THINK PROGRESS
The Progress Report
CIVIL RIGHTS
Victories For Equal Rights
Earlier this month, the California Supreme Court, "striking down two
state laws that had limited marriages to unions between a man and a
woman," ruled that same-sex couples have a constitutional
right to marry. The 4-3 decision
makes California the second state,
after Massachusetts, to allow same-sex marriage. The AP reported
yesterday that "California officials are telling county clerks that
they can start issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples on
June 17." In another
victory
for equal rights advocates, New
York Governor David
Paterson (D) this week "instructed state agencies -- including those
governing insurance and health care -- to immediately change policies
and regulations to recognize gay marriages." Paterson called it "a strong
step toward marriage
equality." Once civil marriages are available in California
and Massachusetts and recognized in New York, "marriage equality
will reach around 60
million Americans," noted gay
rights activist Andrew
Sullivan. When asked to explain the
reasoning behind the decision, California Chief Justice Ronald George,
a Republican, said, "I think there are times when doing
the right thing means not
playing it safe."
CONSERVATIVE REACTION:
Conservatives
are up in
arms in response to the New York and California developments. In
California, right-wing groups are attempting to place a constitutional
amendment on
the ballot in November stating, "only marriage
between a man and a woman is
valid or
recognized in California." Organizations
will reportedly
spend between $10
and $15 million on the
initiative. "The initiative
will be asking voters to do two disruptive things: change the state
constitution and retroactively impugn
these already-existing marriages,"
Sullivan said. Other reactions
to the California ruling were even more extreme, such
as from the far-right Campaign for
Children and Families, who compared the county clerks issuing
same-sex
marriage licenses to
Nazis during the Holocaust.
The New York Times reports today
that "opponents of same-sex unions were pondering a range
of legal and legislative challenges"
to Paterson's directive, including a
potential lawsuit "from citizens groups." New
York Senate majority leader Joseph Bruno (R) "said he would be
consulting with lawyers to study constitutional
questions raised by Mr. Paterson's directive, suggesting that legal
action was a possibility."
SUPPORT FOR EQUAL RIGHTS: A
common right-wing response to the California gay marriage ruling is
that the justices defied
public opinion in ruling in
favor of same-sex marriage. "It's
outrageous that the court has overturned not only the historic
definition of marriage, but the clear
will of the people
of California," said Family
Research Council's Tony Perkins, for example.
Several prominent conservatives also launched similar
attacks. Rep. Roy Blunt (R-MO), former Massachussets governor
Mitt
Romney, and Rep. Tom Feeney (R-FL), falsely claimed the California
ruling came from "unelected judges." But the justices were "confirmed
by the public"
after being appointed and "also come before voters at the end of their
12-year terms." In fact, each of the seven justices involved in the
ruling were approved by overwhelming
margins. A Field poll released
this week "found that in recent
decades, a growing number of
Californians have approved allowing same-sex couples to marry,
with
51 percent of those polled now approving,
up from 44 percent in
2006 and 30 percent in 1985." The poll is the "first
ever majority
for same-sex marriage in a California poll," Sullivan
noted. Beyond the increasingly popular support for marriage
equality, courts have an obligation to protect fundamental
rights like marriage for historically unpopular minorities.
BENEFITS
OF EQUAL RIGHTS: Earlier
this week,
Schwarzenegger
suggested California's economy could grow because of the gay marriage
ruling. "I hope that California's economy
is booming
because everyone is going to come here and get married,"
he
said. The San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau expects
a
tourism
boom this summer, and its website now "promotes a gay travel section"
and explains that same-sex couples are "officially
allowed to marry in
the state of California." In a
landmark decision in 2004, the
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts ruling made the state the first
to legalize same-sex marriage. A 2006 report from the Williams
Institute noted that "gay workers who receive domestic-partnership
benefits are more
comfortable in their work environment
and far happier -- and more
productive -- than employees who do not receive them." Furthermore, a report
from
the University of Massachusetts
predicted that the Massachusetts marriage ruling could bring
over $150
million in new spending in the
state within a year. Furthermore,
"if same-sex marriages increase general spending, the state will
receive higher sales tax revenues as well," the report noted. "Workers
who have an unmarried domestic partner are doubly
burdened: Their employers
typically do not provide coverage for domestic partners; and even when
partners are covered, the partner's coverage is taxed as income to the
employee," the Center for American Progress and Williams
Institute noted
in December.
Under the Radar
MILITARY
-- VA SECRETARY CALLS VETS'
CONCERNS ABOUT PTSD 'OVERBLOWN': Over
the weekend, VA Secretary James Peake visited Alaska
with Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK). While there, they met with Vietnam
veteran John Guinn, who questioned the Secretary about the growing
problem of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) amongst veterans.
Peake suggested that some concerns about PTSD
are "overblown,"
adding that many of the brain injuries were
"akin to what anyone who played football in their youth might have
suffered." On Saturday, Peake also said that many vets with PTSD may
just need "a
little counseling" and shouldn't
"need the PTSD label their whole
lives." Peake's comments are disturbing, especially in light of new
numbers
released by the Pentagon this week showing that the number of new PTSD
cases "jumped
by roughly 50 percent in 2007."
Additionally, as Brandon
Friedman at VetVoice points out,
Peake's comments are undermined by
VA psychiatrist Jonathan Shay, who has stressed the seriousness of
PSTD: "Combat PTSD is a war injury. Veterans with combat PTSD are war
wounded, carrying the burdens of sacrifice for the rest of us as surely
as the amputees, the burned, the blind, and the paralyzed carry them."
