Tag Archives: Prop 8

Where is the LA Times on the Mormon Church and Prop 8 Story?

Seriously, this is the biggest race in California and members of the Mormon Church are responsible for at least 40% of the cash into the Prop 8 campaign and who knows how many volunteers.  Quite honestly, the California papers have been following the lead of the Salt Lake Tribune, but the LA Times is nowhere to be found.

First, the SLT reported on Friday that the Mormon Church was closing their church based call centers in Utah and other states.  The SacBee picked that one up on Saturday, mentioning the Courage Campaign’s petition (delivery is Tues AM) to the LDS Church.

Yesterday, the SLT reported on the strife within the Mormon Church about their unprecedented level of involvement.  Here is the lede:

The thought of going to church in her southern California LDS ward makes Carol Oldham cry. She can’t face one more sermon against same-sex marriage. She can’t tolerate the glares at the rainbow pin on her lapel.

Oldham, a lifelong Mormon, is troubled by her church’s zeal in supporting a California ballot initiative that would define marriage as between one man and one woman. She feels the church is bringing politics into her sanctuary.

“It has tainted everything for me,” Oldham said, choking up during a telephone interview/.  “I am afraid to go there and hear people say mean things about gay people. I am in mourning. I don’t know how long I can last.”

Now check out this lede by the Chronicle today:

Christine Alonso’s body trembled and her lips quivered as she walked up and spoke to a few of the 50 protesters in front of the Mormon Temple in Oakland on Sunday.

“Don’t think they’re all against you,” said Alonso, 27, explaining that she was Mormon and that despite her religious leaders’ support of a ballot measure banning same-sex marriage, she was actively opposed.

As she walked away, she said, “I’m afraid that a gay or lesbian friend might hear that I’m Mormon and think that I want to tear their marriage apart.”

Oldam and Alonso are not alone in being extremely troubled and distressed about their Church’s overwhelming involvement in the Prop 8 campaign.  You don’t have to look much further than right here on Calitics for the same anguish. Chino Blanco wrote earlier today:

The “Yes on 8” campaign has directed more than $10 million dollars (so far) from Mormon donors to a narrow political campaign. Much of this money was raised after the Church reviewed its tithing records and identified wealthy Mormons to recruit even larger donations from, using special conference calls with Church elders. Why are tithing records being utilized this way? What does this reveal about the way the wealth of individual members has played a growing role in church leadership decisions? How many lives could this money save through the Church’s Humanitarian General Fund? How many educations could this money pay for through the Church’s Perpetual Education Fund? Why does our concept of morality focus so zealously on gender and sexuality at the cost of efforts to end death by disease or starvation, proclaim peace, relieve the debtor, or show stewardship for God’s creation?

The whole thing really is worth a read.  This path that the proponents of Prop 8 have taken is tearing people apart, inside and out.

The LAT is the biggest paper on record here in California, one of the largest in the country and they are missing this wrenching story.  How about we suggest some story lines here in the comments.

I will go first: dig into the enemy of my enemy is my friend story to look into how well the evangelicals, who are no fans of the Mormon Church are working with Mormons within the campaign.

(full disclosure: I work for the Courage Campaign)

Prop 8 makes me sad & afraid

(Cross-posted at Living in the O.)

Last night, I couldn’t sleep. Out of nowhere, I had started to feel really sad, and at first I couldn’t figure out why. Then I realized that I was worrying about the passage of Prop 8, which would take away my right to marry the woman I love.

When the California Supreme Court ruled in favor of same-sex marriage, I couldn’t have been much happier. It was inspiring to watch some of the first same-sex marriages happen at Oakland City Hall. It gave me so much hope for the future of our state, and for the first time, my girlfriend and I started to think seriously about the possibility of marriage.

But now I’m facing the reality that this right could be ripped away from me. A few months ago, I thought Prop 8 was sure to go down. The polling looked good, and I thought that the thousands of same sex couples who were getting married would shift this debate forever. Didn’t everyone at least peripherally know one same sex couple who had gotten married?

Now I think my assumptions may have been off. The Mormon church has dumped millions of dollars into passing Prop 8 and has run extremely misleading ads that seem to have been very effective. The polling is far too close for comfort.

