A nice
overview by former Log Cabin spokesman Kevin Ivers on John
McCain's plusses and minuses for gays. Excerpt:
He stood with gay Republicans against the ugly tactics in South
Carolina in 2000 and the early pandering by the 2000 Bush campaign
to anti-gay groups. He voted against the FMA in the Senate, and
spoke against it on the Senate floor, but he also voted for DOMA,
against ENDA, supports "don't ask, don't tell" and backed the
Arizona anti-gay marriage referendum (but so did John Kerry back
such a measure in 2004).
He led the fight…to repeal the repulsive Dornan Amendment, which
sought to create witchhunts to drive soldiers out of the military
who tested HIV positive after enlistment and cut off all their
benefits.... And when I raised "don't ask, don't tell"...he had the
same political (almost Hillaryesque) answer: "When General Colin
Powell says it's time to repeal it, we can do it." ...
He already went to Liberty University a long time ago, and much
like he did at CPAC last week, he didn't give them anything other
than very polite attention and a restatement that he is who he is,
take him or leave him.
Ivers concludes, "Conviction, politics, bravery,
skittishness-all rolled up in one." But still, he represents a huge
step forward for a GOP standard-bearer.
More. Comments reader "Avee""
gay issues have fallen off the radar...because the Democrats
think Obama and/or Clinton should not be pushed for any kind of
real commitment to advancing gay equality other than feel-good
rhetoric, and Republicans realize it's probably futile to try to
press McCain for anything (other than continued opposition to the
federal marriage amendment, which does put him ahead of W.)
I agree. Without a GOP nominee who is shilling for the federal
marriage amendment, gay issues will be all but unheard this go
round.
A caveat. If the Senate's Democratic leadership
finally allows the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) to come
to the floor (it passed the House last fall), it could cause a
ripple. The closer it is to November, the more likely President
Bush will feel compelled to veto it, so as to keep already
alienated social conservatives from sitting out the election. Which
may explain why Senate Democratic leaders are waiting to move the
bill-helping ensure a veto keeps gays on the reservation.
Update. Well, it's getting pretty obvious just
how ugly and below-the-belt the "progressive" left media is going
to get in order to elect their new messiah,
isn't it.