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Log Cabin Republicans Endorse McCain for President

Pointing to his decision to break from the Republican majority and speak out against a federal amendment banning same-sex marriage, the Log Cabin Republicans on Tuesday officially endorsed John McCain for president, Log Cabin president Patrick Sammon announced at the Republican National Convention.


Pointing to his decision to break from the Republican majority and speak out against a federal amendment banning same-sex marriage, the Log Cabin Republicans on Tuesday officially endorsed John McCain for president. Log Cabin president Patrick Sammon announced the endorsement to a little over 200 attendees of the Big Tent Event at the Republican National Convention.

Log Cabin had indicated that gay marriage would be a hot-button issue for the group this election season, and Sammon later told The Advocate that McCain’s opposition to a U.S. constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage was enough to warrant an endorsement.

"Senator McCain stood with our community during its most critical attack in the last 10 years," Sammon said, referring to the Federal Marriage Amendment, "something it would have taken 100 years to fix in our Constitution. And Senator McCain paid a political price for that. He is distrusted by social conservatives in part because of his vote against the amendment. So we thought it was important to show our support for him because he stood with us."

Log Cabin's board of directors voted 12–2 in favor of the endorsement, and Sammon said he had "no illusions" that many LGBT activists would disagree with the decision. "It was not a rubber stamp. There was a lot of good discussion over the recent months -- a lot of soul-searching, a lot of honest deliberation," he said.

Sammon noted that LCR's membership largely favored the endorsement and added that he deemed it a strategic imperative for the gay community overall. "There's a 40% to 50% chance John McCain will win this election and I think it's important to have a strong voice that goes in and makes the case for him to support the issues that we care so much about. The fact is, John McCain is no George Bush on these issues." LCR endorsed then–Governor Bush in the 2000 election but declined to endorse him for reelection in 2004 based largely on President Bush's support for the Federal Marriage Amendment.

While McCain has said he supports the definition of marriage as being between a man and a woman and he advocated for passage of his own state's marriage ban in 2006, he has said that a federal ban on gay marriage is “un-Republican.” In 2004 he broke from the Bush administration and condemned the proposed amendment, saying he felt the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act was a more appropriate measure.

McCain's vice-presidential pick, Alaska governor Sarah Palin, a Christian conservative, has also gone on the record as saying she is against same-sex marriage and for defining marriage as being between a man and a woman, adding that she supported passing the state's constitutional marriage amendment in 1998.

She has, however, received some credit from gay voters for vetoing a law that would have denied health care and retiree benefits to the partners of gay state employees, according to the Anchorage Daily News. Palin vetoed the law based on a recommendation from the Alaska attorney general that it was unconstitutional. But she indicated that she did not personally support extending domestic-partner benefits to same-sex couples and backed a state amendment to repeal the Alaska supreme court's decision.

Sammon acknowledged that Log Cabin Republicans disagree with some of Governor Palin's positions, but added, "A lot of social conservatives were pressuring her to sign that legislation and she vetoed it, which had the effect of providing domestic-partner benefits." He also said Palin has not used gay issues in her campaigns in order to get elected in the same way that politicians like Mitt Romney have. (Kerry Eleveld, The Advocate)

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Reader Comments
  • Name: Ronald
    Date posted: 9/4/2008 3:41:00 AM
    Hometown: Honolulu

    Comment:

    Endorsements are lame. Those that follow them are too lazy to do their own policy research and would rather follow the leader like a bunch of cows. And, for the record our wonderful HRC endorses a candidate who doesn't support full marriage rights for the LGBT community. In my eyes, their endorsement is just as useless as this one.

  • Name: Robert Frost
    Date posted: 9/3/2008 10:41:00 PM
    Hometown: Phoenix

    Comment:

    To Andrew in Irving, TX. John McCain had everything to do with the 2006 Gay Marriage Proposition in AZ. He appeared in TV commercials urging voters to pass the proposition and VOTE YES. John McCain is solidly in favor of gay marriage amendments. The 2006 proposition would have would have amended the AZ Constitution to ban domestic partnerships as well as gay marriage. That vote by the people wasn’t good enough for the right wing, theocratic Christianists. During the last few minutes of the 2008 legislative session, the repugnican controlled legislature, by shutting off the microphones of the 2 Democrats who had the floor and in violation of Senate rules, voted to put the issue once again on the November ballot. This time, the proposition is much more narrow and will attempt to amend the Constitution to define marriage as only between a man and a woman. I would suggest that before you post a comment, you check your facts to make sure they are correct.

