By Michael Barbaro
The
board of the N.A.A.C.P. voted to endorse same-sex marriage on Saturday,
putting the weight of the country’s most prominent civil rights group
behind a cause that has long divided some quarters of the black
community.
The largely symbolic move, made at the group’s
quarterly board meeting in Miami, puts the N.A.A.C.P. in line with
President Obama, who endorsed gay marriage a little over a week ago.
Given the timing, it is likely to be viewed as both a statement of
principle as well as support for the president’s position in the middle
of a closely contested presidential campaign.
All but two of the
organization’s 64 board members, who include many religious leaders,
backed a resolution supporting same-sex marriage, according to people
told of the decision.
Borrowing a term used by gay right’s
advocates, the resolution stated: “We support marriage equality
consistent with equal protection under the law provided under the
Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.”
In a
statement, Roslyn M. Brock, chairwoman of the board, said that “we have
and will oppose efforts to codify discrimination into law.”
A spokesman for the group declined to discuss a breakdown of how the board members voted.
The
practical implications of the the N.A.A.C.P.’s decision are unclear.
Several of its leaders have already expressed support for same-sex
marriage, and local branches have repeatedly opposed measures
to ban
such unions, most recently in North Carolina, where voters just passed a
referendum against weddings and civil unions for gay people.
The
strongest opposition to gay weddings within the black community has
come from church leaders, whose opinions may not be swayed by the
N.A.A.C.P. In its resolution, the board appeared to be sensitive to
those objections, reaffirming its support for religious freedom.
The
N.A.A.C.P. board has been grappling with the issue for several years.
Among religious figures on the board, the issue was especially fraught.
Maxim
Thorne, a former high-ranking official with the organization, said that
“for certain people, it was a very long evolution and a very long
process of reconciling their faith with this, and coming to a very civil
rights understanding of marriage equality verses a theological
understanding of marriage.”
The group’s endorsement could
potentially bolster support for President Obama with a key constituency:
black Democratic voters who remain skeptical of same-sex marriage.
No comments:
Post a Comment