Showing posts with label Rick Santorum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rick Santorum. Show all posts

Monday, April 9, 2012

The Real Meaning of Santorum

Social conservatives are searching for a hero, and Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum’s antigay views have helped him claim the mantle of religious freedom fighter. For The Advocate’s May issue, Lucas Grindley examines how Santorum shot to the top of the Republican primary field, rallied the party’s religious conservatives, and what his new influence means for the future of the GOP.

No one predicted that the man who once compared gay sex to bestiality and pedophilia, who had lost reelection to the U.S. Senate by 18 points in 2006, would upset  the monied juggernaut Mitt Romney campaign in state after state. LGBT activists always doubted Santorum could ever beat Romney, however what’s most shocking to them aren’t his chances of winning the nomination but that he can win anything at all.

“You could knock me over with a drop of Santorum. I am completely blown away by this,” Dan Savage, the mastermind of the Google-bomb that forever redefined Rick’s last name, told The Advocate’s Lucas Grindley. Savage, who had dismissed Santorum’s Iowa win as a chance for more moderate voters in other states to prove his views are big political losers, remains baffled by Santorum’s success continuing, “Whatever it is, it’s terrifying.”

Grindley points out that what is most worrisome is that Santorum’s public statements show he goes further than any other candidate in campaigning against LGBT people under the banner of “religious freedom.” Not only is he the only candidate to claim that amending the Constitution would retroactively invalidate marriages of same-sex couples, he once explained the difference between God-given rights and government-given rights.

In Rick Santorum’s view of the world, God has not given gay, bisexual, or transgender people any rights, Grindley continues. Instead, Obama and his liberal supporters have extended those rights in violation of God’s law and the religious beliefs of people like Santorum. In Santorum’s mind, Obama and the Democrats have played God, and that’s why they are to blame for the downfall of society.

Many on the right and in the GOP, however, praise and support Santorum for sticking to his socially conservative convictions. A high-level Republican strategist with experience in big campaigns sees this as winning leadership points for the candidate. Joe Solmonese, outgoing president of the Human Rights Campaign, tends to agree. “He absolutely represents people,” says Solmonese. “The problem with him is, he is true to his convictions. He means what he says, and that should give us reason to be deeply concerned and afraid about the prospect of Rick Santorum.”

Even LGBT conservatives are wary of a Santorum nomination, which Jimmy LaSalvia, executive director for the gay conservative group GOProud, says would be “disastrous” for his party. “If he is the nominee,” LaSalvia predicts with alarm, “the Obama-Santorum outcome will make Reagan-Mondale look like a squeaker.” LaSalvia, a loyal Republican and Romney supporter, doesn’t mince words except when asked whether GOProud could endorse a ticket that included Santorum’s name. “It would be a referendum on the most outdated and wrong beliefs of some conservatives.”

Monday, January 23, 2012

S.C. evangelicals criticize Romney over LGBT positions

Mitt Romney, Homophiliac?
Three South Carolina evangelical leaders last week announced their support of Rick Santorum for president, saying they could not support Mitt Romney because of his "homophilia.

The trio praised Santorum’s views on homosexuality, but said Romney "very clearly endorses dangerous, unhealthy homosexual conduct."

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Evangelical leaders endorse Santorum in strategic political move

Santorum
Rick Santorum has won the backing of a group of more than 100 socially conservative leaders who met in Texas this week to choose a candidate whom they hope will defeat Mitt Romney in the the Republican presidential primary race. 

The group is expected to deploy volunteers to help Santorum in South Carolina, where a victory by Romney in the upcoming primary could significantly bolster his position as the eventual GOP nominee. If Romney eventually wins the nomination, some believe the group’s actions this week could weaken the influence of evangelicals in Republican politics.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

HRC to Rick Santorum: Get Your Facts Straight and Put Children First

The Human Rights Campaign (HRC), the nation’s largest civil rights organization dedicated to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) equality, today denounced former Pennsylvania senator and presidential hopeful Rick Santorum’s comments that adoption is a privilege that gay people are not entitled to.  Despite the fact that over 100,000 children and youth across the country are in need of a loving home, and years of research that confirms sexual orientation has nothing to do with one’s ability to raise a child, Santorum continues to tell lies about LGBT families and myths about child welfare.

“If Rick Santorum wants to talk about family values, he should talk about the need to find permanent homes for every child – that is a value we all share,” said HRC President Joe Solmonese.  “At a time when we have a child welfare crisis on our hands, Rick Santorum resorts to spreading lies about our families.  The leading child welfare experts agree that adoptive parents should be judged by their character and their ability to raise a child, not their marital status or sexual orientation.”

The Child Welfare League of America, the nation’s oldest and largest child welfare organization, opposes restrictions on adoption and believes that applicants should be assessed on their ability to parent a child, not on their marital status or sexual orientation.  The North American Council on Adoptable Children opposes laws and legislation that restrict the consideration of prospective foster and adoptive parents based on their sexual orientation.

“It is distressing that too many politicians are turning to their old games of discrimination and prejudice, on the backs of our children and families, to get attention,” said Ellen Kahn, Director of HRC’s Family Project and a professional social worker.  “Years of research, public opinion, and the child welfare profession conclude that discrimination is not in the best interest of the children.  They simply delay or deny access to stable, loving homes and force kids to languish in the foster care system.”