Thursday, September 25, 2014

Jindal and RNC Urged to Reject the Values Voters Summit

The 2014 Values Voters Summit, an annual gathering of right-wing political figures and commentators, will kick off tomorrow in Washington D.C. (More here.) Sponsored by the Family Research Council, Liberty Counsel, and other right-wing groups, the event has given anti-gay speakers a high-profile platform. Several religious leaders and progressive organizations have taken note, and are calling for political leaders to distance themselves from the summit.

According to the New Orleans Times-Picayune, a group of religious leaders urged Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal to cancel his appearance at the Values Voters Summit. In an open letter posted at Faithful America, 13 Christian leaders from Louisiana reminded Jindal that the summit sponsors have a long history of anti-LGBTQ activism.
"Your deep personal commitment to Christian faith, and especially to the teachings of the Catholic Church, should preclude your involvement with FRC, which has been formally designated a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, because of FRC's repeated "use of known falsehoods to attack and demonize members of the LGBT community." ... the Family Research Council's leaders have a decades-long track record of making false and inflammatory comments about lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people."
Other voices are calling for leaders to reject the Values Voters Summit. On September 24th, representatives from 7 organizations, including People for the American Way, the Southern Poverty Law Center, GLAAD, and Human Rights Campaign, published an open letter to the Republican National Committee. The letter urged committee chairman Reince Priebus to sever ties with the organizations sponsoring the Values Voters Summit. "These groups engage in repeated, groundless demonization of LGBT people — portraying them as sick, vile, incestuous, violent, perverted, and a danger to the nation," the letter asserted.
"The Family Research Council, the summit’s host, is vigorously opposed to extending equal rights to the LGBT community. Its president, Tony Perkins, has repeatedly claimed that pedophilia is a "homosexual problem." He has called the "It Gets Better" campaign — designed to give LGBT students hope for a better tomorrow — “disgusting” and a "concerted effort" to "recruit" children into the gay "lifestyle." He has condemned the National Republican Congressional Committee for supporting three openly gay candidates.

Bryan Fischer of the American Family Association, a summit sponsor, has said the U.S. needs to "be more like Russia," which enacted a law criminalizing the distribution of LGBT "propaganda." He also has said, "Homosexuality gave us Adolph Hitler, and homosexuals in the military gave us the Brown Shirts, the Nazi war machine, and six million dead Jews."

Similarly, Mat Staver of the Liberty Counsel, another summit sponsor, has compared those who do not denounce same-sex marriage to those who remained silent during the Holocaust. Marriage equality, he has said, is the "beginning of the end of Western civilization.""
The letter argued that extremism should not be endorsed by elected officials, and that the GOP is obliged to condemn anti-LGBTQ bigotry as it has condemned racism.

As the public grows more supportive of LGBTQ equality, homophobic rhetoric at the Values Voters Summit will increasingly come under fire. When the event launches tomorrow, LGBTQ equality supporters will be watching.

7 comments:

  1. It's nice to see things changing. But the fear those changes inspire in the religious far right (i.e. "Christians") is manifest is some of the ugliest human behaviors imaginable. For example, I did not know that Bryan Fischer of AFA blamed the holocaust on homosexuality. What a freak.

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  2. Those voters are Jindal voters. Why would he reject the Summit? :(

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    1. Brian -- He likely won't, but the people in question wanted to make a symbolic statement.

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  3. It would be incredible to see someone who's opposed LGTB equality at one time turn around and fight for equal rights in the future. The biggest changes come from within. We can only hope that some of these men/women will change their minds at some point in time. But until then we need to keep fighting for equal rights on the outside. It'll happen eventually.

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    1. Heather -- I do hope that some of these anti-gay voices have a change of heart. Failing that, I hope they're smart enough to recognize that anti-gay rhetoric will be a liability to their political careers, at least.

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  4. This rhetoric is not surprising coming form the Christian right. Its very sad that government officials in this day and age can still get elected when they associate with groups like this. I wish the voters would wake up and not tolerate these voices anymore.

    They do have a right to be bigots, but that so many people buy into their rhetoric is just scary.

    Lets hope things get better soon.

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    1. Christian -- I long for the day when voters refuse to put up with the far right, or politicians who break bread with the far right.

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