But all of this was still very far removed from my own life. That changed on Saturday, when I took the bus down to Lakeshore in Oakland, as I got off the bus, I saw a large group of Yes on 8 protesters shouting and waving their signs. They were mostly kids, with a few adults. And they seemed very, very angry. There was a small contingent of No on 8 people across the street, who were standing quietly with their signs and passing out fliers.

I left this scene feeling upset – sad, angry, and afraid. I could not believe I had just seen people expressing such hatred in the heart of Oakland. These feelings grew in me all weekend, and I realized that I needed to do something about it. I’ve been so engrossed in Rebecca Kaplan’s campaign for Oakland City Council and the No on Measure KK campaign in Berkeley, that I’ve done almost nothing for No on 8.

Well, that’s going to change. I’m going to dedicate most of my energy this week to No on 8, and I hope you will join me. Here’s what we can do to make sure that one day I can marry the woman I love and that all Californians have the right to marry whomever they love, regardless of gender:

  1. Donate! Like I said, the Mormon church has raised a ton of money for Yes on 8. We need to counter that with funds of our own. Do not wait another day – give generously today.
  2. Volunteer: I’ll be phoning at the Oakland United Democratic Campaign office at 1915 Broadway in downtown Oakland several nights this week (I’m headed there right now). The great thing about this office is that you can phone for various campaigns at once – I’ll be phoning for No on 8 and Rebecca Kaplan. Join me any night from 5-9pm. If you’re not in Oakland, you can find your local No on 8 office here.
  3. Do Personal GOTV: Don’t assume all your friends are going to vote. Call, email, or bang down their doors – just make sure everyone you know is voting No on 8. The California Democratic Party has set up this great tool that allows you to text your friends for free. Check it out and personalize the message to remind your friends to vote No on 8.

A Beautiful Sunday in Northern California

As I mentioned last week, I made a trip out to Stockton yesterday.  The weather was beautiful, warm and sunny. It made for a nice day to walk a precinct. The CDP Rural Caucus couldn’t have chosen a nicer day.

I got to Stockton at around 10, after a gorgeous drive over the Altamont pass and through the sea of wind turbines (and the “Jesus Saves” cross burned into the side of a hill). It really is beautiful, when you see the hills with a smidge of foggy haze over them.  As I walked into the building, a former movie theater, you can see a few things. One, this wasn’t fancy. There wasn’t even a restroom, you had to use one at the sympathetic coffee shop next door.  There was insulation and old movie theater seats in the back room that was now housing a proliferation of lawn signs from local candidates.

And there are a lot of strong local candidates.  The event was designed to support Assembly candidates Huber and Eisenhut as well as State Senate candidate Lois Wolk. (Note: I do some work for Wolk’s campaign.) However, it went further than that. We had the CDP’s flyer with the Obama Highway picture that contained some pretty good recommendations for the props (except that the CDP couldn’t come to a recommendation on Prop 10…vote no on 10!) and a flyer for Stockton mayoral candidate Ann Johnston.  

I walked with CDP Rural Caucus Chair Jamie Beutler and Region 4 Chair Owen Jackman. Well, I’ll put “walk” in quotes there.  It’s weird, because for all I complain about the huge hills in SF, there are advantages to walking precincts here. Namely, everything is close. So, we drove around talking to voters. We were in a pretty mixed neighborhood, with a bunch of students from University of the Pacific as well as some working class families. Overall, the impresion of the voters we spoke to was very positive.

PhotobucketI was, once again, impressed with Alyson Huber. For a political newcomer, she has run a great campaign. While I might have tweaked a few tactics here and there, overall she has managed to stay competitive in a tough district.  In the next 8 days, she has a better shot than anybody has had in this district for a long time to put a Democrat in this seat.  Her opponent, Jack Sieglock, is a longtime politician. He’s been a city councilman, a supervisor, and generally hanging around GOP politics in the region for a while.  

At this point, Sieglock’s running a pretty negative campaign. (Even using a quote from the Calitics podcast out of context on a mailer). But all that’s just the name of the game in politics, but more troubling are all the lies.  Namely, Sieglock is alleging that Huber is some sort of McClintock-esque carpetbagger.  Trust me when I say that Huber is no McClintock, carpetbagger-wise or in any other stretch of the imagination.  Huber was born and raised in the Central Valley. She graduated from Lodi High School and attended Cal State, Chico before finishing up at Cornell. She attended one of our fine state law schools, Hastings, and now practices from her home in the Valley. Huber deserves respect for working her way up, and she should be the next Assembly member from AD-10.

