Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Courage Campaign believes 2012 is the Right Time


The Courage Campaign has decided not to seek a 2010 overturn of Prop 8.

They, like so many, believe more support and research are needed to make this a successful campaign.

Here's the press release:
LOS ANGELES, CA — The Courage Campaign today called for more research and time to change hearts and minds before returning to the ballot to restore marriage for gay and lesbian couples in California. At least one initiative to restore same-sex marriage is currently circulating that, if it qualifies, would appear on the November, 2010 ballot.

The Courage Campaign, in partnership with Lambda Legal, has recently concluded the first phase of extensive and groundbreaking research about public beliefs and concerns about marriage and homosexuality.

It confirmed that attitudes are shifting steadily toward equal treatment of same-sex couples, and that conversations among family members and other close relationships inevitably speed the process.

The statement released today is concurrent with a Lambda Legal statement.
“For months, we have laid out the criteria for moving forward. Like the Obama Campaign, we understand that we need a combination of powerful and clear research that informs an expertly run campaign, an unstoppable movement that harnesses the new energy we have seen since the passage of Prop. 8 and the connections through personal stories and outreach in order to win at the ballot box,” said Rick Jacobs, the Courage Campaign founder and Chair.

“We are taking the lessons learned from last year’s Prop. 8 campaign, the campaigns in Maine and other states to understand the fundamental work that must be done before moving forward in California. We also must come together as a community to create a broad coalition and governance structure, put in place a strong manager and secure the resources to win. Right now, the pieces are not all in place to do so confidently.”


The recently concluded research validated the lasting effect of the work already being done in the successful Camp Courage training program and by 44 Courage Equality Teams organizing across the state in 23 counties. These grassroots efforts are building support for marriage equality by training Californians to tap into their community’s resources to start a conversation and connect the movement for equality to their own lives and their own experiences, along with the broader progressive agenda.


Jacobs hailed the work being done in the field by grassroots activists, saying, “We must build our ultimate victory from the lessons of our recent disappointments,” continued Jacobs. “We know that we can change hearts and minds through real conversations with our friends, family, co-workers and neighbors. This takes time and has to be built to scale — so we can’t delay. When we go back to the ballot, we must be strong, clear and embracing.”


Last week, the Courage Campaign launched Courageous Conversations, a national effort to encourage the dialogue necessary to change hearts and minds. For more information and a map of pledged Courageous Conversations to date, click here:
http://www.couragecampaign.org/CourageousConversations

I believe this is for the best. Polls show that folks want to wait until we are truly ready. However, Love, Honor and Cherish will still try to repeal Prop 8 by collecting a million signatures by the 3-4 month deadline... odds are not in their favor.

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2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm reminded a line from a certain movie, "America isn't easy. America is advanced citizenship. You've gotta want it bad, 'cause it's gonna put up a fight.

I don't believe the people who have subscribed themselves as arbiters of the cause have what it takes to put up a fight; they're just interested in keeping their jobs and building up a war chest for themselves.

Kyle Leach said...

We must all put up a fight to get what we want. I don't think it matters when that fight happens; it does matter that we are all in that fight working together, for the same end.

Their are many in our community who are too comfortable to do anything and that is a huge liability to moving us forward. There are also those in our community who benefit from keeping their cause active and open ended, yet another liability.

I do like their "conversations" tactic, it is one I learned in college, but that tactic is too slow to help with the immediate problems there in CA.

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Viktor is a small town southern boy living in Los Angeles. You can find him on Twitter, writing about pop culture, politics, and comics. He’s the creator of the graphic novel StrangeLore and currently getting back into screenwriting.