With the Supreme Court's landmark decision on Friday to legalize same-sex marriage across the country, the party that a decade ago hung its strategy for winning the White House on opposition to gay marriage has not only gained a new enemy and a new front in the ongoing culture war, but has also been handed a reprieve.
Republicans' response to Friday's ruling showcased a party at odds with itself and largely at odds with a country that has come to swiftly accept gay marriage even as political leaders of both parties lagged behind public opinion.
But it also provides both GOP camps a helpful political path: Republicans who strongly oppose the court's decision can and will fight; Republicans who see this issue as too divisive can simply point to the Supreme Court decision as settled law.
As clerks in Texas, Arkansas, Kentucky and Tennessee moved to issue marriage licenses, GOP leaders put out conflicting statements on a hot-button issue that used to unite them.
The divide is an early sign that same-sex marriage could emerge as one of the brightest fault-lines of the GOP primary battle.
For moderate Republicans, the court's 5-4 ruling was a lifeline that effectively ended a fight that they would rather not have, given where the country is.
Polls show that nearly three quarters of Americans believe that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry -- including almost 60 percent of Republicans under 50. And another poll, cited by Republican consultant Margaret Hoover on CNN's "Legal View," suggests that 53 percent of GOP primary voters in Iowa, South Carolina and Nevada, who might themselves oppose gay marriage, think that it's time to move on given the Supreme Court's decision.
In Ohio, Gov. John Kasich's administration signaled that the battle was now over since the Supreme Court found in favor of lead plaintiff Jim Obergerfell, who had sued Ohio over its same-sex marriage ban.
The swing state's ban was until now protected by an Ohio constitutional amendment passed in 2004 -- the appeal of the traditional marriage referendum that year has been credited with bringing out Republicans who helped also hand a reelection victory to President George W. Bush.
"The governor has always believed in the sanctity of marriage between a man and a woman, but our nation's highest court has spoken and we must respect its decision," said Rob Nichols, a spokesman for Kasich, who is expected to soon enter the 2016 race for president.
http://edition.cnn.com/2015/06/26/politics/same-sex-marriage/index.html
Structure of the Lead:
WHO-GOP camps, Republicans
WHEN-not given
WHAT-legalize same-sex marriage across the country
WHY-Polls show that nearly three quarters of Americans believe that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry
WHERE-America
HOW-cast a vote
Keywords
1.reprieve:暫緩
2.swiftly:即刻
3.divisive:分裂的
4.Polls:民意測驗
5.constitutional:立憲的
6.plaintiff:起訴人
7.amendment:修正案
8.sanctity:聖潔