From Think Progress:
VIRGINIA: former Sen. George Allen (R).
In a 1994 radio broadcast, then-Gov. Allen told listeners that he
didn’t want his children “even seeing the news of some of these things
here, thinking that, this is acceptable behavior.” He added: “I don’t
think this is acceptable behavior… and as a matter of government policy I
don’t think we should condone that sort of behavior.” In the same
broadcast, he praised Virginia’s unconstitutional Crimes Against Nature
law –which made private consensual sex between same-sex adults a felony —
saying “It’s against the criminal law in Virginia, that homosexual acts
are illegal, and I think should stay illegal.” Perhaps unaware that
President Obama signed the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate
Crimes Prevention Act into law in 2009, on Allen’s current campaign
website he bizarrely promises to “vote against adding sexual orientation
to federal hate crimes statutes, as he did in 2005.”
MISSOURI: Rep. Todd Akin (R).
He argued on the House floor that marriage is only “about a love that
can bear children,” and warned that “anybody who knows something about
the history of the human race knows that there is no civilization which
has condoned homosexual marriage widely and openly that has long
survived.” He called Don’t Ask Don’t Tell repeal “an eclipse of reason”
and “the imposition of somebody’s social agenda that they want to impose
on the military,” and criticized President Obama’s endorsement of
marriage equality as an “unquenchable desire to tear down the
traditional family unit brick by brick.”
MASSACHUSETTS: Sen. Scott Brown (R).
In 2001, he told the Boston Globe it was “not normal” for two women to
have children. His comments — focused at then-State Sen. Cheryl Jacques
and her domestic partner Jennifer Chrisler — also belittled Jacques’
“alleged family responsibilities.” While he later backed off of what he
called a “wrong choice of a word that is probably going to crucify me,”
Brown has to this day never directly apologized to Jacques and Chrisler.
Brown refused to be in the Massachusetts delegation’s “It Gets Better”
anti-suicide video and was one of just three state senators to oppose
repeal of a 1913 anti-interracial marriage law that then-Gov. Mitt
Romney used to prevent out-of-state same-sex couples from marrying in
Massachusetts.
WISCONSIN: former Gov. Tommy Thompson (R).
Thompson’s opposition to LGBT equality dates back nearly three decades.
In his successful 1986 campaign to for Governor of Wisconsin, he
repeatedly pledged to eliminate his predecessor’s Council on Lesbian and
Gay Issues. Dick Wagner, who co-chaired the council, told ThinkProgress
that Thompson did not reauthorize the Council on Lesbian and Gay Issues
but “did continue the Bicycle Coordinating Council.” During a 2007
Republican presidential primary debate, Thompson was asked whether
employers who believe “homosexuality is immoral” should be allowed to
fire gay employees. Thompson forcefully responded that “business people
have to make their own determination” on whether to fire employees based
on sexual orientation. A day later, he reversed himself, saying “I
didn’t hear the question properly and I apologize.”
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