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Arizona
Voters Approve Proposal to Ban
Gay Marriage
The second time around proved
the charm, as Arizona voters
approved a constitutional
amendment that bans same-sex
marriage.
Proposition 102 proposed a
20-word amendment to the state
Constitution to define marriage
as between one man and one
woman. It's an attempt to do
what backers couldn't do in
2006: ensure that Arizona's
existing law banning same-sex
marriages will not be overturned
by a judge.
"Prop. 102's victory shows that
a simple and timeless value like
marriage unites people of all
ethnic, religious and political
backgrounds," said Cathi Herrod,
president of the Center for
Arizona Policy, which lobbied
heavily to get lawmakers to
refer the matter to the ballot.
In 2006, Arizona voters rejected
a same-sex marriage amendment,
making it the only state ever to
turn down such a ban. However,
that measure included a
provision that would have barred
state and local governments from
offering domestic-partner
benefits to their employees, and
many felt that doomed the
measure two years ago.
The marriage amendment returned
to the political arena this year
after a contentious debate in
the state Senate that mirrored
the passions the marriage issue
creates in society.
Its immediate effect is no
change: Same-sex marriage
already is against the law in
Arizona and the ban has been
upheld by the courts.
But proponents, many of them
coming from Arizona's churches,
argued that the constitutional
amendment is needed to guard
against a potential legal
turnabout. |
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Hispanics
Say No to Gay Marriage
LOS ANGELES (By Dan Morain and
Jessica Garrison, LATimes) November
6, 2008
―
Opponents of gay marriage shrewdly
targeted the implications for
schools, churches and children,
analysts say. The measure on the
ballot was only 14 words long -- a
simple statement that "only marriage
between a man and a woman is valid
or recognized in California."
But supporters of California
Proposition 8, in what political
analysts said was an extremely
effective strategy, made the race
about much more than that.
They were able to focus the debate
on their assertion that without the
ban, public school children would be
indoctrinated into accepting gay
marriage against their parents'
wishes, churches would be sanctioned
for not performing same-sex weddings
and the institution of marriage
would be irreparably harmed.
Supporters of gay marriage, along
with political leaders including
Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-San
Francisco) and the state's
superintendent of public
instruction, denounced those
messages as scare tactics, but they
were not able to sway voters.
Preliminary returns showed
Proposition 8 passing 52% to 48%.
"It was masterful of the campaign to
raise the implications of what it
could mean in terms of the school
system," said Republican political
consultant Wayne Johnson. He said
voters may have started out
"thinking that as long as it doesn't
affect me, do what you want" but the
supporters shifted the focus to
children.
In the wake of the vote, gay couples
and their supporters mourned, held
rallies, including one in West
Hollywood on Wednesday night, filed
legal challenges and, in some cases,
rushed to the county recorder's
office to tie the knot before the
state stopped allowing it. The Los
Angeles County registrar-recorder
stopped issuing same-sex marriage
licenses Wednesday afternoon.
At the West Hollywood rally, which
drew thousands to San Vicente and
Santa Monica boulevards Wednesday
night, demonstrators vented their
frustrations and cheered when
passing cars honked in support.
While officers were shutting down
streets for the rally, a deputy was
accidentally struck by a pickup and
suffered minor injuries.
For many demonstrators who had
backed Barack Obama for president,
Tuesday's elections brought mixed
emotions.
"I felt happy and then I felt
crushed," said Chris Thurman, 24. He
and another friend, 29-year-old T.J.
Prokop, carried signs depicting
separate straight drinking fountains
and gay drinking fountains, a
reference to the racially segregated
South in the pre-Civil Rights era.
Demonstrator Chris Moll, 35, who was
married in October and was carrying
his 18-month-old daughter, Ella, in
his arms, said the election did not
alter his feelings about his
marriage.
"Whatever happened last night does
not change how I feel about my
husband and my family," Moll said.
"It is a tough feeling, but I know
this is a strong community, and I
know we'll find the next step."
Earlier Wednesday, Paul Waters of
Valley Village summed up his
feelings: "disappointment."
"Straight couples don't have a way
to be able to truly understand the
depth of what this means." Waters
married his partner of 15 years,
Kevin Voecks, on June 17.
Like them, many gay-rights activists
spent the day asking themselves how
they had been defeated. At the polls
Tuesday, voters throughout the state
said proponents' argument about
schools was a major part of the
answer.
