Sen. Morahan comes out…against gay marriage
After ducking the subject for seven months, State Senator Thomas P. Morahan has said that he will not support civil rights for gays that will allow them to marry. Morahan told the Journal News this weekend that he’s going to vote against it when it comes to vote in the State Senate.
“I understand both sides,” he said. “I prefer civil union, as opposed to traditional marriage.”
Someone should explain to Senator Morahan that “separate, but equal” is unconstitutional.
“Maybe I’m a traditionalist,” he said. “I know my community is divided. If you can accommodate both sides, why not do that?”
Nobody is being accommodated here. Are we to believe that gay couples will somehow feel empowered by Morahan’s belief that what they have is not equal to what he has with his wife?
More from the Journal News:
He explained that he understands and empathizes with the arguments about “inheritance rights, spousal rights,” and believes that civil unions will accomplish those goals of equal rights for same-sex partners.
Morahan went on to tell the Journal News editorial board that his reasons for getting married were for love, not for spousal rights.
So, it’s obvious to me that Senator Morahan either doesn’t understand this whole movement for gay marriage is really about one thing: love. And his implication that the love that he shares with his wife is greater than the love that is shared by the lesbian couple in Nyack or the gay couple in Nanuet is mind boggling.
I don’t think Morahan’s gay constituents want him to embrace the bonds that they share, but I do think that they want him to acknowledge what they share is at least equal to what he has been privileged to have.
Politicians like Morahan have gone to events like Gay Pride Rockland to tell you they’re for gay rights. You’ll hear the Senator say that LGBTs should have the same access to housing, jobs, benefits like health care and insurance, and equal protection of the law, but then it stops at gay marriage. Why is that? Is it Morahan’s Catholic religion that keeps him from supporting gay marriage? Nobody is forcing the Catholic Church to perform gay marriages and I don’t think they’d excommunicate the Senator from the Church for voting in the side of love. No, I don’t think that’s the problem.
Is it that Morahan really believes the stereotype of gays being promiscuous and incapable of forming long-term relationships? Does he, like many of his Republican allies, believe that homosexuality is merely a perversion? No, I think that Morahan has seen enough from the gay pride events that he has attended to know that this isn’t the truth.
The fault, I believe lies in Morahan’s unwavering allegience to the Republican Party. Many people, especially some liberal friends of mine, like to believe that Morahan is a closet liberal. I’ve been told by some of the most progressive people I know in Rockland County that he is some throwback Rockefeller Republican who’s really on our side, fighting for our values. Democratic politicians in the county like Ilan Schoenberger, Alex Gromack, and Christopher St. Lawrence openly support Sen. Morahan and hardly anybody blinks. I admit, Morahan has been good with marketing and with that “member items” slush fund he uses to insure his incumbency.
Now the truth is out: Morahan was never has been the progressive or “moderate” that Rockland voters thought that he was. In fact, he has rarely stood up for anything that didn’t sound like apple pie Americana. He’s got a great formula for getting elected: sponsor some no-brainer legislation about children in need and talk it up, keep your mouth shut about everything else, smile, and everyone will think you’re just like them. This worked for a long time, but now it’s over. The upcoming gay marriage vote will expose Morahan’s real values. And all these years of kissing babies and handing out obscene checks just before election time won’t work anymore. We know what our State Senator is made of.
Thank you, Sen. Morahan for finally coming out. Now we can make more informed choices at the polls.
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Cliff, thanks for the heads up.
I am angry. I wrote (pen & paper) to Morahan and spoke to his office twice over the past several weeks urging him to support marriage equality. I didn’t expect his enthusiastic support but I had hoped that he would, at the end of the day, do the right and just thing. What angers me is the tone of his rationale: in his own words, “I know my community is divided. If you can accommodate both sides, why not do that?”
How would the Senator have voted forty years ago over the issue of white only/black only drinking fountains? Would he quip “no problem, both sides are accommodated”?
Sen. Morahan, I ask you this question: If tomorrow, the community became divided over your flavor of domestic arrangement; asked you and your wife to trade in your dusty old marriage certificate for a freshly minted civil union document… would you do so? I think not.
I urge everyone to call this man and let him know you feelings.
—Steve Bretschneider
[...] Rock Progressive Dems [...]
[...] the DSSC and other non-partisan statewide reform organizations to take notice. Morahan, who has recently taken a staunch anti-gay rights stance and who has been consistently against ethics and election reform in Albany, will finally meet a [...]
[...] the DSSC and other non-partisan statewide reform organizations to take notice. Morahan, who has recently taken a staunch anti-gay rights stance and who has been consistently against ethics and election reform in Albany, will finally meet a [...]
[...] the Marriage Equailty bill before the State Senate. With Morahan’s passionate help (he came out strongly against gay marriage in July), the bill was defeated 24-38. While many Democrats gave [...]