The march towards marriage equality has taken some important steps forward recently, and with public attitudes quickly becoming more progressive, it’s no longer a question of “if” the nation will do the right thing, but rather, “when.”
Indeed, support for marriage equality is even becoming more bipartisan, slowly but surely, with Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) joining a growing number of Republicans outside public office in support of same-sex marriage.
That said, progress among GOP officeholders remains terribly slow.
Support for gay marriage is picking up steam all over the country — except on Capitol Hill.
Take Sen. Saxby Chambliss. When asked if his views had changed on gay marriage, the Georgia Republican quipped: “I’m not gay. So I’m not going to marry one.”
Well, with logic like that, it’s obvious our elected leaders are poised for a mature, high-minded debate about civil rights.
I mean, really. Saxby Chambliss opposes marriage rights because he’s “not gay”? Does he realize that same-sex marriage would not require him to leave his wife and marry a man? Do Americans really have to wait for elected officials to actually be gay before marriage equality is a national reality?
In some ways, Chambliss’ response is a counterweight of sorts to Portman’s response. In the latter case, the Ohio Republican came around after learning that his son is gay and wanting him to have equal rights. In the former, the Georgia Republican isn’t personally gay, so he doesn’t see the need to extend equal rights to anyone else.
Of course, by this reasoning, Chambliss would be comfortable with discrimination against anyone who isn’t a wealthy, white, Christian guy from the South.