It really was a great experience, and I topped it off with a stop in Tracy to stand at a street corner to oppose Prop 8.  We got a lot of great support, honking horns and the sort.  It was a great group that turned out, a lot of young newly energized Californians opposing the joke that is Prop 8.

Now that’s a beautiful day…

Under Fire, Mormons Are Backing Off (A Bit) on Prop 8

Estimates of donations by Mormons to Prop 8 are now up to $10 million, funding all of those lies and distortions on our airwaves.  They have been fueling their volunteer base from here in California and across the country, using their church organizing networks to turn out volunteers to phone bank and knock doors.  And Mark Jansson, a “Yes on 8” Executive Committee member and self-described LDS member, was one of four signers to the blackmail letter sent to Equality California donors. The Mormon Church is heart of the Prop 8 campaign, but for a long time the scope of their involvement was not known.

Well, now that it is out in the open and attention is being paid to it, the Mormon Church is squirming and at least in one case, backing down.  They are simply not enjoying this attention. From today’s SacBee:

The Mormon church, whose members have emerged as the leading backers of a ballot measure to end same-sex marriage in California, is scaling back its Utah campaign operation but will continue to support the initiative.

Church members will no longer be making phone calls from Utah to California voters, Kim Farah, a spokeswoman for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, said in a prepared statement Friday.

Good.  They shouldn’t be doing it in the first place.  Pressure on the Mormon Church to cease their funding of the lying, blackmailing Prop 8 campaign is working.

The Courage Campaign has been keeping the heat on with our petition to LDS President-Prophet Thomas Monson demanding that his church cease funding the Prop 8 campaign and all forms of advocacy for the ballot measure, which was referenced in the SacBee article.   Flip it:

(oh and full disclosure: if you didn’t know it already, I work for the Courage Campaign)

Opponents of the measure have criticized the church’s involvement in the campaign.

The Courage Campaign, a liberal advocacy group, plans to deliver a petition to a Mormon church in Los Angeles next week demanding the church stop funding the Yes on 8 campaign.

But a spokesman for the church, which holds traditional marriage is a sacred institution ordained by God, said the church continues to support the measure despite curtailing its Utah phone bank operation.

We are not the only ones ruffling their feathers.  Dante sure got under their skin with his Daily Kos post suggesting kossacks work on a distributed research project to look into the Mormon donors to Prop 8 and see if there is any dirt.  The info is all out in the public domain and he was not doing anything illegal and unethical, but when the blackmail story broke the Prop 8 campaign tried to use it as an excuse.

His post was the subject of a story by the Salt Lake City ABC affiliate.  It’s really funny to watch the newscaster emphasize “damn” and “hell” as in Hell to Pay, the competition on Daily Kos that netted $150,000 for the No on Prop 8 campaign.

The lesson we should take from all of this is to keep it up.  Keep up the focus on the Mormons.  Keep exposing their lies and blackmail.  Keep pointing out the hypocrisy of a religion funding lies and distortions.  We can respect their freedom to choose not to conduct same-sex marriages, we only ask that they respect Californians to make up our own minds on whether we should take away the rights of loving couples to marry.

And if you haven’t already, go sign the letter to the President-Prophet.  We are going to deliver it on Tuesday and invite the press.  The more names we have with us the better.

Apple on Prop 8

Apple has an announcement on the front of their Safari Startpage:

No on Prop 8:

Apple is publicly opposing Proposition 8 and making a donation of $100,000 to the No on 8 campaign. Apple was among the first California companies to offer equal rights and benefits to our employees’ same-sex partners, and we strongly believe that a person’s fundamental rights – including the right to marry – should not be affected by their sexual orientation. Apple views this as a civil rights issue, rather than just a political issue, and is therefore speaking out publicly against Proposition 8.

Now, go buy an iPod or something.

SF Chronicle Jeopardizes Marriage Equality

From today’s Beyond Chron.

In the final stretch of this election, Proposition 8 is dangerously close in the polls-after months of it being safely behind.  With massive out-of-state funding, including $8.4 million from the Mormon Church, the “Yes on 8” campaign has scared many swing voters into falsely believing that marriage equality will intrude on their religion and indoctrinate their children.  And while the San Francisco Chronicle took a formal position against it, the paper’s news coverage-which has a far greater impact than its editorial endorsements-has actively pushed a meme that helps Prop 8’s message.  Over the last two weeks, the paper has treated a first-grade teacher’s wedding as front-page news, repeated the line that Gavin Newsom is a liability and that San Francisco is “so different” from the rest of the state, and fomented divisions within liberal constituencies that give wavering voters an “out” in supporting Prop 8.  With the stakes in this election higher than virtually any other race, the Chronicle should not think that merely opposing Prop 8 can absolve them of responsibility should it pass on November 4th.

