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[personal profile] cos
A couple of weeks ago, this June, Maine Senator Susan Collins finally came out in favor of gay marriage.

When the Maine legislature first legalized it in 2009, and then a counter-campaign put it on the ballot, and Maine voted to unlegalize it, Susan Collins didn't do favor it.

When Mainers United for Marriage organized in 2011 and 2012 to put it back on the ballot, Susan Collins didn't support them.

When their referendum passed, Maine legalized same sex marriage again at the end of 2012, and in the year and a half that it's been a reality in Maine, Susan Collins didn't support it.

Why now? Because earlier this June, Shenna Bellows became the Democratic nominee for Senate in Maine, running against Susan Collins. As executive director of the Maine ACLU, Shenna Bellows was one of the lead organizers of Mainers United for Marriage. She was one of the people who formed the organization, back when Maine had recently voted to ban same sex marriage and many people said it was too soon to try again. Her active leadership for marriage equality before it was won has been earning her campaign a lot of support, and contributions.

So what did the HRC do? They struck a deal with Susan Collins: She says she favors gay marriage, and they endorse her for Senate over Shenna Bellows.

I guess the message to other politicians is: You don't earn HRC's support by working hard for equality, which is supposedly their mission. You do it by sitting on the sidelines until the work is done, and then telling HRC that if they'll endorse you, you'll say that you favor the gains from the work that other people did, after they've already won those gains.

Edit: A post by digsby, via [livejournal.com profile] jered, that expands on this. While HRC points to Susan Collins' support of the current Employment Non-Discrimination Act in the Senate, she's part of the reason why the current ENDA is so relatively narrow in its protections; Shenna Bellows, on the other hand, led in getting Maine to pass the Maine Human Rights Act, with broad and comprehensive antidiscrimination protections.
Date: 2014-07-09 09:57 (UTC)

From: (Anonymous)
It seems to me that the HRC is doing what is strategically the best move in order to help the fight for gay rights (as opposed to simply cheering the people we owe our progress to, which of course would be nice, but also a complete waste of time).

They got a(nother) GOP senator to endorse same sex marriage! Even if Bellows had a chance of winning (which she doesn't), converting a GOP senator to a mild supporter is _much_ more valuable than having a staunch democratic supporter.

It will do us no good to split the senate between 59 staunche gay-rights supporters and 41 staunch gay-rights detractors. That democratic senators support gay rights is already a given, what we need is to convince a handfull of republicans to go from "no way" to "I don't really care, but ok, fine, have your rights". Maybe that means we'll end up with 50 strong supporters, 10 weak supporters and 40 strong detractors. But let's face it, that is all we need.

If the HRC are thinking a bit more long-term, and take as their general strategy to support people who flip over people who were always true to the cause, one could imagine a handfull more GOP congressmen and women deciding to cash in on this, and we'd end up with lots of house/senate races between strong and weak gay rights supporters.

We are on the cups of winning, both popular opinion, in the courts and in congress. But if we want a complete and lasting victory, we cannot do that by wiping out our enemy (there will be republicans on the capitol for many years to come), we have to do it by convincing them to join our cause. That is what the HRC is doing, and we should all applaude their level-headedness!

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