Member of the reality-based community of progressive (not anonymous) Massachusetts blogs
This is it, folks. Our opportunity to be part of democracy in action. As per my own post, earlier today I called Rep. Kevin Murphy at his office in Lowell and spoke to him directly regarding the anti-gay amendment that the Constitutional Convention takes up on Wednesday. He told me he was still considering his vote. Tell him you want him voting against this amendment, that gay marriage is harming no one here in Massachusetts, and that homosexuals deserve equal rights.
The number is 978-459-6320 (option 12 if you don’t get a live person, which I did). Tell him you’re watching this vote. Tell him to be for equal rights. If you don’t know whether Murphy is your Rep, my previous post has some links you can use to find out.
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September 13th, 2005 at 8:47 pm
Tomorrow’s vote is expected to go down to defeat. An AP poll of lawmakers shows 104 planning to vote against the ban.
HOWEVER, the fight might ultimately be lost!
The initiative petition recently approved by Attorney General Reilly is also for an amendment to the state constitution, it does not even contain language for civil unions, and more importantly, it does NOT require a majority vote in the two consecutive constitutional conventions to be placed on the ballot, it only requires 25%!
This is the one that stands the better chance of passage and bears close watching and fighting!
September 13th, 2005 at 9:36 pm
Yes it does, and I find it weird that it would only need 25% passage in the House and Senate. What the hell kinda weird loophole is that??
But I doubt it’ll get majority support in the public. We need to be vigilent, but I don’t think it’ll be hard to defeat it handily, because without the civil union language, it’s a rightwingnut measure and we don’t have too many rightwingnuts here.
Just cronyist morons…
(Sorry, staring at John Cox all night is making me feel ooky.)
September 14th, 2005 at 8:09 pm
I wrote to both my state reps and Ann Gobi wrote right back to me to let me know where she stood on the issue and how she would vote. It only takes one call or one letter to be part of the process. Without input, our representatives cannot properly represent us. It’s that simple.