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Demonizing Gay
Couples
Andrew Sullivan
Oct. 31, 2004
THE IMPACT ON GAYS: I've been trying to think of what to say
about what appears to be the enormous success the Republicans had
in using gay couples' rights to gain critical votes in key
states. In eight more states now, gay couples have no
relationship rights at all. Their legal ability to visit a spouse
in hospital, to pass on property, to have legal protections for
their children has been gutted. If you are a gay couple living in
Alabama, you know one thing: your family has no standing under
the law; and it can and will be violated by strangers. I'm not
surprised by this. When you put a tiny and despised minority up
for a popular vote, the minority usually loses. But it is deeply,
deeply dispiriting nonetheless. A lot of gay people are
devastated this morning, and terrified. We have seen, and not for
the first time, how using fear of a minority can be so effective
a tool in building a political movement. The single most
important issue for Republican voters, according to exit polls,
was not the war on terror or Iraq or the economy. It was "moral
values." Karl Rove understood the American psyche better than I
did. By demonizing gay couples, the Republicans were able to
bring in whole swathes of new anti-gay believers into their
party. With new senators Jim DeMint and Tom Coburn, two of the
most anti-gay politicians in America, we can only brace ourselves
for what is now coming.
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