Obama Opposes NC Amendment Banning Gay Marriage

 
By : _Paul  Stanley_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/paul-stanley/)  , 
Christian Post Reporter  
March 20, 2012|12:22 pm
President Obama appears to be moving away from his  2009 stance of opposing 
gay marriage. He is opposing a proposed constitutional  amendment in North 
Carolina that would define _marriage_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/marriage/)  as between one man and one  
woman.
"While the president does not weigh in on every single ballot measure in  
every state, the record is clear that the President has long opposed divisive 
 and discriminatory efforts to deny rights and benefits to same-sex 
couples,"  said Obama's North Carolina spokesperson, Cameron French, last 
Friday. 
"That's what the North Carolina ballot initiative would do – it would 
single  out and discriminate against committed gay and lesbian couples – and 
that's why  the President does not support it." 
Obama's current position on gay marriage seems to have taken a series of  
180-degree turns since he embarked on his public service career in the  
1990s. 
In a 1996 letter to a homosexual publication in Chicago, then State Senate  
candidate Barrack Obama gave an affirmative response to a question on 
same-sex  marriage. 
"6) I favor legalizing same-sex marriages, and would fight efforts to  
prohibit such marriages."  
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As a sitting Illinois State Senator in 1998, Obama responded to another  
question asking if the state should recognize same-sex marriages. "Undecided," 
 was his checked response. 
In a 2008 interview with MTV, then U.S. Senator _Barack Obama_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/barack-obama/)  and  Democratic 
presidential 
candidate stated he was opposed to same-sex  marriage. 
"I believe that marriage is between a man and woman and I am not in favor 
of  gay marriage." 
David Axelrod, a former White House advisor and now Obama campaign  
strategist, told MSNBC in 2010 that Obama "does oppose same-sex marriage, but 
he  
supports equality for gay and lesbian couples … He supports civil unions. 
That's  been his position throughout. So nothing has changed." 
The upcoming May 8 constitutional amendment vote in North Carolina is only  
the latest battle in an on-going turf war to redefine the boundaries of  
traditional marriage and prohibit the judicial branch from defining the issue  
for the citizens of a state. 
The North Carolina amendment, more commonly known as Amendment 1, reads:  
"Marriage between one man and one woman is the only domestic legal union that 
 shall be valid or recognized in this State." 
Tami Fitzgerald who chairs Vote FOR Marriage NC – the coalition of groups  
supporting passage of the amendment – says judicial activism is one of the  
primary reasons they want the amendment passed. 
"Not only did President Obama state during his election battle in 2008 that 
 he believes marriage is the union between one man and woman, but he said 
that  for him as a Christian, it is also a sacred union, invoking the name of 
'God' as  his source," Fitzgerald said in a statement. 
"Unfortunately, his recommendation against the Marriage Protection 
Amendment  would leave the definition of marriage up to an activist judge 
instead of 
the  people of our state," she added. "President Obama has no business 
inserting  himself into the people's business in North Carolina. The people of 
North  Carolina cannot sit by and let marriage as the union of one man and 
one woman be  destroyed by a handful of political activists or by activists 
judges." 
According to two recent polls, the amendment is favored by a majority of 
the  state's voters. 
A Public Policy Polling survey, known to favor Democrat voters, showed 54  
percent of 780 registered voters supporting the amendment's passage. The PPP 
 survey was conducted in early January of this year. 
Another Civitas poll conducted in late February of 600 likely voters had 
the  amendment passing with 64 percent of the vote. 
When marriage amendments of bills have been played before the voters over 
the  past several years, they have passed 31 times in 31 states – a perfect  
record. 
Besides North Carolina, Maryland and Minnesota will have same-sex marriage  
issues before their voters in 2012.

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