McCain Accused Of Gay Baiting In Anti-Romney Attack

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First Posted: 01-29-08 01:00 PM   |   Updated: 03-28-08 02:45 AM

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Mccain Gay Baiting

On the eve of the Florida Republican primary, Sen. John McCain launched a robo-call campaign attacking his rival Mitt Romney that some gay rights groups say amounts to gay baiting.

The call, which comes at the end of a hotly contested election that could very well determine the GOP nominee, reads as follows [emphasis added]:

"Mitt Romney thinks he can fool us. He supported abortion on demand, even allowed a law mandating taxpayer-funding for abortion. He says he changed his mind, but he still hasn't changed the law. He told gay organizers in Massachusetts he would be a stronger advocate for special rights than even Ted Kennedy. Now, it's something different."

According to The Atlantic's Marc Ambinder, the robo-call was pulled on Tuesday.

In 1994, Romney did write a letter to the state's Log Cabin Club -- a gay Republican group -- promising to be a stronger advocate for gays than Kennedy. Romney was challenging Kennedy for his U.S. Senate seat.

But the timing of the robo-call -- launched the day before the all-important primary -- and the tone -- specifically the reference to "special rights" of homosexuals -- has raised concerns and suspicion.

"It's ironic that Sen. John McCain is using the same tactics that George Bush used against him in 2000; surreptitiously trying to exploit anti-gay prejudice for votes," said Human Rights Campaign President Joe Solmonese. "So much for John McCain being above that."

"I think this is definitely an attempt at gay baiting," added Jon Hoadley, executive director of the National Stonewall Democrats.

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According to many in the community, the robo call hit is not simply a timely attempt to scare voters away from Romney, but a reflection of McCain's true colors on social issues.

"Sometimes McCain gets a pass because he wasn't a staunch supporter of the federal marriage amendment," said Hoadley. "But he showed his true colors when he campaigned...to pass the marriage ban in Arizona." (McCain starred in two television advertisements supporting the ban.) "When the community is looking at McCain, they need to look at the true record he was adamantly opposed to one of the groundbreaking victories in 2006," Hoadley said.

McCain last year opposed hate crimes legislation that would have covered gays and lesbians, and he has vocally supported the "Don't Ask Don't Tell" ban on gays in the military. In a statement last May, McCain said "the national security of the United States" would be "put at grave risk" if homosexuality was openly expressed in the military.

McCain's supporters acknowledge that while he hasn't always been the most progressive senator on gay and lesbian issues, they say that at least there is consistency in his stance (as opposed to Romney). And they argue that his statement about Romney's position was factual, not incendiary.

"That is not gay baiting that is a statement of fact. I know people who worked for Romney during the campaign and left in disgust... because he reversed himself during the campaign," former Arizona Congressman Jim Kolbe, a gay Republican and a McCain supporter, told the Huffington Post. "Now I disagree with John on some of the [social] issue but at least he has been straightforward and consistent."

In fact, McCain's positions have not been entirely consistent. In 2004, he said he would not support a constitutional ban on gay marriage, calling it "antithetical in every way to the core philosophy of Republicans." Two years later, McCain told televangelist Jerry Falwell that he would back a constitutional ban if state laws prohibiting gay marriage failed.

On the eve of the Florida Republican primary, Sen. John McCain launched a robo-call campaign attacking his rival Mitt Romney that some gay rights groups say amounts to gay baiting. The call, which co...
On the eve of the Florida Republican primary, Sen. John McCain launched a robo-call campaign attacking his rival Mitt Romney that some gay rights groups say amounts to gay baiting. The call, which co...
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- desmirl I'm a Fan of desmirl 9 fans permalink

All Republican presidential candidates are running on platforms of fear and/or hate. The Party has gone to the dark side--by choice--because they believe that appealing to the voters fear and/or hatred will galvanize a voting bloc that will propel them into office. What is frightening is that they may be right, and convince enough voters ot forget that once more, "It's the economy, dummy," to sway the November election.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:30 PM on 01/29/2008
- dezzertguy I'm a Fan of dezzertguy 10 fans permalink
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Polls show McCain still ahead in AZ, but I hope that will change. With his stands on illegal aliens, energy and human rights it is surprising he is still in office. His ads supporting the state Focus on the Family organization were gross. He is truly two-faced.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:29 PM on 01/29/2008
- KQuark I'm a Fan of KQuark 267 fans permalink
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McCain will win the Republican nomination because it's his turn and that's how the Republicans pick their nominee. Of course he's gay bating, he's a Republican. Anyone dumb enough to be a Republican thinks that God hates gays.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:29 PM on 01/29/2008
- tfred I'm a Fan of tfred 4 fans permalink
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John McCain is just too old and stodgy to be a president in the 21st century. He would have made a dandy candidate in the 1950's.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:16 PM on 01/29/2008
- 433 I'm a Fan of 433 permalink

Well, I'm a Dem and I'm opposed to any and all "hate crimes" laws. Don't much care WHAT the reason someone commits a crime is - they should be punished for the crime, not why they did it. "Hate crime" laws DO amount to "special" rights - or, really, "special" consequences for those who break their civil rights, above and beyond the consequences for someone who commited the exact same crime against... me.

That said, McCain totally sold out what grace and respect he had the moment he decided he was gonna make another run for the big office. Maybe he thinks once he's in place he can put the genie back in the bottle or something. Either he was disingenous back in his "maverick" days, or he's being disingenuous now - either way, lame. Not that I woulda voted for him to begin with, mind you...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:16 PM on 01/29/2008
- chagedorn I'm a Fan of chagedorn 18 fans permalink
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And people say Hillary Clinton will do or say anything to get elected, both Romney and McCain have her outflanked by many, many miles...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 PM on 01/29/2008

Don't matter to me. After W, I would never consider voting for a Republican again. They proved themselves to be an avaricious bunch who thought of the public trough as their own personal piggy bank to dole out to their cronies (i.e. the awarding of non-competitive bidding contracts).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 01/29/2008
- semorg I'm a Fan of semorg 6 fans permalink

Sam,
Are you a oped writer or a journalist. Your bio says, "the investigative journalism group Center for Public Integrity". If that's the case, I've lost all respect. All your posts are consistently anti Obama, this is fine. But just come clean with who you are supporting and call it an oped.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 01/29/2008

I live in Arizona and just about every single person I've talked to is NOT voting for him.

He likes to be called a "maverick", but after his kissie-poo make-up lovefest with George W and sucking up to Falwellian crowd he's shown that he's just a two-faced, say anything, has-been sell out.

That joined at the hip thing he's got going on with Liebermonster isn't helping anything either.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 PM on 01/29/2008

Why wouldn't he incorporate a strategy that worked? Didn't Bill Clinton tell John Kerry to throw the gays under the bus?
http://www.americablog.com/2007/06/bill-clinton-reportedly-told-john-kerry.html
Now he wants to run over black people...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:00 PM on 01/29/2008

It's nice to see the right go after themselves for once.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 PM on 01/29/2008
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