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Barry, religious leaders protest gay marriage measure

By: Teddy Kahn
Special to The Examiner
April 29, 2009

D.C. Councilman Marion Barry told church leaders and other opponents of gay marriage Tuesday that he opposed the city council’s decision to recognize same-sex marriages performed outside the District.

Calling himself “a politician who is moral,” Barry said he would have voted against the measure if he had been present at the April 6 session. The former mayor, who was convicted of cocaine possession in 1990 and has recently been investigated for not paying his taxes, was recovering earlier this month from a kidney transplant. 

The legislation recognizing same-sex marriages from other jurisdictions is supported by the 12 other council members, meaning Barry’s lone dissenting voice is unlikely to affect the outcome of the final vote on May 5.

Still, Barry urged the approximately 100 protesters outside the Wilson Building on Tuesday to “pack the chambers” and confront his colleagues at next week’s vote. 

Bishop Harry Jackson of Hope Christian Church in Bowie, who organized the rally, said it was time to send a message to Mayor Adrian Fenty and the council.

“There will be consequences to your irreverence,” he said. “We will rock your world and shake your boat.”

Jackson said the council’s decision does not reflect strong opposition to same-sex marriage in the area’s religious community and argued that proponents of marriage equality misrepresented his position.

“This is not about hating gays, it’s about loving Jesus,” Jackson said. 

But Lynne Breece, a counterprotester who described herself as a deeply religious person who believes in the institution of marriage, disagreed.

She called the movement against marriage equality “disgraceful” and compared it to opposition to interracial marriage during the civil rights era.

“As African-Americans we know what it’s like to be discriminated against,” she said.  “We’re doing to others what was done to us.”

The vote to recognize other states’ gay marriages was seen as a first step to legalizing same-sex marriage in the District. 

Peter Rosenstein, a prominent D.C. gay activist, said Tuesday that the city was ready for same-sex marriage.

“The D.C. population is more supportive of marriage equality than any place in the country” he said.

Councilman David Catania, one of the city council’s two openly gay members, is expected to introduce gay marriage legislation this year. But Congress, which must approve all D.C. bills before they become law, remains a potential obstacle.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Conker58

Apr 28, 2009

Marion Barry a moral politician? ROFLOL.
Is this same crack smoking, sleeping with prostitutes Marion Barry. How this total failure of a human being can inflict his so called morals against the rights of other human beings is beyond me.

 

Big-K(DC)

Apr 29, 2009

Finally, the people of DC has spoken. Our one turm Mayor plus two Gay agenda Councilmen without any input from the citizens of this city, intend to force their perverted belief on everyone and if you are disagreeable, you are violating their so call civil Rights which is a farce or Homophobia another of their catch all phase to justify their agenda.So rest assured, the majority of the population of this city wil not stand idlely by as they try to rewrite the laws of nature.

 

drdanfee

Apr 29, 2009

Good try reverend. You get no extra credit from me for claiming that you love the gays. Some love - wanting to outlaw their ethically committed couple or parental status, all supposedly to protect yourself from some mysterious and terible damage you will sustain if the gays do make ethical lifelong commitments of care which are no longer undermined or disrupted by legal indifference. On a more personal note, that you can so loudly preach this as a person of color who has presumably felt the stings and arrows of prejudice (and discrimination?) must surely give the rest of us who listen to you, great pause. Then the really terrible thing happens, when we have to slowly ask ourselves: What is this guy really getting out of trash talking the gays? Hard to say, but the answers surely cannot be the excluisve Good News you claim is your core calling. Alas. Lord have mercy.

 

Joe

Apr 30, 2009

I used to feel sorry for Marion Barry. But not anymore.

 


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