When President Obama announced his support for same-sex marriage last week, there was speculation that the move could hurt him among one of the most reliable parts of his base — African-American voters, who support gay nuptials at a significantly lower rate than whites.
But one legendary civil rights leader says Obama’s decision is in keeping with the values his own movement embodied.
“I couldn’t imagine myself denying a right to my neighbor, my fellow citizen, that I enjoy myself,” Rev. Joseph Lowery told Al Sharpton on PoliticsNation Wednesday. “I don’t think you can say we believe in equal rights for some people but not for others. I think that’s what we call an oxymoron. I think if you believe in equal rights, you have to grant them to all the people.”
As Sharpton explained, Lowery, now 90, was a close ally of Martin Luther King, and a key organizer of the 1963 March on Washington, the 1965 March for Voting Rights, and several other key episodes of the civil rights movement.








