Gay Marriage as an issue in Presidential Elections (user search)
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  Gay Marriage as an issue in Presidential Elections (search mode)
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Question: How long before mainstream Republicans give up on this as an issue in national elections?
#1
0-5 years
#2
6-10 years
#3
11-15 years
#4
16-20 years
#5
they'll just be a minority party forever
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Author Topic: Gay Marriage as an issue in Presidential Elections  (Read 4671 times)
Bojack Horseman
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« on: March 05, 2014, 09:29:55 PM »

Wasn't that one of the big deciding factors in Ohio in 2004 that Bush supported a federal marriage amendment? 62% of Ohioans voted against marriage equality in '04, which obviously crossed party lines, and seemed to push Bush over the top.
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Bojack Horseman
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« Reply #1 on: March 09, 2014, 06:01:56 PM »

Before the Supreme Court punted on Hollingsworth, I thought that this would be the Roe vs. Wade of my generation, the Supreme Court ruling that the Republican Party will spend the next 40 years trying to undo. Abortion will always be an issue, and I think gay marriage will be as well.
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Bojack Horseman
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« Reply #2 on: March 09, 2014, 07:00:17 PM »

Before the Supreme Court punted on Hollingsworth, I thought that this would be the Roe vs. Wade of my generation, the Supreme Court ruling that the Republican Party will spend the next 40 years trying to undo. Abortion will always be an issue, and I think gay marriage will be as well.

Abortion and gay marriage are not remotely the same thing.

Though I lean pro-choice, I will readily admit that the pro-lifers have legitimate claims about "protecting the unborn". Abortion is terminating cells or a fetus that will actually become a human being. Even among the pro-choice crowd, there are huge divides on how far abortion should be permitted to go (example: 1st trimester abortions are generally tolerated, while 3rd trimesters are very much opposed). I'm pro-choice and am deeply uncomfortable with abortion and the procedures. Abortion divides something like 49% - 45% approve/disapprove, while gay marriage is riding high at 53% to 58% approval and rapidly growing favorability.

Gay marriage afects no one except the two getting involved. Abortion has very real impacts and is morally questionable. Gay marriage will be more like slavery and prohibition: resolved, a large majority will be like "no duh" in the future, but it will leave marks on the political landscape for several generations before time makes it irrelevant.

Bad comparison man

This is the Christian right we're talking about. These are the people the GOP has to pander to in order to get elected, and these are the people that think that because folks like you and I can get married in certain states, that some magical "god" will destroy America. I thought the conservative firestorm that would come from a nationwide gay marriage ruling would open Pandora's Box just like Roe V. Wade did.

That and the fact that the people that vote for them just aren't that bright anyway.
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