From Brian Brown, President
Washington, DC
— The National Organization for Marriage (NOM) today celebrated the
failure of legislation to come to a vote late
this evening in Illinois seeking to redefine marriage, thus preserving
marriage in the state as the union of one man and one woman. The bill's
House
sponsor, Rep. Greg Harris, announced this evening that he did not have
the votes to pass the measure and would not bring the legislation to a
vote.
Assuming this is the case, the bill is thus dead until the fall when the
Legislature reconvenes for a veto session.
"This
effort to redefine marriage in Illinois was one of the most fiercely
contested legislative battles in the
country this year," said Brian Brown, NOM's president. "This is a great
victory for our allies and supporters, as well as Illinois families
who have worked tirelessly with us to preserve marriage in Illinois. We
are gratified that our collective hard work has paid off in this
stunning
victory."
Illinois
is a heavily Democratic state and has been widely considered by
the gay marriage lobby as virtually certain to redefine marriage.
Backers of the legislation have frequently claimed, falsely, that they
had the votes
in hand to pass the legislation (SB 10). President Obama had urged his
former colleagues to vote to redefine marriage, and it was a top
priority of
both Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and Governor Pat Quinn. It even was
supported by a former Republican Chairman who was forced to resign from
his post
for advocating a position contrary to Republican principles.
"So
much for the
inevitability of gay marriage," said Brian Brown. "With a coalition that
included strong support from the African American community as well
as so many others throughout the state, we did what nobody in the
intelligentsia thought was possible. This is a huge victory at a pivotal
time, and
totally undercuts the lie that somehow same-sex marriage is inevitable."
NOM spent
well over $125,000 on grassroots activities to defeat the bill, but praised others in the coalition for securing the victory.
"Our
thanks go out to champions such as the African American Clergy
Coalition; Rev. James
Meeks and Bishop Lance Davis; the Illinois Conference of Catholic
Bishops and their director Bob Gilligan; the Illinois Family Institute
and their
director David Smith; the Illinois Family PAC and their director, Paul
Caprio; and the Coalition of African American Pastors and their
chairman, Rev.
Bill Owens. Everyone pitched in everything they had to stop this
ill-conceived legislation. We at NOM are honored to have been part of
the coalition
effort."
NOM
also announced that it would form a state PAC to support Democrats and
Republicans who supported marriage as the union of one man and one
woman, and would oppose legislators, especially Republicans, who
abandoned the true
definition of marriage.
"We
intend to continue to work with our coalition allies
including Pastor Meeks, Bishop Davis and the other amazing leaders in
the African American community who boldly stood for the truth about
marriage," Brown said. "And those Republicans who betrayed principle
will soon learn that their political careers are headed for the same
dustbin that met former GOP Chair Pat Brady when he betrayed the cause
of marriage."
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