For hundreds of gay and lesbian couples across Florida, 2015 will be remembered as the year that began with saying “I do.” But marriage equality’s arrival in the Sunshine State could have big implications for 2016, too – especially for the state’s former governor, Jeb Bush.
After flubbing his initial response to a federal ruling that struck down Florida’s same-sex marriage ban, which went into effect on Tuesday, Bush delivered an artful statement on the matter Monday evening — illustrating just how tight a spot many Republican presidential hopefuls now find themselves in when it comes to marriage equality.
“We live in a democracy, and regardless of our disagreements, we have to respect the rule of law,” said Bush in a written statement. “I hope that we can also show respect for the good people on all sides of the gay and lesbian marriage issue — including couples making lifetime commitments to each other who are seeking greater legal protections and those of us who believe marriage is a sacrament and want to safeguard religious liberty.”
Opposition to same-sex marriage, long a centerpiece of the GOP social agenda, has in the last year turned into a political headache as a growing number of states are seeing their bans on same-sex nuptials collapse, and a growing number of voters are welcoming that change.
At the same time, however, Republicans like Bush eyeing a possible 2016 bid can’t just drop the issue altogether. They’re still faced with having to appeal to the party’s socially conservative primary voters, many of whom are older, religious and value the concept of traditional marriage. The challenge for these potential GOP hopefuls is to win over the social conservatives in a way that doesn’t completely destroy their chances of winning the general election — something that the past two Republican nominees have been unable to accomplish.
So where does that leave Bush, who’s inching closer toward a 2016 presidential run and would be viewed as a serious contender?
Bush’s statement Monday night marked a considerable step up from a brief post-golf interview he gave to the Miami Herald over the weekend, during which he offered a kind of half-hearted affirmation of his earlier opposition to marriage equality. “The people of the state decided,” Bush told the Herald on Sunday. “But it’s been overturned by the courts, I guess.”
In recent years, Bush has spoken of the political dangers associated with backing policies seen as anti-gay. He told the crowd at a 2013 Conservative Political Action Committee’s (CPAC) event that the GOP needed to “move beyond the divisive and extraneous issues that currently define the public debate.”
Yet while Bush’s supporters view him as an electable candidate who can appeal to the center of an ever-more diverse national electorate, his record as governor is actually quite conservative. In 2004, Bush supported his older brother, former President George W. Bush, in a push to create a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage. But four years later, after he’d left office, Jeb Bush expressed some reservations about the campaign to enshrine Florida’s ban on same-sex nuptials in the state’s constitution, saying the change was not needed. He ended up supporting the effort.
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In 2012, the former governor again went on the record with his opposition to marriage equality, telling PBS’s Charlie Rose that “traditional marriage is what should be sanctioned” by the government. He added, however, that same-sex parents who “love their children with all their heart and soul” should be held up as role models.
Given his past statements, Bush’s latest attempt at talking about marriage equality certainly contained some of the most sympathetic language he’s ever used in reference to LGBT rights. Still, Democrats and marriage equality advocates were quick to pounce. In a statement, Democratic National Committee communications director Mo Elleithee declared that Bush had said “absolutely nothing.” “Nothing’s changed,” said Elleithee. “At the end of Bush’s statement, he still had the same position: He opposes the right of gay and lesbian Floridians — and all LGBT Americans — to get married and adopt children.”
But conservative political watchers were more impressed with his tact. “Here is a fascinating nuance,” said John J. Pitney Jr., a former national GOP official and a government professor at Claremont McKenna College, via email. “Jeb is a Catholic convert. All Christian churches have marriage rituals, but only Catholics, some Anglicans, and some Orthodox call it a sacrament.”
“He wants to avoid endorsing same-sex marriage, and avoid giving offense to anyone,” continued Pitney. “Most of all, he wants to avoid the issue entirely.”








