Gay voters scrutinize Democrats in TV forum

Fri Aug 10, 2007 8:16am EDT
 
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By Steve Gorman

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Six Democrats running for the White House made some history on Thursday night as they debated such issues as same-sex marriage versus civil unions in an unprecedented nationally televised forum directed at gay voters.

While the event, carried live on the gay-oriented cable network Logo, owned by Viacom Inc., shed little new light on candidates' positions, organizers hailed it as a political milestone.

The two-hour event marked the first time that an ensemble of major-party candidates for president -- this one all Democrats -- appeared together specifically to address a gay and lesbian audience in a national telecast.

Gays are estimated to account for 4 to 6 percent of the U.S. electorate, and, according to a recent survey, the percentage who turned out to vote in the 2004 presidential race topped 90 percent, far more than the public at large.

Organizers said candidates of both major parties were invited to take part but that no Republicans accepted.

"We pulled the curtain back a bit and gave all Americans a deeper look inside the candidates' core beliefs about the issues that affect our community," said Joe Solmonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign, a gay and lesbian civil rights group that co-sponsored the forum.

Still, Solmonese said he was disappointed in the stand taken by four of the candidates, including front-runners Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama and John Edwards, in supporting civil unions for same-sex couples over full-fledged marriage.

The question of same-sex marriage vs. civil unions, which dominated Thursday's discussion, has emerged as a hot-button issue in the gay community and a tricky one for Democrats who count gays and lesbians among their core constituency.

"While we heard very strong commitments to civil unions and equality in federal rights and benefits, their reasons for opposing equality in civil marriage tonight became even less clear," Solmonese said.

EQUALITY

Solmonese was one of four panelists posing questions to the candidates, who appeared separately for 20 minutes each. Rock star and activist Melissa Etheridge also was a panelist.

At least one candidate, New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, seemed to stumble when asked by Etheridge if he believed homosexuality was a choice or biological.

"It's a choice," he said at first. "I'm not a scientist. I don't see this as an issue of science or definition."

When pressed on the point that opponents of gay rights often assert that homosexuality is a lifestyle choice, Richardson said, "I don't think it's a matter of preferences, I think it's a matter of equality."

His campaign later issued a statement "clarifying" his position: "Let me be clear -- I do not believe that sexual orientation or gender identity happen by choice."  Continued...

 
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