Tag Archive | "newt gingrich"

Gingrich: Pro-Gay Laws Are Better Than Pro-Gay Court Rulings

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OLYMPIA, WA – Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich met with Washington State lawmakers last week and said that although that he personally disagrees with marriage equality, he believes that those states that have legalized it legislatively are “doing it the right way.” On Friday, Feb. 24, Gingrich, a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, met with legislators in the Evergreen State, where gay marriage was passed by lawmakers last month. Maryland’s Senate and House of Delegates also approved marriage equality last month.

“I think at least they’re doing it the right way, which is going through voters, giving them a chance to vote and not having a handful of judges arbitrarily impose their will,” Gingrich said of Washington State and Maryland lawmakers. “I don’t agree with it. I would vote ‘no’ if it were on a referendum where I was, but at least they’re doing it the right way.”

Here Come the Grooms: GOP Rivals Outline Different Visions for Same-Sex Marriage

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The two leading Republican presidential hopefuls are outlining competing visions for what they see as the future of same-sex marriage if they are elected next November.

Mitt Romney, once considered the unchallenged frontrunner for the 2012 GOP nomination, has outlined a proposal that calls for a three-tier system that specifically defines marriage for LGBT persons.­­­

Speaking to the Boston Herald newspaper, the former Massachusetts governor laid out a plan for a new amendment to the U.S. Constitution that includes maintaining marriage rights for heterosexual couples, recognizing existing same-sex unions, and barring recognition of future same-sex marriages.

Said Romney, 64, with respect to his plan: “I think it would keep intact those marriages which had occurred under the law but maintain future plans based on marriage being between a man and a woman,” Romney said.

California’s 2008 passage of its Marriage Protection Act — Proposition 8 — which barred same-sex marriage, led to similar conditions in the Golden State: an end to future weddings between gay couples, along with recognition of the 18,000 same-sex unions that had already been performed.

The aspiring Matchmaker-in-Chief’s plan for a Federal mandate contradicts his earlier political position. In 1994, during his unsuccessful challenge to the late Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Romney said that “the authorization of marriage on a same-sex basis falls under state jurisdiction.”

Romney’s proposal has also been criticized by members of his party. On December 15, the Log Cabin Republicans released a statement calling the plan “unworkable, unnecessary, and entirely foreign to the United States’ founding principle of equality under the law.”

The group’s Executive Director, R. Clarke Cooper, wrote that “Governor Romney is contorting himself into a pretzel trying to avoid the simplest solution to a purely political problem. The best way to strengthen all families is to grant equal access to civil marriage for all couple regardless of their orientation.”

Meanwhile, the man who has emerged as the most serious threat to Romney’s nomination aspirations has taken a completely different turn on the issue, with former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich singing the National Organization for Marriage’s (NOM) “marriage pledge,” also on December 15.

NOM’s pledge states that candidates will work to support an amendment to the Constitution barring same-sex marriage, as well as “establish[ing] a presidential commission on religious liberty to investigate and document reports of Americans who have been harassed or threatened for exercising key civil rights to organize, to speak, to donate, or to vote for marriage, and to propose new protections, if needed.”

According to NOM’s website, the pledge also requires that, if elected president, the candidate will appoint federal judges and an attorney general who “will respect the original meaning” of the Constitution’s definition of marriage as between a man and a woman.

Gingrich’s own marriage history includes two divorces, each of which reportedly ended after the 67-year-old former Georgia congressman’s infidelities, and while each of his wives was seriously ill. He married his third wife, former congressional aide Callista Bisek, in 2000 after a six-year extramarital affair he has acknowledged.

In 2010, Esquire.com reported that when asked how he could act unfaithfully towards two seriously ill wives and still give a speech on family values, Gingrich replied that “people need to hear what I have to say. There’s no one else who can say what I can say. It doesn’t matter what I live.”

Gingrich’s half-sister, Candace Gingrich-Jones, a gay woman and LGBT rights activist, said during an interview with MSNBC that her older half-brother “is definitely on the wrong side of history when it comes to [gay rights] issues.” Gingrich-Jones says that she will support President Obama’s reelection in 2012.

 

Kevin Miller Cartoon – Cain Train

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Newt’s Gay Sister to the Rescue

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By Cliff Dunn

Former U.S. Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich’s gay half-sister has weighed in on the future of her brother’s presidential campaign.

Candace Gingrich-Jones defended her half-brother over calls for him to abandon his bid for the 2012 Republican nomination, and said recent setbacks won’t deter his White House run.

“He doesn’t give up that easily,” Gingrich-Jones told The Huffington Post. “Just because some staff members weren’t with his strategy isn’t going to make him quit. If anything, I can imagine that strengthening his desire and his resolve to do good.”
Gingrich-Jones’ comments came in the wake of a mass exodus of Gingrich staffers two weeks ago. A majority of his campaign staff, including his campaign manager and a half dozen senior advisors, resigned after Gingrich left for a two-week vacation cruise; many close to the campaign were concerned about the message it sent.

The list of resignations included Gingrich’s campaign manager, Rob Johnson, longtime spokesman Rick Tyler, and strategists based in New Hampshire, South Carolina and Iowa.

Gingrich-Jones, who works with the Human Rights Campaign’s Youth and Campus Outreach Program, credits Gingrich’s third wife, Callista, with a change in her brother’s positions on gay rights.

“She’s possibly gotten LGBT issues to no longer be a red meat issue for him politically.”

Possibly. But in 2010, the former House Speaker was a major contributor to the campaign that successfully unseated three of the nine state Supreme Court justices who had ruled in favor of marriage equality in Iowa. According to the Washington, D.C.-based Center for American Progress, of $850,000 raised in that campaign, one third was donated by Newt Gingrich and his associates.
The former Georgia congressman is also on record as opposing gay marriage, including apparently for members of his own family. In a 1996 Meet the Press segment, Gingrich told interviewer Tim Russert that if his sister married in a same-sex union, he would not attend. In August 2009, Candace married longtime partner Rebecca Jones; her half-brother did not attend the Boston ceremony.

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