"Last
night in Charlotte, the Democratic Party made history as the first
national party to offer a platform endorsing marriage equality for all
Americans. The move followed, of course, President Obama's personal
endorsement of same-sex marriage in May. Both were important moments
for me, here as a delegate for New York, and many others at the
convention who have fought for full equality for gays and lesbians over
many years. It was a completely different scene in Tampa last week.
"When
Ann Romney spoke about her own 'real marriage' at the Republican
National Convention, I wondered if this admittedly likable woman
auditioning for a role as first lady would someday try to stand in the
way of my marriage. I thought: can Mitt Romney stop gay marriage? Does
he even want to? [snip]
"I asked Evan Wolfson, President of the
group Freedom to Marry and the founder of the marriage equality movement
nationally, whether he though Mitt Romney could stop marriage equality
or if he thought Romney even cared. 'He has staked out a position,
whether sincerely or otherwise, to the right of Dick Cheney and George
W. Bush'” said Wolfson. 'We have no reason to think he's not serious.'
So
while I welcome my pro-equality friends in the GOP to the cause—they
see the future—I'm happier in Charlotte than I would have been in Tampa.
And I hope that the country sticks with the president it's got." -
Former Clinton White House advisor
Richard Socarides, writing for the
Daily Beast.
Read the full article.
Reposted from Joe