THE
DEMOCRATIC
PARTY
announced
last
week
that
Virginia
Gov.
Tim
Kaine
will
deliver
the
party’s
official
response
to
President
Bush’s
“State
of
the
Union”
address
later
this
month.
A
statement
issued
by
the
party
praised
Kaine,
just
one
week
on
the
job,
for
being
“a
champion
for
working
families,
putting
their
priorities
above
the
needs
of
the
special
interests.”
That
description
will
surprise
the
“working
families”
of
Virginia
headed
up
by
gay
and
lesbian
couples.
Because
the
same
day
Kaine
debuted
as
“the
new
face”
of
the
Democratic
Party,
the
Blade
reported
that
he
supports
and
will
sign
onto
the
ballot
an
amendment
to
the
Virginia
Constitution
that
not
only
bans
gay
marriage
and
civil
unions,
but
domestic
partnerships
as
well,
and
may
even
deprive
gay
couples
the
protection
of
domestic
violence
laws.
After
the
Blade
story
hit
the
fan,
a
Kaine
spokesperson
telephoned
to
“clarify”
his
position.
It
turns
out
the
governor
does,
as
reported,
support
a
constitutional
ban
on
gay
marriage
and
civil
unions,
but
he
opposes
the
rest
of
the
amendment,
which
prohibits
the
state
or
local
governments
from
giving
any
legal
recognition
whatsoever
to
gay
and
unmarried
straight
couples,
and
also
blocks
the
state
from
recognizing
similar
efforts
by
other
states
or
local
governments.
Not
only
would
Virginia’s
gay
couples
be
blocked
from
any
legal
recognition,
so
too
would
a
married
gay
couple
visiting
the
state
from
Massachusetts,
or
a
civil
union’d
couple
from
Vermont,
or
domestic
partners
from
neighboring
Washington,
D.C.
Should
they
encounter
a
medical
emergency,
their
home-state
recognition
would
be
stripped
and
they’d
have
no
right
to
make
medical
decisions
or
hospital
visits.
What
a
relief
that
these
gay
“working
families”
must
feel
at
Kaine’s
“clarified”
position,
opposing
such
unprecedented
bigotry!
Not
so
fast.
It
also
turns
out
that
although
Kaine
isn’t
“comfortable”
with
the
extraordinary
broad
language,
which
would
be
the
most
punitive
ever
adopted
by
any
state,
this
“champion
for
working
families”
decided
not
to
expend
any
political
capital
limiting
its
scope
and
will
sign
onto
the
ballot.
With
champions
like
this,
who
needs
enemies?
NOT
TO
WORRY,
gay
Virginians
(and
those
who
might
visit
them).
You
still
have
plenty
of
leverage
here
because
Kaine
is
a
Democrat
and
has
aspirations
to
higher
public
office.
Given
the
influence
gay
Democratic
groups
have
within
the
party,
pressure
will
surely
be
brought
to
bear
on
such
an
abject
betrayal
of
an
important
constituency,
not
to
mention
the
party’s
historical
commitment
to
civil
rights.
But
alas,
gay
Democratic
activists
ought
to
be
called
“Democratic
activists
who
happen
to
be
gay,”
as
they
so
clearly
are
Democrats
first
and
gay
second
(and
activists
very,
very
third).
Josh
Israel,
president
of
the
Virginia
Partisans
Gay
&
Lesbian
Democratic
Club,
which
endorsed
Kaine’s
election,
refused
to
call
on
Kaine
to
veto
the
bill
that
puts
the
amendment
on
the
ballot.
With
gay
rights
activists
like
that,
who
needs
party
hacks?
It
will
come
as
a
bitter
irony
to
gay
Virginians,
and
gays
nationwide
who
should
be
appalled
by
Kaine’s
selection
as
the
party’s
new
poster
boy,
that
just
across
the
Potomac
River,
a
Republican
governor
is
proposing
to
extend
the
very
rights
the
Democrat
in
Virginia
would
permanently
ban.
Maryland
Gov.
Robert
Ehrlich
has
introduced
legislation
to
allow
gay
and
unmarried
straight
couples
to
sign
an
official
government
registry
ensuring
they
can
make
medical
decisions
for
each
other
in
time
of
emergency.
The
National
Stonewall
Democrats,
based
in
Washington,
reacted
to
Ehrlich’s
proposal
by
attacking
the
Republican
and
not
even
mentioning
the
“new
face”
Democrat
in
Virginia.
“A
bridal
registry
at
Target
would
offer
same-sex
couples
more
benefits
than
this
watered-down,
election-year
ploy
by
Governor
Ehrlich,”
said
Eric
Stern,
the
Stonewall
Democrats’
executive
director.
Maybe
so,
but
the
Democrat
in
Richmond
is
poised
to
sign
a
ballot
measure
that
would
amend
the
state’s
constitution
to
forever
ban
even
a
“watered-down”
registry
like
the
one
proposed
by
Ehrlich,
and
it
would
probably
take
the
bridal
book
at
Target
down
with
it.
Give
the
Stonewall
Dems
credit
for
eventually
calling
on
Kaine
not
to
sign
the
marriage
amendment,
even
as
the
Virginia
Partisans
and
apologists
like
Adam
Ebbin,
the
state’s
first
openly
gay
legislator,
worked
the
phones
to
defend
Kaine
rather
than
their
gay
constituents.
Gay
Democrats
aren’t
the
only
ones
to
buy
into
the
dogma
that
the
party
is
always
a
higher
priority
than
gay
rights,
for
the
perverse
reason
that
helping
the
party
is
supposed
to,
some
day,
help
gay
rights,
too.
Log
Cabin
Republicans
have
been
smoking
their
own
dope
for
at
least
as
long,
and
just
this
...