research Council’s Tony Perkins acknowledge that Young Conservatives for the Freedom to Marry and its allies this year are better organized in this fight than his side. But it wouldn’t be the first time that pro-gay-marriage Republicans have tried to soften or remove the party’s platform position, only to be met with even stronger language.
Henry says this time is different, with a better-funded and well-organized effort that has started earlier than ever before. “It only sounds unreasonable,” she says, “if you don’t understand the momentum behind this issue already.”
And thats the real obstacle in front of the GOPs gay marriage proponents. Roarty noted that they must convince the partys organizational leaders that the backlash to abandoning hostility toward same-sex marriage rights from social conservatives will be minimal. According to the polling, that day is not far off.
An NBC News/Marist University survey of Republican primary voters in New Hampshire and South Carolina recently found that a majority now see opposition to gay marriage as mostly or totally unacceptable for the party’s presidential nominee. Only in Iowa did a narrow plurality of likely Republican caucus-goers say opposition to gay marriage remains an acceptable position for a prospective nominee to hold.
The party is changing. If scrapping the party platform altogether is not on the table, the GOPs position on relatively inconsequential social issues should at least be reflective of the changing dynamics around the country. If the most controversial aspect of the GOP platform is its opposition to elective abortions, a position that is increasingly shared by the public, it will become that much harder for Democrats to frame the GOP as the party of extreme social values.
Its a thin coat of paint now.
Other than making sure Obamacare survives, and amnesty survives, there is no platform.
Sure, just put your finger in the wind (or ask the Chamber of Commerce what it thinks).
” Sure, just put your finger in the wind (or ask the Chamber of Commerce what it thinks). “
This is where we are.
The GOP has a platform??? If it does its as firm as Jell-0. lol
That ***hole, Steve Schmidt, was on Morning Joe this morning screaming that this. I can’t believe poor Sarah had to put up with this creep.
it should not...
Celebrate Perversity should NEVER become an accepted part
of the Republican platform
If this is the road they are determined to go down, the elephant is most definitely dead.
It’s amazing how 3% of the population has managed to overturn our entire society. There’s a lesson in there somewhere.
I wish that low-information states would wise up to the reality that, regardless what pro-gay activist judges and justices are saying about gay marriage, the Constitutions silence about marriage means that itss ultimately up to legal majority voters of each state, not the federal government, to decide a given states marriage policy.
The only reason that the GOP platform opposes gay marriage is to win votes on the issues like Democrats do, the feds actually having no constitutional authority to address many such issues.
The current one is not a thin coat of paint.
It is a real shame that more people don't take the time to read the RNC platform.
And then read the DNC one in comparison.
There is no starker difference between any group, anywhere.
“See, see you mean-old right-wing extremists, now we can focus on economic issues! Who cares if two people of the same gender marry, OK? We can go back to beating our chests celebrating a minor decrease in federal spending!” < /GOP flunky >
Will opposition to gay marriage disappear from the GOPs party platform?
Thats homosexual marriage as “gay” is something they are far from. It had better not disappear or the GOP will be the thing that ends up disappearing.
Our Constitution was made for a religious and moral people. It is wholly inadequate for the government of any other.
That familiar statement tells us:
Our Constitution was not designed to PREVENT the imposition of abortion, gay marriage, etc., etc., on the American People, once the American People decide they do not care if abortion, gay marriage, etc., are imposed on them. (Of course, nothing in the Constitution can prevent these impositions, either.)
The Constitution was designed for the government of a morally and politically healthy people. If the people are corrupt, the Constitution can do nothing for them.
The Left (e.g., Unitarians, Quakers, Communists, Eugenicists, etc.), from the 1780’s on, has had a plan to destroy Christianity, and the family and marriage, and the Constitution. “Our” side has had no plan, because they didn’t even know they had an enemy.
Dole said pretty much the same thing just before he got trounced by an incumbent president who had just been impeached.
Rand Paul: Time for GOP to soften war stance...by softening its edge on some volatile social issues and altering its image as the party always seemingly "eager to go to war... We do need to expand the party and grow the party and that does mean that we don't always all agree on every issue" ... the party needs to become more welcoming to individuals who disagree with basic Republican doctrine on emotional social issues such as gay marriage... "We're going to have to be a little hands off on some of these issues ... and get people into the party," Paul said.[Posted on 01/31/2013 5:08:50 PM PST by xzins]
I won’t vote for someone who would define sodomy as marriage.
If the 2016 GOP nominee is pro-same-sex-marriage, he or she will even more surely lose to Hillary Clinton. Ms. Henry won’t tell you that. I just did.
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