Once considered shocking, elected officials’ declarations of support for the freedom to marry have become less and less surprising to Americans. Reminded of their own evolution toward greater acceptance and understanding of their gay and lesbian friends and neighbors, citizens identify with the deeply personal conclusions their legislators are reaching. They “get” that it is a very personal journey.
But every once in a while these developments are seen as real news, as we saw this week with Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski’s historic announcement that she too supports the freedom to marry. Murkowski’s decision made her the third Republican Senator to embrace the principle that “freedom means freedom for everyone,” joining 226 other Republican legislators across the country who have taken a stand on the right side of history. Making her statement just days before two widely anticipated Supreme Court decisions on marriage, Murkowski compellingly articulated the conservative case for marriage equality: defending the pursuit of happiness from inappropriate government interference while respecting the critical importance of religious freedom.
Now that 12 states have enacted the freedom to marry, it has become increasingly clear why these principled stands by Republicans matter so much to the trajectory of the marriage issue. In state after state and in our nation’s capital, too, courageous leaders like Lisa Murkowski are altering conventional wisdom and having a transformative impact on peers who continue to struggle with the issue.
Related: Murkowski third Republican senator to endorse marriage equality
When conservative Ohio Senator Rob Portman announced his support for marriage in March, pundits focused on how the experience of having a gay family member influences one’s perspective on the ways that government and society treat their loved ones. But there’s an even more interesting part of the story–the multiplying effect a single statement of support from a leading Republican can have on other elected officials. This “Portman effect” caused not only Republican Senators to rethink the issue, but it changed the calculus for wavering Democrats.
Portman’s decision put Democrats on the spot, forcing them to take a position on an issue they’d rather avoid. It also moved the goalposts, making support for same-sex marriage necessary for Democrats who do not want to be seen as “to the right” of a reliably conservative GOP senator. In the days that followed, the dynamic shifted dramatically as Democratic senators and Hillary Clinton all came around on the issue, prompting Chief Justice John Roberts to suggest legislators were “falling all over themselves.”









