Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney has been the very picture of paranoid homophobia in the last few years, becoming an almost-comic figure when he filed a bogus law suit last month in an attempt to force an anti-marriage amendment onto the 2008 ballot in Massachusetts. This from a man who opposes “activist judges” and favors tort reform. Coincidentally (or not), most pundits expect Romney to be a presidential candidate on the ballot in 2008.
But, according to the Boston Globe, Romney sang a different tune in a recently re-released 1994 interview with Bay Windows, Boston’s gay paper. Romney said that the gay-lesbian community “needs more support from the Republican Party.” Romney advocated letting states decide whether to allow same-sex marriage. “People of integrity don’t force their beliefs on others, they make sure that others can live by different beliefs they may have,” Romney said. (Note to Bay Windows: SNAP on the re-release, but lose the cutesy name!)
Golly Gee, it turns out that Mitt Romney, like so many other Republicans, has been cynically gay-baiting all these years in hopes of earning kudos and votes from the religious crazies who actually think gay marriage is a pressing issue. (In reality, only about 8,000 same-sex couples have married in Massachusetts. Not only has the sky not fallen, but support for gay marriage has increased statewide.) Well, either Romney has been exaggerating his anti-gay feelings as governor of Massachusetts or he disingenuously downplayed them as a candidate, in efforts to woo gay votes away from his opponent, the notorious liberal Edward Kennedy.
So, did he lie then, or is he lying now? Frankly, I don’t give a damn. Romney won’t win in 2008, thanks, in a stroke of poetic justice, to prejudice. In this case, against him. A recent Gallup Poll says Americans aren’t ready for a Mormon president. See how hating doesn’t pay?
— Cameron Scott