Now that the Supreme Court
has effectively ended the debate over gay marriage by refusing to
listen to challenges over state laws allowing it, it would appear
this is a huge loss for republicans. In fact, if they play their
cards right, the opposite might be true.
While supporters of gay
marriage can celebrate the court's decision, republicans can thrive
if they learn from their past. With the 2016 presidential election
just two years away, thanks to the Supreme Court, gay marriage should
no longer be an issue. If asked for their position on gay marriage,
republican presidential candidates simply need to reply, “While I
personally do not believe in gay marriage, the legal process has
played out and the Supreme Court has decided the matter once and for
all. We have more pressing matters that face this nation and it will
be those matters that my presidency will focus on.”
By respectfully disagreeing
with the court's decision while telling the public the matter is
dead, republicans will be able to begin the process of ending the
practice of allowing religiously influenced politics to direct their
presidential goals. If they are wise, republicans would also do the
same when it comes to their stances on abortion, euthanasia, or any
other issues that are all too often bible driven.
In doing so, the Republican
Party can begin concentrating on convincing millennials they are the
party best suited for the future of this significant voting
population. Jobs, war, tuition reform, the environment, taxes,
health care, and housing are not bible driven issues and all are more
important to the children of baby boomers than who is or is not
allowed to get married.
Republicans would also be
wise to forget about a litmus test for their future judicial
appointments, expecting them to be pro life, pro death penalty, and
pro heterosexual. All these do is send a message to young people
that republicans are not an all inclusive party. If they want to
gain the vote of women, minorities, or the young, they need to return
to focusing on the issues that matter most to the majority rather
than those of the overly influential extreme right.
Millennials do not care
whether or not a person is gay or straight, christian or other, white
or black, or conservative or liberal. All they want is to trust a
political party with their future, a future that today is no better
off than it was when they got behind President Obama in 2008 and
2012.
In 2016, democrats will have
to run on their record. They will not be able to blame the war,
economy, health care, or social reforms on republicans. The
republican candidate who can focus on the short comings of the past
eight years rather than on undoing what the Supreme Court has allowed
and what most Americans support, will have a much better chance of
winning the White House. This candidate will be able to paint the
democrats choice, most likely Hillary Clinton, as a representative of
failed past policies that only stand in the way of the future
progress of this nation. Republicans might actually have a chance at
painting themselves as the more level headed and moderate party,
something most Americans are hoping to find in one of our two major
parties.
So in two years, if
republicans win back the White House, they can thank the Supreme
Court once again. Only this time it will not be over their
interpretation of dangling chads or voter recounts in Florida but
rather because they took a divisive issue that made republicans look
out of touch with the rest of the nation and took it off the
political table.
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