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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
05.09.2008
A Sad Day for Gay Republicans?

Minutes after John McCain finished his speech tonight, a prominent gay conservative wrote me with this observation:

I liked it a lot. I'm delighted I was wrong to expect a reference to SSM [Same-Sex Marriage]. Am I right that this was the first GOP acceptance speech since probably 1992 not to mention defending traditional marriage or something similar?

I'd have to do a search through the past 16 years of previous acceptance speeches, but I believe my friend is correct. Indeed, the difference in tone on gay issues -- for those who were listening specifically -- between this convention and the last is markedly different. Which isn't much of a surprise, seeing that McCain's entirely comfortable around gays and has no interest in the GOP base's anti-gay hysteria. The Advocate's Sean Kennedy, no McCain partisan he, notes that, aside from a Mike Huckabee promise to save marriage from the gays, "there was an utter lack of rhetoric on gay issues" at the convention. Other gay sources within the GOP tell me they are very pleased not only with the McCain pick, but also, surprisingly, with the Palin one (I've been looking into her record on gay issues this past week and will have more to report later). All in all, they view McCain's ascension (and the rejection of Mitt Romney, whom the Log Cabin Republicans attempted to torpedo in the primary) as a move in the right direction for the GOP, and whatever the weird church revival feel of the convention this past week, I think they're correct.

So if you're looking at this convention from a gay Republican standpoint (as opposed to a sympathetic liberal one), I don't think it's fair to conclude, as my colleague John Judis recently did, that this has been a "sad" week for them. Of course, it's not like gay Republicans have had a lot of great days over the past 8 years...

--James Kirchick 

Posted: Friday, September 05, 2008 1:52 AM with 8 comment(s)

Comments

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hemlock41 said:

Interesting post.

It is still sad, though, that their party's mere willingness to refrain from explicitly attacking their equal rights is the only cause for "delight" that gay Republicans can take in their party on this issue. Would acknowledging the dignity and worth of gay persons (by embracing them as equally valued members of the community) really be so much to ask?

September 5, 2008 4:17 AM

ramboorider said:

Right on Hemlock. You're HAPPY when they finally stop bashing you at every chance and only bash you in the platform? I'm sure black slaves were really THRILLED when they stopped raping and lynching them and only kept raping them. Such figgin' progress.

September 5, 2008 6:39 AM

Wandreycer1 said:

SInce there are so many happy days for gay Repubicans, imagine the contrast.

September 5, 2008 7:20 AM

purcellneil said:

Gay Republicans really don't elicit much sympathy from me - who cares if they have a bad day?  By aligning themselves with a party that only occasionally veils its contempt for them, they help to make possible thousands of bad days for the rest of us.  When will they wake up?

September 5, 2008 7:44 AM

K.Crake said:

So Palin is accepting of homosexuality and yet still believes that contraception for use between a man and a woman should be illegal?  I wonder if she will provide a gay-out clause for purchasing contraceptives in the event she becomes president.  

September 5, 2008 9:51 AM

BHLnyc said:

I'm not sure I share Jamie's optimism on this. I suppose it's a minor victory that there were no overt calls for DoMA type legislation, but maybe that's simply a function of the fact that their opposition to SSM is so well-accepted that it just doesn't bear repeating. In the same way that Democrats don't have to announce that they're in favor of healthy puppies and rainbows, the Republicans hostility to gay rights is just taken as an article of faith.

September 5, 2008 10:36 AM

icarusr said:

I once sat at dinner with six or seven gay Republicans - in Houston, three worked for Anderson and three for Enron before the fall.  It was the most disagreeable three hours I have ever spent - since being cornered by a Revolutionary mob in a concrete hotel basement when I was twelve.  The smug bitchiness of a "let them eat cake" attitude while their own party was buggering the hell out of gay rights was too much for me to handle.  Reading Palin's speech, I was reminded of that dinner; reading Jamie's note, it occurred to me that Palin is a gay Republican in drag.

September 5, 2008 10:51 AM

orkeny said:

Invisibility is keen. When they ignore you, they like you!

September 5, 2008 11:32 AM