MILITARY
-- WEBB'S GI BILL WOULD
ENCOURAGE 30,000 NEW RECRUITS ANNUALLY: The
Pentagon, the
White House and other conservatives have rallied
against Sen. Jim Webb's (D-VA) 21st
Century GI Bill, citing a recent
CBO report that concluded that
Webb's bill would reduce
reenlistment rates by 16
percent. In fact, the report says that the
drop in reenlistment rate would be offset by a 16
percent
increase in recruitment. Slate
has taken a
closer look at the CBO's numbers
and has noted that the military
would in fact see several times as many new recruits as drop-outs
because "the '16 percents'" in the CBO report "aren't necessarily
equal." Slate explains: "the CBO estimate concluded that the 16 percent
increase in recruitment would add an additional 30,000 recruits
annually, while a 16 percent decline in re-enlistment would result in
7,000 fewer re-enlistments annually. In other words, new recruits would
greatly
outnumber soldiers who decline
to re-enlist."
RADICAL
RIGHT -- CONSERVATIVES TRY TO
QUASH INTEREST IN MCCLELLAN BOOK: The
right wing is
trotting out a variety of
counter-attacks to deal
with the explosive
allegations found in former
White House press
secretary Scott McClellan's new
book. On Wednesday morning,
allies of President Bush repeated that they were
"puzzled" by the book, "as if, the New York Times noted, "Mr.
McClellan had undergone some kind of emotional breakdown."
By
afternoon, attacks were more charged, with White House officials
calling McClellan
a
"traitor" and “Benedict."
That night and into yesterday
morning, Fox News pundits were insisting the book is the
work of a nefarious, left-wing publisher.
Finally, several
prominent conservatives are
dismissing the book by
insisting that no one outside of "people who follow Washington issues"
really even cares about McClellan's allegations. "Forgive
me if I'm bored," declared Fox
News's Bill O'Reilly. "I'm more
concerned about American Idol than I am about Scott McClellan," said
former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. "I don't care, like Newt," added
former Vice President Cheney adviser Mary Matalin. But despite what
these pundits
suggest, Americans are paying attention. McClellan's book rose rapidly
on Wednesday to become Amazon's
number one bestseller and
his story has dominated news
coverage.
Think Fast
Bowing to a court order, the White House released a long-delayed report yesterday on the "mainly harmful, impact of human-caused global warming in the United States." According to new projections in the report, "the poor, elderly and communities with lagging public-health and public-works systems will face outsize health risks from warming."
The U.S. military suspended a Marine yesterday "for distributing coins quoting the Gospel to Sunni Muslims" in Fallujah. The incident has "enraged Iraqis who view it as the latest example of American disrespect for Islam." Residents of the Iraqi city perceived the effort as "a 'humiliating' attempt to convert them to Christianity."
Yesterday, a bipartisan group of 20 former U.S. attorneys -- including two who served under President Bush -- urged a federal judge Thursday to reject the administration's "assertion of blanket immunity for presidential chief of staff Joshua Bolten and former White House counsel Harriet Miers in the congressional investigation."
According to a new report by the Commonwealth Fund, the "number of uninsured U.S. young adults, who already represent a major chunk of the American population without health coverage, rose again in 2006." "Based on census data, 13.7 million people aged 19 to 29 had no health insurance, either public or private, in 2006, up from 13.3 million in 2005."
Three months after a congressional deadline, the White House "named a special inspector general to search for possible fraud and abuse in the funding of Afghanistan's reconstruction yesterday." While Afghanistan has largely escaped the intense scrutiny Congress has given Iraq, one official noted that "a lot of the same problems exist."
CIA Director Michael Hayden said yesterday that al Qaeda is "essentially defeated in Iraq and Saudi Arabia and on the defensive throughout much of the rest of the world." "While cautioning that al Qaeda remains a serious threat," Hayden's assessment is "strikingly upbeat" after his agency warned last year of new threats from a resurgent al Qaeda.
The State Department has "withdrawn Fulbright Scholarship grants to Palestinian students in Gaza because they were denied exit visas by Israel." When asked about the development, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said she "had not known" about the report and vowed to investigate.And finally: The Examiner reports, "The Kiss Army fan club has an enthusiastic new recruit: Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. In a departure from her normally staid diplomatic duties, Rice met the legendary glam rock quartet when they happened to share a hotel in the Swedish capital." Rice said she was "thrilled," adding that her favorite song by the group is "Rock and Roll All Nite."
Good News
FIFA, the world's governing body for soccer, "abruptly lifted the suspension of Iraq's soccer association on Thursday, easing concerns that Iraq's team, a rare symbol of national unity, would be banned from the 2010 World Cup." The organization suspended the team earlier this week after the Iraqi government disbanded Iraq's Olympic Committee.
State Watch
MINNESOTA:
"Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R) vetoed a bill that would have deferred
some foreclosure sales in the state for up to a year."
ENVIRONMENT:
"The number of people who live in coastal areas that are most
vulnerable to wind and water has fallen slightly since 2000."
ECONOMY:
Transit agencies across the country are paying 44 percent more
for
fuel this year than last year.
Blog Watch
THINK PROGRESS: Fox News meme: Publisher "got to" former White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan, forced him to "spice it up a little bit."
WONK ROOM: A scholar's influence in Iraq.
EMPTY WHEEL: McClellan: President Bush "secretly declassified" the 2002 National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq to selectively leak to reporters.
TPM MUCKRAKER: Rep. Duncan Hunter's (R-CA) earmarks benefit donors to his son's political campaign.
Daily Grill
"I think his editor wrote a
lot of it."
-- Former White House press secretary Ari Fleischer on former White
House press secretary Scott McClellan's new tell-all book, 5/28/08
VERSUS
"These are very much the views that I hold today after looking back and
reflecting on things and learning from it."
-- McClellan, 5/29/08
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