When the state Supreme Court ruled that all couples have the right to marry, I boldly predicted that Prop 8 would fail.  Once swing voters started seeing their friends, neighbors and relatives get married, I reasoned, attitudes would evolve and the measure would go down-as it has changed opinions in Massachusetts.  The “No on 8” campaign’s basic message is that regardless of how one may feel about same-sex marriage, no group should be singled out of a basic right-a position that swing voters can respect and relate to.

The “Yes on 8” campaign knew they could only win if they changed the subject, so with heavy financial backing from the Mormon Church have flooded the airwaves with blatant lies and scare tactics like “churches could lose their tax-exempt status” and “children in public schools will be taught gay marriage-even if parents object.”  Now some swing voters who say they have “no problem” with gay people are afraid that marriage equality will “indoctrinate” their children and interfere with religious practices.  And once voters are afraid and don’t trust you, it’s a lot harder to make them listen to facts that refute it.

So why did the San Francisco Chronicle make its front-page story on October 11th about a first-grade class attending their lesbian teacher’s wedding?  Going to see your teacher get married is nothing new, and certainly not front-page material.  When I was in second grade, a (straight) teacher at my school got married.  Not only did her students attend the wedding-they even sang at the wedding.  I don’t fault the school for bringing the first grade kids to the lesbian wedding-which, by the way, had the blessing of each child’s parents.  But putting it on the front page of the Chronicle gave the “Yes on 8” campaign what they needed: a visual that gays are “indoctrinating” young children.

According to Jill Tucker, who wrote the Chronicle story, the parents who organized the trip actively sought media coverage-and the paper decided on its own that it was “news” enough to deserve front-page treatment.  But the Chronicle didn’t have to accept their solicitation.  If this was 2004, when San Francisco conducted same-sex weddings in defiance of state law, it probably would have been newsworthy-despite resulting in the same right-wing backlash.  But now that gay and lesbian weddings are sanctioned by the Supreme Court, a wedding is really not noteworthy.  Prop 8 opponents can point out the kids had their parents’ consent to attend, but the damage was done to scare swing voters.

One might excuse the Chronicle for a temporary lapse in judgment.  But its coverage of Prop 8 over the past two weeks has consistently framed San Francisco Values as freakishly out-of-touch with the rest of California-just like they did before on other issues.

An October 14th story described Mayor Gavin Newsom as “everyone’s worst nightmare” because the “Yes on 8” side used his Supreme Court victory speech in one of their ads-as if now we should never applaud a court decision.  John Diaz even lectured Newsom that what draws cheers in San Francisco won’t “play well in Redlands or Redding”-as if those two Republican cities are more representative of California than San Francisco.  No Democratic statewide candidate, by the way, ever does well in Redding or Redlands-so don’t be surprise when Newsom fares poorly in those parts for his gubernatorial bid.

Newsom himself only reinforced the Chronicle’s meme by keeping a low profile during the Prop 8 campaign.  He did speak at the “No on 8” campaign office kick-off in the Castro, but (half-jokingly) described San Francisco as “forty-seven square miles surrounded by reality.”  So according to our own Mayor, San Francisco isn’t the “real” America?  As far as I’m concerned, that sounds too much like how Republicans are talking these days.

On October 22nd, the Chronicle had another front-page story about Prop 8.  Pursuing a narrative that only gives cover to swing voters for voting against marriage equality, John Wildermuth quoted a 29-year-old student who said she had gay friends-but argued she could “still love these persons and be for Prop 8.”

Why is that dangerous?  Because supporters of Prop 8 claim their measure is not about hate-but rather about preventing one group from “imposing” their lifestyle on the rest of us.  Swing voters like to think of themselves as tolerant (but they’re uncomfortable with anyone indoctrinating them), and such a line gives them the perfect “out” to say they can vote for Prop 8 without being bigots.  Wildermuth, however, never used his article to ask an obvious question: how can you “love” gay people while taking away their rights?

