Granted I agree with his 'new' position. The GOP Platform expressly prohibits same sex civil unions as well as gay marriage, so this is not some sort of loophole.
In September, George Bush said nothing about thinking it was OK for states to endorse civil unions between gays. And in fact, that is the real issue anyway. Marriages are religious ceremonies, civil unions are the only thing the government is actually involved in.
So my question is why does he wait until a week before the election to show the resolve for what he believes in? In my opinion they must have private polling that shows Bush is fading among women and gays (he got 25% of the gay vote in 2000). That or their internal polling is showing that they cannot depend on 'turning out the base', meaning Democratic turnout is higher than they had calculated.
So it is a last ditch pitch for the middle perhaps in my opinion.
One analyst i heard thinks it could hurt Bush among blacks who he had made progress with specifically with the gay marriage issue (lot of conservative Christians in that demo).
i saw the video and that's what he said.The NY Times wrote:In an interview on Sunday with Charles Gibson, an anchor of "Good Morning America" on ABC, Mr. Bush said, "I don't think we should deny people rights to a civil union, a legal arrangement, if that's what a state chooses to do so." ABC, which broadcast part of the interview on Monday, is to broadcast the part about civil unions on Tuesday.
According to an ABC transcript, Mr. Gibson then noted to Mr. Bush that the Republican Party platform opposed civil unions.
"Well, I don't," Mr. Bush replied.
He added: "I view the definition of marriage different from legal arrangements that enable people to have rights. And I strongly believe that marriage ought to be defined as between a union between a man and a woman. Now, having said that, states ought to be able to have the right to pass laws that enable people to be able to have rights like others."
Mr. Gibson then asked, "So the Republican platform on that point, as far as you're concerned, is wrong?"
"Right," Mr. Bush replied.
Additionally, how much is this story getting hammered? not getting any real play at all actually. Liberal Media!!!
Anyway, it might be how he truly feels, which I think is the reasonable position honestly. But I would call into question his credibility for only revealing that now, in light of all of the rhetoric on gay marriage since his rose garden speech presenting the Constitutional Amendment in January.
this is the gay marriage amendment that the Senate voted on this summer:
The last sentence is about civil unions, and Bush made no complaint about that sentence (added by the senate) in the summer when he was making political hay with his base on this issue.CNN.com wrote:"Marriage in the United States shall consist only of the union of a man and a woman. Neither this Constitution, nor the constitution of any State, shall be construed to require that marriage or the legal incidents thereof be conferred upon any union other than the union of a man and a woman."
I don't have a problem with politicians "coming around" to reasonable issues. However, Mr. Bush has predicated a substantial portion of his campaign to labelling Mr. Kerry as a "flip-flopper" and defining himself as somebody who has the consistency and resolve to project idyllic leadership.
This is a minor issue to some in this election, but the Republicans put it on the map thinking it would be positive for them. I wonder if this was a strategic error on the unflappable Mr. Rove's part to interject the gay marriage issue with such fervor earlier in the year.