Texas Republican Party compared to Uganda – New Texas GOP Platform: criminalize gay marriage and ban sodomy, outlaw strip clubs and pornography

Jun 22nd, 2010 | By Julie Fite, Contributor | Category: Kentucky Guardian News, National News

Republican activists threw out their party chairwoman Saturday, then bucked Texas Governor Rick Perry by pushing for a crackdown on illegal immigration similar to Arizona’s new law.

The keynote speaker—Texas Governor Rick Perry, however, received standing ovations with his speech: “Texas is a place to proud of and where 1,500 people a day want to be a part of our success and future. We live in the great State of Texas and in a wonderfully blessed Nation.”

The Texas GOP released its 2010 platform, which was finalized during its state convention two weeks ago in Dallas.  Among other things, the platform calls for again making sodomy a crime and for making it a felony to issue a same-sex marriage license.  The anti-gay language in the platform has prompted headlines on some blogs comparing Texas to the African nation of Uganda, which sought to impose the death penalty for homosexuality. (previous story)

Rick Perry, Governor of Texas. Assumed office on December 21, 2000.

Rick Perry, Governor of Texas. Assumed office on December 21, 2000.

In 2003, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that consensual sex between gay men was not a crime. In Wasson v. the Commonwealth of Kentucky, the Kentucky Supreme Court reached the same ruling in 1992, over 10 years before the U.S. Supreme Court did.  The Kentucky Supreme Court decision was based solely on Kentucky law.

Log Cabin Republicans have work around the clock to get the anti-gay language removed, with little success.

“We oppose the legalization of sodomy,” the platform says. “We demand that Congress exercise its authority granted by the U.S. Constitution to withhold jurisdiction from the federal courts from cases involving sodomy.”

The Lone Star state initially passed a law barring sodomy in 1860. Violators faced anywhere from five to 15 years in prison. The ban was overturned in 2003.

In addition, the platform says that homosexuality “tears at the fabric of society, contributes to the breakdown of the family unit and leads to the spread of dangerous communicable diseases.”

It also states that homosexuality must not be presented as an acceptable “alternative” lifestyle in public schools and “family” should not be redefined to include homosexual couples.

The 25-page proposal, presented last week as a guide for the state GOP over the next two years, includes other measures including outlawing “sexually oriented businesses” like strip clubs and banning “all pornography.”

Flag of the Governor of Texas

Flag of the Governor of Texas

Some delegates at the Republican state convention also called for a nonbinding resolution calling on House Republicans to oust their own Speaker, Representative Joe Straus of San Antonio, who is considered too moderate by many of the conservatives. However, convention organizers ruled the House Speaker Straus resolution “out of order.”

The immigration proposal, a hard-line approach that Governor Perry, who has repeatedly said that secession from the United States is an option for Texas, has said isn’t right for Texas, was one of several initiatives debated as delegates wrapped up the two-day convention. The Republican Party platform is a blueprint of the policies that GOP activists want elected officials to pursue.

Held every other year, it’s mostly designed as a giant pep rally to fire up Republicans ahead of the November elections. The choreographed convention began with prayers, video tributes and speeches by top Republican leaders, including Governor Perry.

On Saturday, the main guest speaker, Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour, told delegates that the stakes in the 2010 elections were “higher than any midterm election in my lifetime.” Governor Barbour urged activists to focus their ire not on each other but on the Democrats who had engineered the “biggest lurch to the left in American history.”

“We cannot forget unity because some people will let purity be the enemy of unity,” Governor Barbour said. “It’s a big party and we need everybody who is on our side.”

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