Kerry flip-flopping on gay 'marriage'
Gary Bauer
The Interim
John
Kerry's flip-flops are well-documented and becoming more and more frequent.
Almost daily, it seems, the Kerry campaign offers us contradictory statements
on a variety of issues and this week has been no exception. Yesterday,
it was traditional marriage.
On the campaign trail, Senator Kerry insists he supports marriage remaining
the union of one man and one woman - even though he voted against the
Defence of Marriage Act and opposed the Federal Marriage Amendment.
Senator Kerry says he supports efforts in the state of Massachusetts
to overturn the state supreme court's imposition of same-sex "marriage"
by judicial fiat. But a February 2004 USA Today headline read, "Kerry
signed letter backing gay marriage" - referring to a July 2002 letter
opposing a state marriage amendment in Massachusetts.
After 71 per cent of the people of Missouri voted last month in support
of a state amendment affirming traditional marriage, Kerry told a Kansas
City, Mo. NBC affiliate the he too would have voted for the Missouri
marriage amendment.
But now, John Kerry has once again switched sides. In an interview
published in a homosexual magazine, Kerry insists he was "unbriefed"
on the specific language of the Missouri amendment and would not have
voted for it. He then goes on to elaborate: "Well, the presidency is
the power of bully pulpit to some degree, and you have to talk reasonably
to people. Look - you have to begin at a beginning. It took us a long
time to pass the civil rights law. It took us a long time for women
to get the right to vote in America. You have to fight for things. And
you pick a starting point and my starting point is to try to pass ENDA
and try to pass hate crimes. And you begin to educate people, and hopefully
you change the climate and tone. You've got to begin with ENDA and begin
with hate crimes and proceed to grow people's understanding."
My friends, on an issue as fundamental as the meaning of marriage,
I don't want you to be similarly "unbriefed." One candidate in this
election supports a constitutional amendment to protect traditional
marriage so that future generations of children are raised with mothers
and fathers. That candidate is George W. Bush.
John Kerry, evidently, wants to use the "bully pulpit" of the presidency
to advance the homosexual agenda one step at a time so that some day,
same-sex "marriage" will be legal.
Gary Bauer is chairman of the Campaign for Working Families. This
originally appeared as part of Bauer's Sept. 17 daily e-mail dispatch.