From Deseret News archives:
Bush victory due to stand on marriage
George W. Bush's victory by more than 3.5 million votes overall qualifies as among the most decisive presidential triumphs in history and yet, if he hadn't won by 136,483 votes out of nearly 5.5 million cast in the state of Ohio, Democrat John Kerry would have won the electoral vote and as we speak would be giving moving vans directions to Pennsylvania Avenue.
In trying to figure how Bush managed to score such a significant national mandate after starting a war with an Iraqi dictator who it turned out had no teeth, and who even managed to get a W in Ohio, a state that lost more jobs the last four years than Saddam Hussein's relatives, I followed my old sports writer habits and went to the stats.
What I discovered is evidence to suggest that Bush owes a big thank-you to the burgeoning debate over the definition of marriage.
National exit polls revealed that the No. 1 issue that brought out over 115 million voters nationwide about 14 million more than four years ago was moral values, and that the chief moral values question was whether marriage should be defined only as an institution between one man and one woman.
Nowhere was the upsurge more dramatic than in Oklahoma, where four years ago 1.2 million Oklahomans gave Bush 60 percent of the vote. This year, 1.5 million gave Bush 66 percent of the vote while passing their marriage amendment by 76 percent.
Each of the 11 marriage amendments was passed, in most cases overwhelmingly. Mississippi was highest at 86 percent, followed by Oklahoma and Georgia at 76 percent, Arkansas and Kentucky at 75 percent, North Dakota at 73 percent, Montana at 67 percent, Utah at 66 percent, Ohio at 62 percent, Michigan at 59 percent and Oregon at 57 percent.
Only in Utah, where the Bush ticket won 71 percent approval, did the president do better than the amendment.
It is safe to say that traditional man-woman marriage is more popular in America than the president who supports it.
Of course the most significant state race in 2004 when it came to deciding the presidency was in Ohio, where 20 electoral votes were at stake in a place that since 2000, when Bush narrowly won with 50 percent of the vote, has endured four years of economic downturn. Last Tuesday, nearly a million more Ohioans voted compared to four years ago, and while the margin was still slim, this time Bush won with 51 percent of the vote. And with it the White House.
What does it all mean? My guess is that it means that Utah isn't the only place in the United States of America where defining marriage, and the battle for the traditional family, is the real front lines. Evidence suggests that Bush, who was dead wrong about Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction, more than balanced that scale by siding with the majority of Americans who would like marriage to stay between a man and a woman.
Lee Benson's column runs Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Please send e-mail to benson@desnews.com and faxes to 801-237-2527.
Comments
- Jobless claims dip, spending up 9:43 a.m.
- Search continues for Layton boy 9:40 a.m.
- Stocks rise following jobless news 9:32 a.m.
- 5 clubs suspected of fixing matches 9:16 a.m.
- Probe: Iraq was not U.K.'s main worry 9:11 a.m.
- Know return policy before gifting 9:06 a.m.
- Rescue under way for man in cave 9:01 a.m.
- Shuttle Atlantis headed home 8:30 a.m.
- Obama going to climate summit 8:23 a.m.
- Toyota to replace 4M gas pedals 8:05 a.m.
- Utah, BYU are top choices for bowls
- BYU would like friendlier rivalry
- Witness describes '99 killing
- Protests against Phoenix LDS temple
- KSL: Prostitution in Utah County
- Best prep football games of 2009
- Donny and Kym dance to victory
- Mitchell lawyers lose motion to leave
- Police increase presence at Skyline
- Man trapped in own body for 23 yrs
- BYU would like friendlier rivalry
238 - Glenn Beck to enter politics?
225 - RSL wins MLS Cup on penalty kicks
202 - Protests against Phoenix LDS temple
197 - Bronco, Kyle rubber match
137 - BYU records with win
133 - Letters: Rushing to judge Palin
123 - Hall, Johnson matchup key
102 - 4A: Timpview wins 4th in 4 years
94 - Cougars turn focus to dreaded rivals
90
I'm glad Sloan remembers Abe Pollin. Too bad he doesn't remember how to...
Check your stats. Unga did just fine against TCU. Wide is good as are the...
I have 2 Camry's checked every single angle pedal it's possible to not...
The previous commenter was talking about concealed carry of a privately-owned...
If any other groups of "scientists" had been caught doing the things that the...
Ok, stay unbuckled and see how you feel when you're being scraped off the...
Bad fans are a part of sports at every university and in every city. It is...
Chuck in North Idaho wrote: "In short, I believe that Christ's original...
Why is it that a person would even say something negative? I have seen it...
Max will still throw to them



You can be the first to comment on this story.