Conservatives will miss gay-bashing
as an electoral strategy.
Wow.
In his second
inaugural speech, President
Barack Obama finally sounded like the guy progressives thought would be
governing the United States starting in 2009.
If
he puts those poetic words into action, he may leave a much stronger legacy after
eight years than he did in his first term.
Perhaps
the biggest thing he did was proclaim solidarity with gay Americans at a level
never seen before in this kind of address.
“Our journey is not complete until our gay brothers and sisters are treated like anyone else under the law,” Obama said. “For if we are truly created equal, then surely the love we commit to one another must be equal, as well.”
Was
that as brave as it might appear? Perhaps. While Obama probably won’t ever have
to win a campaign again, he does still have to pay attention to the Democratic
Party’s prospects — especially in 2014.
But
Obama’s call for gay rights in his inauguration speech isn’t the first sign
that gay-bashing no longer works wonders at the polls. Marriage equality ballot
initiatives in Maryland, Washington state, and Maine prevailed in 2012. Similar
rights may be achieved through a more straightforward
legislative process in
five states in the near future: Illinois, Hawaii, Rhode Island, Minnesota, and
Delaware.
This
is a clear win for our nation’s integrity. As Obama put it: “Peace in our time
requires the constant advance of those principles that our common creed describes;
tolerance and opportunity, human dignity and justice.”
At
this rate, it won’t be long until gay-bashing becomes as absurd as calling for
Big Oil to put the lead back into our gasoline.
Those
poor right-wingers. Finding winning campaign issues is getting tougher and
tougher for them.
War
won’t do anymore. Especially after our miserable failure to export democracy to
Iraq and Afghanistan, it’s no easy sell.
Joking
about climate change is passé. After Superstorm Sandy leveled entire New York
neighborhoods and the drought parched much of the Missouri Valley, pretending
it doesn’t exist is getting too hard for all but the most reality-challenged
politicians.
Even
sounding tough about government spending is tricky. Before the hyped-up “fiscal
cliff” negotiations made calls for “entitlement cuts” routine, any talk of even
trimming Medicare or Social Security benefits was seen as political suicide.
Did you notice that even though Congress and the White House knew full well when we’d reach the cliff’s edge, they waited until Election Day to start any kind of serious negotiations over a budget deal? What, was the Office of Management and Budget on some kind of tropical vacation?
Did you notice that even though Congress and the White House knew full well when we’d reach the cliff’s edge, they waited until Election Day to start any kind of serious negotiations over a budget deal? What, was the Office of Management and Budget on some kind of tropical vacation?
And
while U.S. conservatives must increasingly rely on code, invoking “family values”
and so forth to bash gays, this isn’t just hot air: Homosexuality is illegal in some 76 countries and in five it’s
punishable by death.
In
our country, according to the Southern
Poverty Law Center,
“gays and lesbians are more than twice as likely to be attacked in a violent
hate crime as Jews or blacks; more than four times as likely as Muslims; and 14
times as likely as Latinos.”
But
tolerance is spreading. Reportedly, the people in charge of the Boy Scouts are
finally on the verge of ending a ban on gay scouts and leaders.
Conservatives
will miss gay-bashing as an electoral strategy. After all, trumpeting hatred
for gays requires no knowledge. It’s way less time-consuming to study up on
this issue than to become an expert on things like climate change, joblessness,
or drone warfare.
Besides,
getting people to vote conservative seems to be easier if you focus on sex. The
other stuff is just too boring.
Emily
Schwartz Greco is the managing editor of OtherWords, a non-profit national editorial service run
by the Institute for Policy Studies. OtherWords columnist William A. Collins is a former
state representative and a former mayor of Norwalk, Connecticut. OtherWords.org