The Christian Civic League of Maine dropped its petition drive - is the gay rights issue dead in Maine?

Submitted by Susan Young on Tue, 06/24/2008 - 12:59.

The Christian Civic League of Maine dropped its petition drive to reverse Maine’s human rights laws regarding sexual orientation. Is the issue dead?

The Christian Civic League of Maine, citing the lack of signatures, has given up its effort to force a referendum vote on gay and lesbian issues next year. The referendum, if it had passed, would have removed sexual orientation from the Maine Human Rights Law, banned gay couples from marrying and adopting children, and cut off funding to public school civil rights teams. Michael Heath, CCL executive director, said opponents had labeled the initiative as homophobic and bigoted. Was it? Is this the last Maine will see of the debate over gay rights? Should it be?

The Christian Civic League

The Christian Civic League is neither Christian nor Civic.

Christian Civic League, gay marriage.

The issue is not dead. The CCL's petition failed because it advocated discrimination. But as California goes, so goes the nation. So it's only a matter of time before there is a referendum here in Maine for making gay marriage legal. Then we'll have to ask ourselves if marriage is just for reproduction and lineage purposes or is there some other meaning which is more egalitarian? If so, surely God would understand if some guy wanted to marry his truck? Which opens the door to marrying all types of things - crepes suzettes, old copies of "Wuthering Heights", pain medication, etc. "Love laughs at locksmiths" - Proverb.

Over-reach by Civic League

I believe that the Civic League has finally realized that they have exhausted any broad support for anti-gay measures that they might have had. It seems like Michael Heath sat down and made a list of everything he did not want gay people to have and lumped them into one petition and it was too much to gain much support beyond the small League core membership. Perhaps even a good number of Civic League members wish to not continue the fight over gay rights. The message, I believe, is that Mainers are comfortable with the equality status of gay residents at the present time. The debate will heat up again when the gay marriage issue comes forth and it will and it should.