by Michelangelo Signorile
Watching President Obama sitting in the Oval Office speaking out in
support of gay marriage, you couldn't help but notice how comfortable he
was. I've described him in the past as being in the closet on
gay marriage. Closeted people have a habit of cowering and answering
questions tersely, often while on the run. But there he was, sitting
back with the presidential seal right behind him, proudly laying out his
beliefs, telling
ABC's Robin Roberts, "I've just concluded that, for me personally, it
is important for me to go ahead and affirm that I think same-sex couples
should be able to get married."
He was cool and confident. It was the 2008 Barack Obama, not the
stiff, marble-mouthed 2011 guy who, rather than take a position, mumbled
something about "evolving." Perhaps even more startling, on the website of his campaign -- which apparently took in $1 million dollars
in 90 minutes yesterday from big donors and young contributors -- there
it was, his quote at the top of the page: "Same-sex couples should be
able to get married."
Barack Obama didn't just come out of the closet on gay marriage. He's flaunting it!
More precisely, he has, even if briefly and on only this one issue,
liberated himself from the egg-shell-walking trappings of his job. It's
wonderful to watch. And it's also a smart and bold political move -- and
one he had to make -- in the midst of a lackluster election campaign,
in which he draws a sharp difference between himself and Mitt Romney and
reminds people that he has an edge.
It's already put Romney on the defensive, as the GOP candidate got testy
when asked about gay marriage yesterday, and wound up coming out
against civil unions too -- which even George W. Bush supported. Romney,
who last week saw the embarrassing resignation of Richard Grenell, his
newly-named openly gay foreign policy spokesperson, is now in a box.
Trying to move to the middle, the campaign's gay meltdown
over Grenell had Romney caving in to the far-right blowhard Bryan
Fischer, even as Romney desperately tried to assure people it wasn't
true. Fisher was mocking Romney a few days ago, wondering how Romney
could let himself so easily be pushed around.
"How is he going to stand up to North Korea if he can be pushed around
by a yokel like me?" Fischer asked. "I don't think Romney is realizing
the doubts that this begins to raise about his leadership."
The last thing Romney wants is to bow to the Bryan Fischers of world
again, pandering to the extreme as he heads to the center. But the Bryan
Fischers are going to be demanding Romney take on Obama very forcefully
for so brazenly and extremely promoting the homosexual agenda now (even
if a majority of Americans support it).
MORE!
No comments:
Post a Comment