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Gay marriage critics file for D.C. referendum

By: Michael Neibauer
Examiner Staff Writer
September 2, 2009

Bishop Harry Jackson, along with a coalition of pastors and community leaders, filed a ballot initiative Tuesday to define marriage as between one man and one woman. (Examiner)

A coalition of gay marriage opponents asked the D.C. elections board Tuesday to authorize a ballot initiative that if approved by a majority of voters would define marriage in the District as the union of a man and a woman.

Stand4MarriageDC, led by Bishop Harry Jackson of Beltsville's Hope Christian Church, filed papers with the Board of Elections and Ethics seeking authority to collect petition signatures for a November 2010 referendum on the definition of marriage. The filing, backed by the Archdiocese of Washington, comes ahead of an anticipated D.C. Council effort to legalize same-sex marriage in the District.

"The people of the District of Columbia should decide the issue of the definition of marriage, not 13 members of the D.C. Council," Jackson said during a news conference.

The proposed initiative simply reads: "Only marriage between a man and woman is valid or recognized in the District of Columbia."

Many gay rights activists view that language, and the proposed ballot measure, as discriminatory.

"Philosophically many people are opposed to having a ballot initiative that subjects a particular group's rights to an up or down majority vote," said Rick Rosendall, vice president of political affairs for the Gay and Lesbian Activists Alliance.

This is Jackson's second run-in this year with the elections board. The first, a proposed referendum on a city law recognizing gay marriages performed in other jurisdictions, was unanimously rejected. The three-member board ruled it a violation of the D.C. Human Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation.

D.C. Superior Court Judge Judith Retchin upheld the board's decision in late June.

Gay marriage supporters anticipate that the elections board will again declare a marriage initiative unsuitable for the ballot. The Human Rights Campaign is "confident that the Board and the courts will once again rule that, under D.C. law, the initiative process cannot be used as a tool to discriminate and strip away civil rights," the gay rights group said in a statement.

The Archdiocese, meanwhile, emerged to support the initiative "out of our religious teaching and our long-standing commitment to serving the common good," the Most Rev. Barry Knestout wrote in a letter to Elections Board Chairman Errol Arthur.

Democratic committees in five of eight city wards have backed resolutions supporting same-sex marriage. But Jackson was optimistic that a majority of D.C.'s 412,000-plus registered voters "hold traditional values very high" and would back the initiative.

Councilman David Catania, one of two openly gay council members, is expected to introduce a gay marriage bill this fall.

mneibauer@washingtonexaminer.com



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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.

Commonsense

Sep 1, 2009

Kudos for Bishop Jackson and the coalition!

 

Dale

Sep 1, 2009

We as Americans have never set our standards where the rights and freedoms of any of our citizens was left to the ballot. The suggestion to do so is lead by one thing and one thing alone, pure bigotry.

 

Ward8Resident

Sep 3, 2009

And so what if Heather has 2 mommies; Shanikwa has 4 baby daddies!!

Rev. Jackson is PAID big $$ to bamboozle DC residents. But most DC residents are smart; gay marriage does NOT make the top 100 list of DC Black community concerns. We have a loooong laundry list of critical issues that continue to cause long-term socio/economical, and physical death to Black DC residents. Rev. Jackson- go back to PG County!

 

Norman

Sep 3, 2009

It's very sad that an African American would lead the charge for discrimination against a minority group.
It is bigotry-plain and simple-no denying it. Stating it degrades marriage is saying, in no certain terms, that the union of two loving,. same sex adults, demeans the union that opposite sex people have.
Religion is ugly.
Deep shame on this black man-MLK and his wife and weeping in heaven
Is he so ignorant that he doesn't know that this discrimination is directly leading to black men, ashamed of their gayness, having sex with men on the down low and infecting their wives with HIV?

 

Tee

Sep 8, 2009

This is one more objective why the D.C. area is far behind time. I am for the same sex marriages. This world needs to accept that changes has occurred. We are not perfect people and we are going to do things that don't see eye to eye with the so call perfect people. Read the Book Of Revelations (KJV). There are soooo many other topics that can be placed on the D.C.(other states as well) referendum such as, the economy, unemployment, placing kids in stable homes, affordable housing, improving schools, the region council members take a pay cut (especially D.C. who argue among themselves), lowering gas prices, I can go on and on. The people who are speaking against gay marriages, I wage a bet that they have encounter gays, transgenders, etc., with their distant/down the line family members and need to look closer at the man in the mirror.

The referendum will have my supportive vote. May GOD continue to Bless America!!!!!!

 


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