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by Karen Ocamb

Whopping news: Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who has always
referred to Prop. 22 and the “will of the people” as
one of the reasons for twice vetoing the California marriage-equality
bills, came out against the anti-gay marriage constitutional
amendment initiative currently in the signature-gathering
stage.
Speaking before the national Log Cabin Republican Convention
in San Diego April 11, Schwarzenegger was asked by LCR President
Patrick Sammon about the potential ballot initiative, and
Schwarzenegger said he “will always be there to fight
against that,” gay Republican Scott Schmidt reported
in his live-blogging of the event on BoiFromTroy. Apparently
it is the first time Schwarzenegger has spoken about an initiative
still being circulated.
Sammon prefaced his question—whether Schwarzenegger
would stand by Log Cabin if the measure made the November
ballot —with a reference to the late President Ronald
Reagan, who publicly opposed the infamous 1978 anti-gay Briggs
Initiative when he was governor of California. Initially,
Schmidt reported, the governor said he thought that “would
never happen” and that Californians had “moved
beyond” such initiatives.
Schwarzenegger, who also talked about “post-partisanship,” was
originally supposed to use his appearance to pump up presidential
candidate John McCain—who supported an anti-gay marriage
constitutional amendment measure in Arizona. Schwarzenegger’s
wife, Maria Shriver, a famous Democrat, supports Barack Obama.
“We applaud Gov. Schwarzenegger for standing with our
community as we oppose this discriminatory measure, and we
are thrilled that he will be there with us to ‘fight
against’ it should it qualify for the ballot,” Geoff
Kors, executive director of Equality California told IN Los
Angeles magazine. “Equality is not a partisan issue
and the governor demonstrated that with his statement today.
His opposition to the constitutional amendment now in circulation
adds to his record of supporting many LGBT issues, including
signing more than 15 Equality California bills during his
time in office.”
Meanwhile, the California Democratic Party convention also
yielded good news: The party now officially supports marriage
equality.
“We support the LGBT community in its quest for the
right to legal marriage, as well as the clergy's complete
religious freedom to solemnize marriages in accordance with
their beliefs,” the post-convention Party Platform
reads.
The effort was lead by stalwart Stonewall and Democratic
Party activist and Platform co-chair Norman Chramoff.
“It was successful because of the lack of ego involved—we
all put the goal first,” Chramoff told IN.
“In 2005, the party passed a resolution in the consent
calendar supporting civil marriage for lesbian and gay couples.
But by this year, after the state Legislature twice passed
[Assemblymember Mark] Leno’s marriage equality bills,
as well as the hard work of gays and straight allies alike,
made the plank position more acceptable,” Chramoff
said.
Meanwhile, Equality for All, the coalition organized to fight
the potential initiative, is still urgently looking for volunteers
to help block the religious rights’ well-funded paid-signature
gathering campaign. The deadline for signatures to be turned
into the Secretary of State for verification is April
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