But that wasn’t even the worse Chronicle article that day.  A companion piece about each side in the Prop 8 fight targeting African-Americans only further legitimized the fearful aspects of that community.  The piece pictured a black woman wearing an Obama shirt and holding a “Yes on 8” sign-without mentioning the irony that Barack Obama strongly opposes Prop 8.  If the Chronicle asked her about that, her answer didn’t make it in the article.

The piece also uncritically quoted a black minister, who explained his position in favor of Prop 8 by saying: “you didn’t see very many blacks getting married in San Francisco.”  The Chronicle could have pointed out that (a) San Francisco has a relatively small black population, (b) gay couples can now get married anywhere in the state, and (c) there are about 7,400 African-American gay couples living in California.  As Harrison Chastang has written, the black community today is less riled up to oppose same-sex marriage than four years ago.

Under the auspices of “journalism,” the Chronicle painted a picture that implies black voters-who will be voting in droves for Barack Obama-will help pass Prop 8.  Never mind that this coverage only brings out the worst aspects of fear and ignorance, at a time when black marriage equality supporters are working hard to educate their community about this critical issue.

Proposition 8 isn’t your run-of-the-mill electoral fight where armchair pundits can reduce the coverage to “who’s up” and “who’s down” like they do for candidate campaigns.  The stakes are much higher here because it’s a constitutional amendment-and one that will have a far more lasting effect on the lives of ordinary people.  Politically, passing Prop 8 passage could be a disaster for marriage equality supporters-turning back the clock on this civil rights movement for many years.  That’s why the Chronicle needs to be very sensitive on how they analyze the issue, without fueling lies and misconceptions.

The Chronicle may have taken a formal “no” position on Prop 8-as have virtually every major newspaper in California.  But its news coverage will have a much greater effect on the outcome than the paper’s oft-ignored editorials.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Outside of work hours and on his own time, Paul Hogarth has phonebanked for “No on 8” at their campaign office in the Castro-and urges Beyond Chron readers to do the same.

Thursday Open Thread: Anti-Americans and More!

• A Houston Congressman, Ted Poe, has called LA Superior Court Commissioner Marilyn Mackel “Anti-American”. Apparently Mr. Poe didn’t like the fact that Ms. Mackel denied early enlistment for a 17 year old while telling the potential Marine that she opposed the Iraq War. You pretty much know you are on the right path when Ted Poe is attacking you.

• Former Folsom Mayor Glen Fait came out very publicly: he took an ad out in the local newspaper coming out and asking his neighbors to vote against Prop 8. Good for him.

• Ballots sent by mail with incorrect postage will still be counted. While some counties, like San Francisco, choose to pay for the postage for VBM voters, that is not the case in many counties.  This is a sad statement from the Santa Clara County:

“We have an agreement with the post office that they’ll deliver the election mail, but we keep urging people to use the proper postage,” Morales said. “We don’t want to subsidize the entire ballot.”

One would hope that voting would be subsidized, instead of applying a neo-poll tax, small as it may be, for voters who are forced to do VBM by closed precincts or other necessities.

• From a few days ago – turns out that racist “Obama Bucks” cartoon in a Republican mailer was actually taken from a parody blog site.  Ron Nehring is trying to spin this as a “liberal blog” producing hate and racism.  Um, Ron, it makes it WORSE that your GOP minions can’t recognize parody when they see it.

• Already, 6 papers in California that backed Bush in 2004 have endorsed Obama.

• The City of Palo Alto took a stand against brutal immigration enforcement tactics.

• Mary Nichols, head of the California Air Resources Board has come out for No on 10.  And something for the kiddos: A No on Prop 10 Crossword (PDF) from Prop 87 proponent Anthony Rubenstein. Well, at least the very nerdy kiddos. Fun!

Yes on 8 Campaign Blackmails No on 8 Donors

Sorry to push Brian’s excellent post down the page a bit, but some breaking news needs to be shared. The Yes on 8 campaign is admitting to having sent letters to companies that donated to No on 8 and Equality California demanding that the companies provide a matching donation to Yes on 8 – or that the would be “outed.” From the AP:

companies

Leaders of the campaign to outlaw same-sex marriage in California are warning businesses that have given money to the state’s largest gay rights group they will be publicly identified as opponents of traditional unions unless they contribute to the gay marriage ban, too.

