Sunday, May 15, 2011

Wealthy New York Donors Are Backing New York Gay Marriage Push

The New York Times has coverage of a strange phenomenon: wealthy GOP donors supporting the push for same sex marriage in New York State. Is it yet another sign of the schizophrenic nature of today's GOP - i.e., the crazies versus the rational, longer view pragmatists - or something else? Whatever the cause of the phenomenon, it's a shift from wealthy donors pandering to the nastiest aspects of the far right elements in the party. Personally, I suspect that some in the GOP - e.g., those who haven't already bailed from the party - are frightened of the ever increasing insanity of the party base and undue sway of the the Tea Party and Christofascist elements. In addition, some may simply see that long term, history is on the side of full LGBT civil equality and want to position themselves and the party so that they don't forfeit the younger generations of voters. Here are some story highlights:
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As gay rights advocates intensify their campaign to legalize same-sex marriage in New York, the bulk of their money is coming from an unexpected source: a group of conservative financiers and wealthy donors to the Republican Party, most of whom are known for bankrolling right-leaning candidates and causes.
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Their behind-the-scenes financial support — about $1 million in donations, delivered in recent weeks to a new coalition of gay rights organizations — could alter the political calculus of Albany lawmakers, especially the Republican state senators in whose hands the fate of gay marriage rests.
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The donors represent some of New York’s wealthiest and most politically active figures and include Paul E. Singer, a hedge fund manager and top-tier Republican donor, as well as two other financiers, Steven A. Cohen and Clifford S. Asness.
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The support is likely to jolt the traditional financial and political backers of gay rights causes, who now find themselves in the unfamiliar position of being outraised and outspent in New York.
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The donations are financing an intensive campaign of television advertisements and grass-roots activism coordinated by New Yorkers United for Marriage, a group of same-sex marriage advocates. The campaign is aimed chiefly at persuading several members of the Senate Republican majority to join most Senate Democrats in backing same-sex marriage
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The newly recruited donors argue that permitting same-sex marriage is consistent with conservative principles of personal liberty and small government. . . . “This is an issue of basic freedom,” Mr. Asness said.
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Some of those involved have made what might be termed the pro-business argument for same-sex marriage, arguing that the legalization of same-sex marriage would help keep New York economically competitive. One of the donors, Daniel S. Loeb, who has donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to Republican candidates for federal office in the last two years, said he hoped to make clear to Republicans that same-sex marriage had a broad coalition of support.
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The involvement of Mr. Singer is the most striking, given his devotion to conservative candidates and philanthropy: He is chairman of the Manhattan Institute, a right-leaning research group, and one of the most generous Republican donors in the country. But he also has a personal stake in the issue: he has a gay son who married his partner in Massachusetts, where same-sex marriage is legal.
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Aides to Mr. Bloomberg said he viewed the marriage issue in a larger context: Freedom, he argues, is New York’s “competitive advantage” and its brand, and he has become committed to vigorously defending it, as he did amid criticism of a proposed Islamic center near ground zero.
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Would that Virginia had leaders focused on freedom and competitive advantage as opposed to groveling to the foulest elements of the Christofascist at The Family Foundation, CBN Broadcasting, and Liberty University among others.

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