"I'm concerned about having to
educate children," Sharon Smith said
after she voted in Altadena.
Smith and other African American
voters played a crucial role in the
outcome. An exit poll of California
voters showed that black voters
sided in favor of the measure by
margins of more than 2 to 1. Not
only was the black vote weighted
heavily in favor of Proposition 8,
but black turnout -- spurred by
Barack Obama's campaign for
president -- was unusually large,
making up roughly 10% of the voters.
The exit poll was conducted by
Edison Media Research and Mitofsky
International for a consortium of
news organizations.
The campaign against Proposition 8
also did relatively poorly in Los
Angeles County, where voters were
divided almost evenly. By contrast,
on the other high-profile social
issue on the ballot, Proposition 4
on abortion, the liberal side
carried Los Angeles by a margin of
almost 200,000 votes.
On Wednesday, the proposition's
backers celebrated their victory.
"Marriage has been protected," said
Cal Schell, 65, a resident of the
Sacramento suburb of Rancho Cordova.
Schell said he felt sad that
"there's a lot of people who have a
lot of angst over this. But it is
very important that this be
protected. . . . Go to any country,
any place in the world. Marriage
between a man and a woman has been a
part of our being clear back to the
days of early time."
Ron Prentice of the Protect Marriage
Coalition said in a statement that
"the people of California stood up
for traditional marriage and
reclaimed this great institution. We
are gratified that voters chose to
protect traditional marriage and to
enshrine its importance in the state
Constitution."
The campaign against Proposition 8
refused to formally concede
Wednesday, saying that there were
too many provisional and mail-in
ballots to be counted.
The exact number of those ballots
remains unclear -- officials said
they had no precise count. But a
survey by Times reporters of the
state's registrars indicated that
more than 1.7 million ballots
probably remained uncounted. To
change the outcome on Proposition 8,
the opponents would have to win
about two-thirds of those votes,
which campaign strategists privately
conceded was highly improbable.
In the meantime, gay couples tried
to come to terms with what it meant
to lose the right to marry.
Susan Allen of Orange, who married
her partner, Robin Lambert, on July
11, said she went to the county
clerk's office in Santa Ana on
Wednesday with the marriage
certificate that she had been issued
in the summer.
"I said, 'Is this any good?' " Allen
said she asked the clerk of the
certificate that she had had framed
and hung on the wall. The clerk's
answer, Allen said, breaking into
tears, was that "she was sorry, but
she just did not know."
California Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown
has said the marriages performed
between June 17 and Tuesday will
remain valid -- but legal experts
expect the marriages to be
challenged and say there is no clear
answer as to what the courts will
decide.
The race -- among the nation's most
closely watched ballot campaigns as
well as its most expensive --
revealed a deep cultural rift in
California.
Many Proposition 8 supporters
believed that the future of
traditional families was at stake,
while opponents were fighting for
what they considered the fundamental
right of gay people to be treated
equally under the law.
The exit poll and a county-by-county
review of the results show some
major divisions.
As a group, voters under 30 opposed
Proposition 8. Whites narrowly
opposed it, while Latinos favored it
by a small margin.
Opponents of a gay marriage ban drew
most of their support along the
coastal and wine country communities
of the state's northern areas. San
Francisco voters, for example,
opposed Proposition 8 in droves,
with 76.5% voting against the
initiative. But those margins were
not enough to overcome substantial
support for a ban in Southern
California and the Central Valley.
In a news conference at San
Francisco City Hall on Wednesday,
Mayor Gavin Newsom said he would not
have done anything differently.
Newsom set the constitutional
amendment in motion four years ago
when he began marrying gay couples,
leading to the court case that
legalized same-sex unions.
Some political figures have
criticized Newsom for pushing the
issue too fast. But he rejected that
idea.
"I don't regret anything," he said.
"I don't regret standing up for
people."
He added he was "tremendously
optimistic" that California would
someday reverse itself on same-sex
marriage.
For some voters Tuesday, the
decision was not easy.
Jeffrey Jackson of Lynwood said he
struggled with how he would vote on
Proposition 8. On the one hand, as a
black man casting his ballot for
Obama, he said he had a deep and
personal reverence for civil rights.
On the other, he is a Pentecostal
Christian.
In the end, it was that religious
faith that guided his decision.
"It's straight biblical," said
Jackson, 46. "It's just not right."
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