From Deseret News archives:

Gay-nuptial amendment up for House vote today

Published: Thursday, Sept. 30, 2004 8:55 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
WASHINGTON — Win or lose, if Republicans in the U.S. House vote later today on a constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman, it will send political messages to at least three different audiences: conservative voters, Democrats and the judiciary.

Especially the judiciary. Everywhere on Capitol Hill these days, lawmakers from Utah and elsewhere are taking shots at judges they say are making law, not interpreting it.

"What America's founders intended to be the least dangerous branch has become the powerful, and liberty itself is at stake," Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, told the Christian Coalition's Road to Victory 2004 conference recently.

"The timing (of the Marriage Protection Amendment) has been foisted upon us by judicial activists and their runaway courts," insisted House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, during a press conference earlier this week.

With a presidential election scarcely a month away, those are the kind of fire-and-brimstone stump speeches intended to rally conservatives, especially religious conservatives, and further define the differences between Democratic nominee John Kerry, who believes the issue should be left up to the states, and President Bush, who supports a constitutional amendment.

Story continues below
House Republicans are still piqued that Senate Republicans could not muster the votes earlier this year to pass a constitutional measure, and the House would love "to give it back to the Senate to do another vote," said Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah.

Democrats in close races will be put on the spot, too, Bishop said, calling it a "natural outgrowth" of Washingtonian politics. If they vote against the amendment, it could hurt re-election chances in some districts; if they vote for it, they defy a loyal Democratic constituency, not to mention party leadership.

DeLay makes no secret about the political motives behind today's debate.

"The American people need to know where their representatives stand," he said. "It will be part of, and should be part of, the debate and the elections that are upcoming."

It should not be a wedge issue in Utah's tightly contested 2nd Congressional District.

Rep. Jim Matheson, the only Democrat in the Utah delegation, has said from the beginning he supported the amendment, even though he paid a price with Utah gays and lesbians, who protested against Matheson at the state convention by turning their backs on him during his speech.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

Hot Rod behind mic for Lakers

It will be good to hear "real play by play or even as analyst with Joel...

i hope hot rod gets confused while doing the play by play and thinks he's...

The BCS bowl team match-ups aren't what you think. First, yes the top two...

Even Ed Gein was found competant to stand trial.

BYU football: Bronco weighs in on Hall

So Bronco's okay with the churches "standard bearers" spewing hatred. Wierd....

Non-BCS schools not given fair shot

By putting TCU & Boise together that means that the other 3 BCS games will...

Ticky... Tacky...

High school girls soccer: All-region

The DNews requests the lists from the region coaches. Ask your coaches why...

Flash apologize, offer refund

This story brings back memories of an Ogden base ball team, who promiced if a...

GO UTES!!!

Advertisements