  • Name: Colin V. Gallagher
    Date posted: 9/3/2008 8:33:00 PM
    Hometown: San Francisco

    Comment:

    This endorsement is distressing, given that McCain has said that he would support an amendment to the U.S. Constitution to ban same-sex marriage if there were a successful challenge to the Defense of Marriage Act. As a gay Republican and past San Francisco LCR President, I strongly approved of the decision in 2004 to withhold the endorsement of Bush's re-election. Nothing that has happened since then has caused me to question the wisdom of that decision, whatever the short-term cost was to LCR's lobbying in terms of access to the Bush Administration. If the LCR leaders think that McCain, who endorsed Proposition 8 in California, would actually be a better President for the lesbian and gay community than Obama, who has opposed Prop. 8, then they are deluded. McCain's picks to the Supreme Court would likely vote to recriminalize sodomy. Because of this decision, I will likely never contribute again to the Log Cabin organization, either on the state or federal level.

  • Name: Jason
    Date posted: 9/3/2008 4:24:00 PM
    Hometown: Phoenix

    Comment:

    I meant to say that I am NOT putting down LCRs as people. That was a typo as I forgot to put the word "not" there. Only that I do not understand them. That's all...

  • Name: Jason
    Date posted: 9/3/2008 4:18:00 PM
    Hometown: Phoenix

    Comment:

    I do my best to understand where various ideological groups come from. I make an effort to see the reasoning behind those individuals who believe differently from me. However, for a gay person wanting or claiming to be a Republican is synonymous with a Jewish person wanting to join the Nazi Party or an African-American wanting to join the Ku Klux Klan. I am sorry but...that is how much sense a gay person makes to want to join or affiliate with the GOP. Frankly it is near traitorous. I have never understood why a person who affiliates with a demographic, through no fault of their own, would want to join a group, out of choice, that is against your demographic. I am a fairly educated person but this makes no sense to me whatsoever. I am putting down LCRs as people but I believe that their energies are misused and misdirected as well.

  • Name: Roger Burr
    Date posted: 9/3/2008 1:44:00 PM
    Hometown: Marble Hill, MO

    Comment:

    This makes about as much sense as German jews endorsing Adolf Hitler. Referring to the Log Cabin Republicans, I am reminded of what a comedian once said; "You can't fix STUPID"....

  • Name: Joe
    Date posted: 9/3/2008 12:36:00 PM
    Hometown: Fort Worth

    Comment:

    I take issue with those who call the LCRs "self-hating" or "self-loathing" - they are nothing of the sort. Instead, they love themselves (or, rather, their pocketbooks) more than they care for others.

  • Name: Chris Sullivan
    Date posted: 9/3/2008 12:05:00 PM
    Hometown: Chicago, IL

    Comment:

    Patrick Sammon is a classic example of a self-deluisional, self-loathing homosexual. His spin on McCain would be amusing if not so tragic.

  • Name: Chris Sullivan
    Date posted: 9/3/2008 12:01:00 PM
    Hometown: Chicago, IL

    Comment:

    "Gay Republicans" ? What about "Jews for Hitler"? or "Backs for the KKK" they all amount to the same thing. Maybe they can get these Log Cabin Republicans to turn the ovens on. Nothing but a bunch of self-loathing homosexuals. Pathetic.

  • Name: Jonathan
    Date posted: 9/3/2008 1:51:00 AM
    Hometown: Phoenix

    Comment:

    Although all American's may vote whichever way their conscience allows, one has to question the logic behind a homosexual selecting someone who has not openly supported GBLT people in the past, regardless of their fiscal leanings. Working within a group to change it only works when that group works in unison with the effort, rather than consistently fighting against said effort. The Log Cabin Republicans should be working with the Democrat party to move their fiscal agenda more toward conservative monetary responsibility rather than attempting to move a group from one moral stance to another. Ideals which are moral in basis are far more difficult to transition than those based on discordant monetary policy.

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