Exit Poll Shocker: 21%+ of Gays Vote for Bush.

Exit polls from CNN and the Washington Post report that 4 percent of the overall electorate self-identified as gay, lesbian or bisexual, down from 5 percent in 1996, (the Washington Blade has a good wrap up). CNN says Kerry garnered 77 percent of the gay vote; compared with the 70 percent that went to Gore four years ago (the 2000 figure is from an ABC poll). But hold on to your horses: Bush got 23 percent of gay votes this time, says CNN - the same percentage as four years ago. The Washington Post comes close to the same conclusion, putting the gay vote breakdown at 78 percent Kerry, 21 percent Bush and 2 percent Nader. And the polls were skewing toward Kerry!

Very quick analysis: gay culture is so dominated by liberal-left (and left-left) activists and media that we forget that many gay folks are just folks, going to work, running small businesses, attending church and worrying about security, taxes and crime. They don't view Bush with the paranoid vision of gay activists.

I can also relate that among a good quarter of gay folks there is outright hostility toward a dominant gay left that does not speak on their behalf, though it claims to. As for the Log Cabin Republicans, their "non-endorsement" of Bush didn't seem to have much effect on the gay GOP electorate, either.

[Update: In 2000, Bush actually received about 25% of the gay vote according to exit polls. If we take the 21% gay vote figure that the Washington Post reports Bush received this year, the falloff is 4% -- within the margin of error.]

Honest Abe.

I never put much stock in claims by Larry Kramer and others that Abe Lincoln was homosexual. But this review of an upcoming posthumous work by psychologist C.A. Tripp does seem to make a case. Still, there have been so many assertions that historical personages are "gay" based on scant proof that even a mountain of circumstantial evidence in Lincoln's case is likely to be scorned.

It’s Different Over There.

The European Parliament forced the rejection of the Italian nominee to be the EU's commissioner for Justice, Freedom and Security after he caused an uproar by saying "homosexuality is a sin." OK, he additionally said marriage was designed to give women "the right to have children and the protection of a man," which also didn't sit too well with the liberal parliament.

LCR: Missed Opportunity.

As of Thursday evening, still nothing on the Log Cabin site that I can find acknowledging President Bush's unexpected critique of the GOP platform's opposition to civil unions. Even if Bush's statement is too little, too late, it's nevertheless a step in the right direction that could be leveraged to create dialogue. But LCR is silent. Meanwhile, Bush's statement is being bashed (no surprise) on the Stonewall Democrats' website, and even referenced on their home page.

The Righteous Left.

Blogger Tim Hulsey's My Stupid Dog site takes a look at a fundraiser for the Charlottesville, Vir., AIDS/HIV Services Group (ASG) that turned into an anti-GOP hate fest. Hulsey notes:

There was one joke claiming that Bush and an al-Qaida terrorist were alike, because each one "takes flying lessons and works to destroy the country." (You see, Bush was a member of the Texas Air National Guard, which makes him practically the same as the folks who flew those planes into the World Trade Center. Get it?)

And he comments:

[W]hen a nonprofit charity with tax-exempt status and a generous share of public money sponsors explicitly partisan political invective, I have a very big problem. ...

Over the past three years, Congress has increased public funds for organizations like ASG by nearly thirty percent. Meanwhile, Virginia's [GOP controlled] legislature retained and expanded drug subsidies during hard economic times, and even expanded its own funding for AIDS prevention efforts. Thanks largely to these massive infusions of public money, ASG has managed to expand over the past two years -- renting larger offices, starting a new family-housing plan, and serving more clients over a larger area than ever before.

In short, Republican legislators helped make AIDS/HIV Services Group the social-service organization it is today. Last night, while their backs were turned, they finally received their reward.

And it's all par for the course. But remind me, which is supposed to be the Party of Hate?

A Rove Retreat.

New York Times' Headline: Bush Says His Party Is Wrong to Oppose Gay Civil Unions:

President Bush said in an interview this past weekend that he disagreed with the Republican Party platform opposing civil unions of same-sex couples and that the matter should be left up to the states.

As instapundit and others point out, this appears to contradict the position of the failed, Bush-backed Federal Marriage Amendment (unless you believe, as Bush does, that the amendment would only prevent judges from imposing civil unions, which is not how some of the FMA's own backers saw it).

Is the Log Cabin Burning?

Recent revelations and critiques of the Log Cabin Republicans are coming not from gay lefties, but from gay conservatives. Among the charges, as described by the Washington Blade: Leader Patrick Guerriero has crossed over from a nonendorsement of Bush to actively attacking the president and aiding Kerry; that the national office vindictively expelled the Palm Beach chapter after it voted 15-0 to endorse Bush; and, most damning, that Guerriero's lieutenant, political director and chief media contact Christopher Barron, has been a long-time volunteer operative for John Edwards and submitted a written testimonial praising Edwards on a web site at the time Edwards announced his candidacy for president in 2003.

Gay Patriot broke the Barron story, complete with documentation, and Boi from Troi has posted a response from LCR. (which, if it's on LCR's own web site, I can't find).

Log Cabin counters that the Palm Beach chapter violated club rules against local clubs making national endorsements, and says Guerriero's TV appearances and press interviews have targeted Bush on his support for the marriage amendment. Less convincing is the defense of Barron, which LCR seems not to understand is a Big Deal.

For LCR to succeed, it needs to be seen fully as a Republican player, even if it can't endorse the party's presidential nominee this go round. Barron is a gift to social conservatives who think LCR never belonged in the party and say it ought to be bid good riddance. That Barron's position was filled, apparently, without a public search also calls into question how LCR's board and management are operating.

If Bush does win (about which I'm still doubtful), who will have access to his White House? Certainly not the highly partisan Human Rights Campaign and National Gay & Lesbian Task Force, both Democratic Party fronts that have burned their bridges to even GOP moderates. And, alas, not LCR, unless perhaps Barron makes way for a less-blemished Republican (or a better defense is forthcoming), and Guerriero becomes less concerned about winning Cheryl Jacques' and Matt Foreman's approval.

How about talking about the need for vigilance in Iraq, personal social security accounts and market-based health care reform, Patrick, as well as tort reform and standing up to the trial lawyers' lobby. If these aren't in your vocabulary, and aren't being emphasized in your public appearances and press interviews, then something really is seriously amiss at LCR.

Passing Grades.

The Human Rights Campaign's new congressional scorecard is out. On the plus side, unlike in some previous years the scores haven't been larded up to include abortion and affirmative action votes. But it looks like both John Kerry and John Edwards are scored half credit on the Federal Marriage Amendment vote, even though they failed to show up and vote against the amendment. So apparently you can miss the actual vote but still got a passing mark. I wish my high school had been so lenient when it came to key exams!

Addendum: Despite the half-credit on the FMA (and on a hate crimes measure he apparently missed), Kerry still scores "100" from HRC. Must be the new math.