ProtectMarriage.com, the umbrella group behind a ballot initiative that would overturn the California Supreme Court decision that legalized gay marriage, sent a certified letter this week asking companies to withdraw their support of Equality California, a nonprofit organization that is helping lead the campaign against Proposition 8.

“Make a donation of a like amount to ProtectMarriage.com which will help us correct this error,” reads the letter. “Were you to elect not to donate comparably, it would be a clear indication that you are in opposition to traditional marriage. … The names of any companies and organizations that choose not to donate in like manner to ProtectMarriage.com but have given to Equality California will be published.”

The letter was signed by four members of the group’s executive committee: campaign chairman Ron Prentice; Edward Dolejsi, executive director of the California Catholic Conference; Mark Jansson, a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; and Andrew Pugno, the lawyer for ProtectMarriage.com. A donation form was attached. The letter did not say where the names would be published.

CBS 8 in San Diego has the money quote from Yes on 8:

Yes on 8 confirms they sent around 30 companies the letter. A spokeswoman told News 8 they are just trying to hold their ground in a passionate race. She added that No on 8 supporters picketed the Manchester Grand Hyatt after Doug Manchester donated $125,000 thousand. The publicity caused at least one very large group to cancel its event at the hotel.

She also pointed to a popular blog that asked readers to dig up dirt on Yes on 8 supporters, see if they’ve contributed to less than honorable causes, or have done something otherwise egregious, with the hope they can force the Yes on 8 campaign to return their contributions, or face a bunch of negative publicity.

If you’re sick of these intimidation tactics, the Courage Campaign is asking you to sign a petition calling on the Mormon church leadership to stop funding and supporting these kinds of intimidation tactics, lies, and other efforts to take away basic rights.

Note: I work for the Courage Campaign

Prop. 8: Polling, Analysis, Obama

So the latest poll on Prop. 8 has come out from the PPIC, showing the No side still ahead, albeit with a narrower lead than the last time PPIC was in the field.

A majority of Californians still oppose a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage, but the margin is narrowing so notably that the fate of Proposition 8 may hinge on the turnout for the presidential race.

A new poll released late Wednesday by the Public Policy Institute of California shows Prop. 8 losing 52 to 44 percent among likely voters. That eight-point margin has narrowed from the 14-point spread that PPIC polls found in August and September. Just 4 percent of likely voters remain undecided.

“The vote on Proposition 8 could get closer between now and the election, because we know that Californians are evenly divided in general on whether they favor or oppose gay marriage,” said Mark Baldassare, president and CEO of the PPIC.

There should be a Field Poll on this next week.  But I think it’ll confirm what we see here – a close race that either side can take.  The polling guru Nate Silver of 538 waded into this today.

Both the PPIC and SurveyUSA polls have Barack Obama leading by large (20+ point) margins, so I’m not sure that opponents of the measure can count on some sort of turnout surge above and beyond what is already reflected in the polls. There are evidently fair numbers of Obama/’Yes on 8′ tickets, especially among the state’s black and Latino populations.

On the one hand, there have been suggestions that there is something of ‘Bradley Effect’ on polling on gay marriage bans, and that such measures tend to overperform their polls, although a more recent analysis refutes this suggestion.

On the other hand, because ballot measures are confusing, it is usually better to be on the ‘No’ side of them … people tend to vote ‘no’ on things that they don’t understand. In this case, that gives an advantage to the marriage equality folks. (It may even be the case that some voters vote ‘no’, thinking that they’re voting no to gay marriage, when in fact the wording of the resolution is such that a ‘no’ vote protects gay marriage).

I’d peg the ‘no’ side as about a 55/45 favorite, but not more than that.

Sounds pretty accurate to me.  So what can turn the tide in this race at this late date?  Well, there are the human interest stories like this ex-mayor of Folsom coming out and opposing Prop. 8 in an emotional display.  I think putting a face on whose rights would be eliminated can be powerful.  There is also value in putting a spotlight on the extremism and basic indecency coming from the Yes side.

Standing there as the “Yes on 8” rally outside Oakland’s Foothill Missionary Baptist Church began to wind down today, I noticed a gentleman in the crowd approach an elderly woman who was holding a “Gay marriage = legal perversion” sign. I eavesdropped – hey, that’s my job – as he told her he agreed with her sign completely, but he urged her to ditch it and just use a “Yes on 8” sign instead because her homemade sign’s sentiment might turn off some voters.

