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Republican leader of US Senate calls homosexuality a "sin"
By David Walsh
18 June 1998
Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott of Mississippi launched an
ignorant and reactionary attack on gays June 15 while taping a
cable television talk show. Asked by right-wing host Armstrong
Williams if homosexuality was a sin, Lott replied: "Yeah,
it is. In America right now there's an element that want to make
that alternative lifestyle acceptable. You still love that person
and you should not try to mistreat them or treat them as outcasts.
You should try to show them a way to deal with that problem, just
like alcohol ... others have a sex addiction or are kleptomaniacs."
Other Republican leaders expressed their support for Lott.
House Majority Leader Dick Armey of Texas told reporters that
the Bible considers homosexuality a sin and that, "My faith
is very important to me.... I do not quarrel with the Bible on
this subject." Oklahoma Senator Don Nickles also told reporters
he agreed with Lott.
The nomination of openly gay businessman and Democratic Party
contributor James Hormel to the post of ambassador to Luxembourg
has provided the occasion for Lott and congressional Republicans
to vent their views. Earlier this month on CNN Lott expressed
his opposition to Hormel's appointment, claiming that the latter
aggressively advocated a gay lifestyle. Lott, who as majority
leader largely controls the Senate agenda, has refused to schedule
a vote on Hormel's confirmation.
Lott's remarks are a flagrant attack on democratic rights,
in violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of existing civil
rights legislation. The sinister implication of his remarks is
that homosexuals should be treated and cured of their "problem."
Nor does this type of appeal to religious backwardness, prejudice
and fear fall into a political void. Naturally, when a racist
killing such as the one in Jasper, Texas takes place, the politicians
piously deplore it. But Lott's remarks can only worsen an atmosphere
in which physical assaults on gays and blacks are already on the
rise.
The Mississippi Senator's comments follow the warning made
by televangelist and 1988 candidate for the Republican presidential
nomination Pat Robertson that Orlando, Florida might face God's
wrath in the form of natural disasters for hosting a gay pride
weekend. After quoting the apostle Paul's warning to the citizens
of Rome about homosexuality, Robertson declared: "This is
not a message of hate; this is a message of redemption. But if
a condition like this will bring about the destruction of your
nation; if it will bring about terrorist bombs; if it'll bring
about earthquakes, tornadoes, and possibly a meteor, it isn't
necessarily something we ought to open our arms to. And I would
warn Orlando that you're right in the way of some serious hurricanes,
and I don't think I'd be waving those [rainbow] flags in God's
face if I were you."
Robertson and the Christian fundamentalist faction associated
with him wield powerful influence in the Republican Party. These
elements are making clear that they intend to conduct the 1998
and 2000 election campaigns on a very reactionary basis. The June
12 Iowa Republican gala gave a foretaste of the sort of issues
they plan to raise in the next presidential race. Those attending
the event included billionaire magazine publisher Steve Forbes,
Gary Bauer of the Family Research Council, House Budget Committee
Chairman John R. Kasich of Ohio, Marilyn Quayle, wife of the former
vice president, former Reagan administration official Alan Keyes,
Missouri Senator John D. Ashcroft, Clinton impeachment advocate
Rep. Robert L. Barr Jr. of Georgia, former Tennessee governor
Lamar Alexander, Montana Governor Mark Racicot and Iran-contra
conspirator Oliver North.
The speakers, many of whom have expressed interest in running
for the Republican presidential nomination in 2000, spent the
weekend denouncing the supposed moral degradation of America.
Forbes, who ran for the 1996 nomination on the program of a flat
tax, declared that the nation's biggest challenge "is a moral
and spiritual crisis that threatens the very foundation of our
free society." He proposed that opposition to abortion be
made one of the party's central planks. Kasich attacked public
education and Social Security. "The values of Americans should
be imposed on Washington," declared Ashcroft. "America
values families, it values the core institution of the family."
Bauer asserted that American society was enjoying economic prosperity
but suffered from a "virtue deficit."
There is an element of cynical political expediency in some
of the right-wing demagogy. Lott's gay-bashing in particular is
politically calculated. The Mississippi Republican has not been
known for harping on sexual issues until this year, according
to Barney Frank, the gay Democratic congressman from Massachusetts.
In fact, Lott publicly criticized the Air Force in 1997 for investigating
the affairs of Lt. Kelly Flynn, driven out of the military for
an alleged adulterous relationship.
According to press reports, Lott has been meeting regularly
with leaders of the religious right such as James Dobson of the
Colorado Springs, Colorado-based Focus on the Family media empire.
Dobson has been talking to a host of congressional leaders in
recent weeks, drumming up support for his "pro-family"
program, which includes special tax preferences for married couples.
Taking shape in the comments of congressional Republicans are
elements of an extreme right-wing campaign platform for the fall
elections. After all, neither of the two big business parties
has any proposal to make that would address the social crisis
confronting millions. Entirely distant from the problems of working
class and poor families, these wealthy politicians will attempt,
in the name of patriotism, family values and God, to channel the
deep resentment and alienation felt by broad layers of the population
in a reactionary direction. This means more attacks on the poor,
on immigrants and on gays, and on the democratic rights of the
working class.
See Also:
Destabilization campaign targeted
White House
Report charges illegal links between Starr and media
[16 June 1998]
The Starr investigation: a creeping coup
d'etat
[6 June 1998]
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