Bush's 2nd Term Gay
Agenda
365Gay.com
By Doreen Brandt
Posted: November 3, 2004 8:03 pm ET
(Washington) As George W. Bush delivered his acceptance speech
Wednesday in Washington, he seemingly held out an olive branch to
Democrats, but elsewhere in the Administration the signs of a
second Bush term were far more ominous.
Buoyed by a decisive win and a Congress more firmly in GOP
control, Bush is prepared to further advance social conservatism.
On the Hill, Republicans were warning Democrats it would be
unhealthy to oppose them, pointing to the crushing defeat
suffered by Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle in South
Dakota.
In particular, Republican leaders warned Democrats not to
think of any more filibusters of Bush nominations, especially for
the bench. Democrats managed to talk down several Bush judicial
nominations of extreme conservative judges during the President's
first term.
The warning comes as speculation mounts that William Rehnquist
is preparing to resign as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. At
least three other justices are also said to be considering
retirement.
Court watchers say that Rehnquist is unlikely to finish the
year on the bench following complications from cancer
surgery.
With the possibility of as many as four justices to replace,
Bush could pack the court with ultra conservatives who would
serve for a generation.
Such a conservative court would never hear arguments on
same-sex marriage or any other gay rights issue.
Then there is the matter of the federal constitutional
amendment to prevent gays from marrying. Bush began pushing for
the amendment shortly after the Massachusetts Supreme Court
approved gay marriage, but the legislation failed this year
partly because Republicans could not agree on whether it should
include a ban on civil unions.
The amendment's author, Marilyn Musgrave, won reelection to
the House from Colorado. On Wednesday she said she intends to
reintroduce the measure in the next session of Congress. This
time, she predicts, Republicans will be unified.
Matt Daniels of the conservative Alliance for Marriage agrees.
Daniels says only the Federal Marriage Amendment will protect
marriage. The Alliance helped win voter approval for
constitutional amendments in 11 states Tuesday. He said that the
high voter support for the amendments will serve as a warning for
Congress that voters want a federal amendment.
Hate crimes and job protection bills that would protect the
LGBT community from discrimination are expected to be
reintroduced by Democrats. But, don't hold your breath waiting
for them to come to a vote. Republicans today called both
measures "dead in the water".
The Bush administration is also expected to launch a new
attack on gays working for the federal government. The Office of
the Special Counsel, which was set up to protect civil servants
from discrimination, earlier this year said that despite an
executive order signed by then president Bill Clinton, gay
workers were not protected from harassment or dismissal on the
grounds of sexual orientation.
After protests from Democratic members of Congress the White
House gay workers were covered, but only a few months later began
efforts to dismantle job protections for LGBT workers in
government contracts.
When the scheme was exposed, the Administration again backed
down, but many gay government employees believe the Bush
Administration will renew those efforts.
In the area of AIDS, expect federal funding to the Ryan White
Act to be frozen again, and it is likely Republicans will demand
federal money only go to organizations that emphasize
abstinence.
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