They’re trying to hide their wingnuts, but they’re pretty ubiquitous.  And this story seems to me to be a good one to push, considering that one of the key arguments of the Yes side concerns classroom indoctrination.

A Salinas High School teacher who distributed “Yes on Proposition 8” literature to her students last week has been asked to refrain from doing so by administrators […]

The literature that was passed out to students says it is important to protect marriage as an institution between a man and a woman.

The one-page statement also says it is critical to vote yes on Proposition 8, saying its failure would eventually force the state to approve “polygamy, polymory, incest, group and other ‘creative’ arrangements for marriage.”

Think of the children!

But a more controversial idea, expressed by Andrew Sullivan, is that Barack Obama should get involved in this race.  Obama has already expressed his opposition to Prop. 8, but Sullivan argues that he should do more.

As expected, one reason Proposition 8, stripping gay couples of marriage equality, is still viable in California is because of strong African-American support. Black Californians back the anti-gay measure by a margin of 20 points, 58 – 38, in the SUSA poll. No other ethnic group comes close to the level of opposition and black turnout is likely to be very high next month.

All this makes it vital, in my opinion, that Barack Obama strongly and unequivocally oppose Proposition 8 in California, rather than keeping mainly quiet as he has done so far. We need him to make an ad opposing it.  This is a core test of whether gay Americans should back Obama as enthusiastically as they have in the last month. If he does not stand up for gay couples now, why should we believe he will when he is in office? And if black Americans are the critical bloc that helps kill civil rights for gays, that will not help deepen Obama’s governing coalition. It could tear it apart.

I think Sen. Obama is focused on winning a different election right now.  Still, even a small measure, like sending out a fundraising appeal to his California list, could speak volumes.  And as he’s already on the record, it’s not like the McCain campaign couldn’t already point to the issue if they so chose.

What do you think?

Lies

Note: I will be on KRXA 540 AM this morning at 8 to discuss this and other topics in California politics

The dominant theme of the 2008 campaign – from the presidential race on down – has been lies. Republicans and conservatives have resorted to an unprecedented amount of outright lies to try and defeat progressive campaigns and policies. There has been a marked uptick lately in the amount of false advertising especially on the propositions, so I thought I’d collect some of them here.

  • Prop 1A: The Reason Foundation, swimming in oil money, has been flooding the state’s newspapers with misleading claims against high speed rail. The worst example was in a recent issue of the LA Times when Adrian Moore of the Reason Foundation made totally false claims, including that global HSR lines are subsidized (all turn a profit and France’s TGV subsidizes other rail lines) and that HSR doesn’t take passengers from airlines (in fact, they all do – to the point that Air France is going to enter the HSR market itself). More on these lies at the California High Speed Rail Blog.
  • Prop 4: Planned Parenthood is facing a malicious attack from Prop 4 proponents. From an email sent out to the No on 4 list yesterday:

    A new ad from the proponents of Proposition 4 twists a tragic case of a teen trapped in an incestuous situation, and falsely claims that Prop 4 would have helped. What is most outrageous is that Prop 4 would have put that teen in an even worse and more desperate situation. It would not have helped this teen in any way yet the anti-choice extremists behind Prop 4 continue to use tragic events to lie to California voters.

    Visit No on Prop 4 to donate and find volunteer opportunities to help defeat this attack on teen safety and abortion rights.

  • Prop 8: Brian explained yesterday the most recent falsehood being peddled by the Yes on 8 folks. Even though Mormon legal expert Morris Thurston exposed these claims as lies and demanded the church stop spreading them, the Mormon Church is still helping pay for these ads. Visit the No on 8 campaign to volunteer your time or your money to defeat these liars and protect marriage rights.

Why all the lies? Partly because if we had a discussion on the actual merits of the issues, Prop 1A would pass and Props 4 and 8 would fail by large margins. The media plays a role here as well, letting groups like the Reason Foundation or the Mormon Church spread false claims without pushing back for the truth. Stenography has replaced journalism, as media outlets just report what “both sides” have to say regardless of whether or not there’s any truth to the claims. And the op-ed pages and TV ads exist in a zone of truthiness, where nobody holds the liars accountable.

Except us. California progressives, the blogs, the grassroots. All the more reason for us to Stay For Change and save California from the liars on the right who wish to set this state back decades instead of help us embrace a better future.

Every time you close your eyes…lies, lies.