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Trusts. Business Planning and Domestic Partnerships Call for your free 30-mmute consultation on Estate Planning JAMES D. McVlTTIE Attorney-at-ljw, Lie. in OR & WA credit for the successes and responsibility for the failures. You must build upon your foundations to put us back on the path to equality. Integrate To the E ditor : your organization into a national coalition under national leadership. The voices of our n your e-mail of July 1 to your members and supporters, you describe how Oregon legisla­ community and those like yourselves who repre­ tors have received thousands of phone calls, sent us, together with those of our brothers and e-mails, faxes and letters from Oregonians ask­ sisters, mothers and fathers, children, friends ing for a vote on Senate Bill 1000. and co-workers in every state, must once again As recently as a week ago, you assured Basic he joined and heard loudly and clearly. We must Rights Oregon supporters there was plenty of unify with those whose goals we share and who rime to get a Senate vote and successfully move support us in our schools, in our places of work the hill to the House for a vote before the end of and at every level of government. If temporary the current session. Anyone who understands defeats are not eventually turned into lasting how the legislative process works knows that victory, and if we are unable to claim the rights any piece of legislation not enacted in the cur­ to which we are entitled under the Constitu­ rent session dies at the end of that session. Any tion, we will face defeat over and over again. effort to promote this same type of hill in a future legislative session would have to begin J ames H ernandez Portland anew. And now, in your July 1 correspondence, you tell us to “Accept No Excuses.” You begin to gird us for defeat. What a difference a week makes. To the E ditor : You should not he surprised that the repre­ hank you for your letter and for giving me sentatives in Salem have chosen to “sit” on this a chance to reply. 1 appreciate the passion piece of legislation, ensuring that it is never behind your words, although I have to admit passed. Even if it does receive the benefit of a that the tone of your letter seems a hit harsh. vote in the Senate and moves to the House, the Where it seems we differ is in expectation. chances of it passing in the House are close to We are not naive about the complexities of the none. It does not have anywhere near the sup­ political process nor about the tough battles port in the House that it enjoys in the Senate. ahead, but we are not so cynical about our abil­ This should be of surprise to no one, especially ity to influence the political process. Your letter yourselves. Passage in only one chamber will not seems to suggest that lobbying the Legislature is suffice. hopeless and unproductive. 1 just don’t believe This is not to say that our community does that is true. In fact, I think the Senate vote on not have supporters in these two bodies. It does July 8 is a clear indication that our effort, com­ mean, though, that we live in two vastly differ­ bined with that of thousands of Oregonians, has ent Oregons—one that supports equal rights made an impact. And I believe we still can. regardless of sexual orientation, and one that When we sent out an e-mail asking people to does not. We of the “same-sex” community, our “Accept No Excuses,” we wanted exactly what legislators and BRO have failed to bridge that we said we wanted: for people to put pressure on cultural divide. the Senate to bring the hill to a vote, which it You cannot honestly tell the Oregon same- did by almost a 2-1 margin. As we move to the sex community you are surprised by the lack of House, we are of course aware that this is a movement in both the Oregon Senate and tougher political climate. Having lobbied the House. House all session, we don’t share your view that I believe we must consider shifting our there is little support for this hill in the House. resources and changing the front on which the In fact, we believe as a result of our direct con­ battle is to he waged. If you consider that Presi­ versations with legislators, we have the votes in dent Bush supports a “one woman, one man” the House to pass the bill if we can get it to the marriage amendment to the U.S. Constitution, floor. There is one person standing between you should realize our opponents no longer view defeat and victory, and that is Speaker Karen it as an issue of states’ rights hut one of federal, Minnis. As a community, we cannot let her sin­ civil and constitutional rights. It would take gle-handedly stand in the way of our civil rights, years to achieve uniformity in marriage law for and I believe we owe it to ourselves to push as same-sex couples on a state-to-state basis, trying hard as we can for the rights we deserve. to win (and maintain in the courts) 50 consec­ This is good news for all of us in Oregon, and utive victories. It makes more sense to redirect I can’t predict how it will all turn out. But we your energies toward a national strategy. Even if will not throw up our hands just because some some states support marriage equality, it would say it is impossible or too hard. The minute we likely take many, many years for those of us who as a movement give into this kind of hopeless­ seek marriage justice to realize any benefit from ness, we concede defeat. That is something we 50 localized skirmishes. just won’t do. When you should have been positively shap­ I’m sorry you don’t agree with our approach ing public opinion in 2004 toward the idea that last year, but 1 hope you’ll believe me that we gays and lesbians deserve equal rights (instead of would have had a ballot measure regardless of jumping on the “marriage” handwagon), your whether the marriages in Multnomah County time and resources were first spent defending had happened or not. Not only was the measure the issuance of marriage licenses and later in filed well before the marriages began, hut 11 attempting to defeat a subsequent “one woman, states had similar measures last year, and Oregon one man” marriage measure that was bom in was the only one where any same-sex couples direct response to your involvement in the got married. When I tell people who work in issuance of the (ultimately invalid) marriage other states that our opponents blame us for the licenses. From those “leadership” decisions, and ballot measure, they laugh, because they know the summary legal judgments and legislation that these measures were part of a national strat­ that have resulted, the terrain of the conflict has egy to turn out evangelical voters. We should he been irrevocably changed, and your strategies— wary of blaming ourselves and our organizations our strategies—must change to adapt to the new for not immediately succeeding in creating deep environment. social change—that takes decades, and while we have made some amazing progress, I agree with At some point, you have to stand up and acknowledge your tactical errors, tell us where you that we have a long way to go. you succeeded and where you failed and take I think you raise some interesting points An open letter to Basic Rights Oregon I BRO responds T