Fight Is On in Maryland Over Marriage
A fight is on in Maryland over whether the state will keep the marriage law it passed earlier this year.
Marriage equality opponents needed to gather more than 55,000 signatures to put a repeal of the law up to a majority vote of Maryland's citizens in November. The number of signatures deemed "valid" as part of an unofficial count has now climbed to 70,000, according to a tally posted on the state's website.
LGBT activists had already begun gearing up for a fight. Marylanders for Marriage Equality, the coalition leading the campaign, announced today a long list of moves they've made to counter the repeal. It includes opening two campaign offices, hiring 12 field staffers, expanding its social media presence, and commissioning a poll that found Maryland voters overwhelmingly on their side. Public Policy Polling found that 57% of voters would uphold the law, and that African-Americans had made a huge swing after President Obama announced his support for marriage equality.
The "faith team" has already recruited a stable of religious leaders who are on their side to counter voices on the right who claim a monopoly on biblical views. It's a similar tactic to one being employed in Minnesota, where dozens of faith leaders are speaking out for marriage equality as just another example of the "love and commitment" that all marriages represent. That message has resulted in a 10-point swing in four months, according to a PPP poll, with independents driving fresh support for same-sex marriage. Now 49% of voters are against amending the Minnesota constitution to ban same-sex marriage.
http://www.advocate.com/politics/marriage-equality/2012/06/08/fight-maryland-over-marriage