Kevin Drum raised a great point yesterday that bears repeating — we’re seeing the beginning of the end for opponents of gay marriage. The cause? Gay relationships have received legal recognition and the sky has managed not to fall.
Massachusetts, for example, began allowing gay marriages last year under court order. Yesterday, state lawmakers were given an opportunity to undo the legal foundation of the ruling by endorsing a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage and establish civil unions. The vote, however, wasn’t even close — the measure was defeated by a 157-to-39 vote, after less than two hours of debate.
A year ago, this outcome seemed far less likely. Fortunately, the politics changed.
Wednesday’s 157-to-39 vote by a joint session of the House and Senate partly reflected the fact that some legislators now consider same-sex marriage more politically acceptable, after a largely conflict-free year in which some 6,600 same-sex couples got married and lawmakers who supported it got re-elected.
…Saying he had heard from over 7,000 constituents, most against the amendment, [Senator Brian] Lees added, “Gay marriage has begun and life has not changed for the citizens of the commonwealth, with the exception of those who can now marry who could not before.”
I’m not entirely sure what the right expected to happen once gay people started getting married. Actually, scratch that, I do know what they expected: Last year, Rick Santorum said if gays start getting married, straight couples will stop getting married.
Perhaps the right’s biggest problem right now is that they built up expectations for disaster a little too high. It happened in Vermont a few years ago when the state passed a civil-unions law. Conservatives hyperventilated about the utter calamity that would destroy the state … and then nothing happened. Civil unions don’t even raise an eyebrow in Vermont anymore.
A similar problem for the right exists in Massachusetts. To hear the right tell it, the state would inevitably face locusts and plagues. Instead, as Kevin put it, the only thing that happened is “more people than ever can show off wedding scrapbooks with pictures of beaming partners and guests having a blast.”
Unfortunately for the Dobsons and the Santorums of the world, that just isn’t scary.