Below The Beltway

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Republicans Against Proposition 8

by @ 9:15 am on October 25, 2008.

Former California Congressman Tom Campbell, a Republican, is voting no on Proposition 8:

Republicans often say that courts should apply the law, not create it. It was really quite a stretch for the California Supreme Court to say that the Constitution of California already contains a right for same-sex marriage, when the Constitution doesn’t say a word about it. The truth is: It’s a new issue. To those who say the Court got it wrong, I say: I agree. It’s for us to decide. Now, let’s make the right decision. And that right decision, in my view, is to allow same-sex marriage in California.

Republicans believe deeply that government should be limited. Government has no business making distinctions between people based on their personal lives. That’s why, as a Californian and a Republican who has held elective office at the federal and state levels, I will be voting No on Proposition 8.

(…)

We’ve seen the walls fall down that once stood against women’s rights; the same has been true for racial equality. When my mother was born, women still couldn’t vote in many states. When I entered school, black and white couples couldn’t get married in many states. It’s easy to forget those things, but it wasn’t all that long ago. Someday, we’ll tell our children that, when two adults in our state who wanted to get married were told they couldn’t, we had the chance to change that. I want to be able to tell the next generation that I was part of ending discrimination, not making it a permanent part of the law.

Campbell isn’t alone, there’s a group of Republican officials who have come out against the effort to ban same sex-marriage, including a certain Governor you may have heard of.

They’ve also put out a few ads, including one that claims freedom as a Republican value:

Good for them.

H/T: The Moderate Voice

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3 Responses to “Republicans Against Proposition 8”

  1. David Weintraub Says:

    Yes, absolutely good for them.

    It’s worth remembering, though, that the right to marry the person of one’s choice without regard to race was decided, not by referendum, but by a Supreme Court that found it in the Constitution. If that right were subject to a popular vote, would Campbell be saying that the Supreme Court got it wrong, but that he personally would be voting in favor of marriage equality – or that such a fundamental right should never be left up to the whim of the majority?

  2. James Young Says:

    Well, Campbell got it half right.

  3. The conservative case against Prop 8 : Equality Loudoun Says:

    [...] tip to Doug at Below the Beltway, where I left this comment: Yes, absolutely good for [...]

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