Clinton's Gay
Constituency Angry
WASHINGTON (AllPolitics, Sept. 21) --
President Clinton chose the small hours of
Saturday to sign a bill denying federal
recognition of same-sex marriages, and the
stealth treatment was no mistake.
It is not a great political issue for Clinton,
and his decision to sign the bill is angering his
loyal gay constituency.
There was no attempt to call attention to the
signing because the president believes the
lawmakers who sponsored it had
"dubious" motives, according to White
House press secretary Mike McCurry.
Clinton has long been on record as saying he
would sign the bill into law, even though he has
charged that many of its supporters were just
seeking a way to bash gays and lesbians.
Members of the homosexual community already
promise a constitutional challenge of the new
law, and they charge that Republicans picked this
time to raise the issue in order to get the most
political impact. The bill's sponsor said just
the opposite was true.
"It wasn't really on our agenda at all at
the beginning of the year -- it was forced on us
by the homosexual extremists," said
Republican Rep. Bob Barr of Georgia.
Opponents of the new law say Clinton is wading
"into the mud with Bob Dole on this
issue."
"We believe what the President has done
is very shameful," said David Smith of the
Human Rights Campaign. "What he has done is
instituted a law, put his name on a law, that
creates a second-class status for gay
people."
The law leaves it up to each state to decide
whether to recognize same-sex marriages. None has
to date, but the issue is pending in Hawaii.
Clinton said the bill also "clarifies, for
purposes of federal law, the operative meaning of
the terms 'marriage' and 'spouse.'"
Federal benefits would be denied to same-sex
couples under the new law even in a state that
ratified such unions.
"It becomes a federal issue in two
ways," Barr said. "One, to protect the
federal treasury against being raided by the
homosexual movement. Secondly, to stop one state
from being forced to accept homosexual marriages
from another state."
Clinton's stand on the marriage issue, for
many gays, marks another disappointment in the
same vein as the president's ambiguous 'don't
ask, don't tell' military service policy.
But many in the gay constituency believe they
realistically have nowhere else to turn
politically.
They note the White House has worked hard for
them on other fronts, such as pushing for the
Employment Non-Discrimination Act that would
extend protection to gays and lesbians in the
workplace. It failed in the Senate this year by
one vote.
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