After months of intense campaigning, Obama emerged as the
projected victor of the 2012 US presidential election. I care
about the outcome of the presidential race, but there were three other contests,
four including my own state’s senatorial race, whose outcomes worried and
excited me almost as much as that for president. They were the ballot votes on
gay marriage in Maryland, Maine and Washington.
What is unique about this particular ballot vote is that it
had never before succeeded. Massachusetts, Iowa and the other four states that
currently allow same-sex marriage were not decided by a popular vote: their
courts deemed such discrimination unconstitutional. When attempting to pass
same sex marriage via the popular vote, even Maine shot the proposition down
53% to 47% several years ago (http://bruni.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/11/07/maine-and-maryland-say-we-do/).
Now in 2012 things are starting to change. Obama is the
first president to openly support gay marriage. Maryland and Maine passed gay
marriage in their respective states with promising results thus far predicted
for Washington (their submit their ballots in the mail so actual numbers take
longer to determine). Wisconsin elected the first gay senator, Tammy Baldwin. To
me, these results symbolize a change in attitude in the American population.
People have finally realized that the failure to include all people and
families in law is flat-out discrimination, religious preferences and propaganda
aside. It’s acknowledgement that we are not so different after all and do not
deserve to be denied our rights.
There is still a lot of work to be done. Thirty states have
banned gay marriage in their constitutions. But if the number of states
allowing gay marriage can jump from six to nine states overnight, there may
just be hope that those numbers will be reversed by the time by moms turn 65.
Thank you, American voters, for supporting my family last
night.
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