Civil Unions in Colorado
Last week was significant both nationally and here in Colorado. Nationally, the president came out of the closet in favor of civil unions. No real surprise there. In North Carolina, an amendment to define marriage as between a man and a woman passed by 61% of the vote, making that state the 31st state to affirm traditional marriage.
Here in Colorado the legislative session expired with a civil unions bill left unpassed by the House. Thirty bills were in fact left hanging at the end of the session but homosexual activists and the media focused on that one bill. Democrat Governor Hickenlooper wasted no time in calling for a special session to consider civil unions, reportedly “emotional” as he made the announcement.
Is all this coincidence? I think not.
Here in Colorado, homosexual activists Tim Gill, Pat Stryker and Jared Polis bankroll the activities of the Democrat Party. How much is hard to say but if you read The Blueprint, you are left with the impression that the Gang of Four (the above three plus Rutt Bridges) bought Colorado for the Democrats in 2006 and 2008.
Hickenlooper and the Democrats owe them.
In 2006, despite Democrat gains in the legislature, Amendment 43 specifying marriage as between only one man and one woman passed with a 55% vote. Referendum I, to establish domestic partnerships, failed at 47%.
In Colorado, amendments and initiatives are suggested by the people and petitioners must gather signatures. Referenda are referred by the legislature and only need to be passed by them. In 2006 both methods were used and the result was clear.
What is happening now is simple: Having failed at the ballot box and despite knowing that the majority of Coloradans do not favor same-sex unions, the Democrats—beholden to the homosexual lobby for funding—are trying to ram it through in a special session of the legislature.
Never mind that it is really not an issue of equity or fairness: two members of the same sex are free to enter into any contract or make any agreement that married couples can. It is about nothing less than securing legal recognition of “gay marriage.” The proposed bill makes that clear in all but name.
The Republican leadership in the House has been singularly inept in killing the civil unions bill in the regular session, missing two good chances in committee. Speaker McNulty and Majority Leader Stephens may have thought they had finally succeeded when the session ended but then the issue became a national one and Hickenlooper took up the standard from the Obama campaign…or was told to.
Rumors from the capitol indicate that McNulty and Stephens were trying to play both sides: to not antagonize or perhaps even cultivate the homosexual lobby while at the same time planning to eventually kill the bill and look good to their own side in the process.
It looks like they were a little too clever for their own good (and ours) but the jury is still out. The special session convenes Monday the 14th. There are rallies at the capitol. If you can’t go, pray for success.

