Jonetta Rose Barras

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Washington Democratic Party propaganda?

By: Jonetta Rose Barras
Examiner Columnist
May 25, 2009

Many, including the media, have crowed about votes for a “marriage equality” resolution offered by the Gertrude Stein Club and taken during recent meetings of Democratic organizations in several wards — 2, 4, 6 and 8. They believe the favorable results indicate strong support, including among African-Americans, for same-sex marriage in the District.

Don’t believe the hype.

Many of those meetings were not well-publicized. The number of Democrats who participated in the proceedings and ultimately voted on the resolution paled when compared with the actual registered voters in those wards. For example, as of April 30, 2009, there were 45,753 registered voters in Ward 8 — 37,427 of them were Democrats — according to the D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics.

Published reports indicated only 32 people in Ward 8 voted earlier this month to approve the Stein resolution. That hardly can be considered representative of how registered Democrats there feel about a same-sex marriage. The numbers in other wards weren’t much better.

Moreover, the Democratic Party’s ward-based organizations aren’t paragons of objectivity. Operatives and allies of currently elected District officials dominate the leadership. For example, Charles Allen, the chairman of the Ward 6 group, also is a paid staffer for Ward 6 D.C. Councilman Tommy Wells. Wells was one of 12 legislators who voted last month to recognize same-sex marriages performed in other jurisdictions.

Using these votes to lend credibility to the “marriage equality” movement or legitimacy to council action, taken without even a cursory public hearing, is a deliberate and orchestrated effort to mislead the public.

Misrepresenting the facts appears to be acceptable even for the media. Recent reports have suggested primary opponents to same-sex marriage in the District come mostly from the ranks of the clergy — Bishop Harry Jackson, senior pastor of Hope Christian Church, and Anthony Evans with the National Black Church Initiative, for example — or outsiders — Reps. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, and Dan Boren, D-Okla. But historic and recent polls offer evidence to the contrary.

In May 2006, a survey commissioned by the Foundation for all Families of 800 likely District voters found only 42 percent of blacks favored a same-sex marriage initiative. Last month, a New York Times poll found that 38 percent of blacks and 40 percent of whites supported gay marriage. A Post-ABC poll also conducted last month found that 48 percent of whites and 42 percent of blacks “strongly or somewhat favored same-sex marriage.”

The local Democratic Party apparatus and members of the Gertrude Stein Club can distract, misdirect and generally attempt to obfuscate. But they can’t deny those polls’ clear assertion: The majority of African-Americans, including those in the District, hasn’t and still doesn’t support same-sex marriage.

But if “marriage equality” advocates aren’t persuaded, they could take their cause directly to the people. They could push to place an initiative on the ballot in 2010. The results from that effort would provide indisputable evidence of District residents’ position, wouldn’t it?




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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.

Marriage Advocate

May 26, 2009

What if Janetta replaced one word?: "The majority of African-Americans, including those in the District, hasn’t and still doesn’t support" interracial marriage. Would the will of the people be justified in that instance? I would love to know *why* the resistance exists, rather than simply being told that it's there.

 

Marriage Advocate

May 27, 2009

Preferences can be protected, from a legal standpoint. Creed is a preference. Religious conversions are common. Newt Gingrinch is Catholic now. Norma McCabe is a born-again Christian. Kareem Abdul Jabbar and Muhammad Ali were not raised as Muslims. People change, as do laws and their respective interpretations. As a single black straight male with divorced straight parents, I see no fair reason to deny legal marriage to homosexuals of any race.

 

Fred

May 27, 2009

@Marriage Advocate Too many Black children grow up with only one parent, usually the mother. The breakdown of the traditional Black family (husband, wife, kids) has caused numerous problems in DC alone: HIV epidemics, Black-on-Black violence, rampant poverty, increasing school dropout rates, etc. Thus, Black Democrats supporting homosexual "marriage" is viewed as making a horrible situation worse. As pointed out by Black celebs from Dr. King to Bill Cosby, the Black community only thrives when the family is intact in most Black homes.

 

Marriage Advocate

May 28, 2009

The "breakdown" of my nuclear family has not lead to HIV, violence or school dropouts (I have a Bachelor's Degree, my two siblings have Master's). I wouldn't call us poor, either. Maybe our family's relative success comes down to opportunity, a support network of extended family and friends, and a willingness to strengthen those bonds.

 


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