The
Marriage Protection Amendment will be voted on in the U.S. House
of Representatives this Tuesday. If you have not yet contacted
your Representative, click here.
They need to hear from you.
If
you have not yet signed the Petition in favor of the Marriage
Protection Amendment, it's simple, click
here. It will be personally delivered to the United States
House of Representatives leadership next week.
A staffer for a congressman who keeps
an eye on faxes, phone calls and emails from the public told us
yesterday in a meeting that it looked like the messages were coming
in 10 to 1 against the marriage amendment. He may have been wrong.
This was his best casual guess, but that’s how it looked to him.
Now, of course, the public is overwhelmingly
in favor of marriage. In the states that have considered marriage
protection amendments, an average of 71% of voters have affirmed
it. So what’s happening?
The bottom line is that those who
want to redefine marriage are organized, funded, passionate and
have a tenacious, undying political will. They count on us being
apathetic and tired. Too often, we who support marriage think
that somebody else with more time will handle the problem.
I have often wondered who this fictitious
“other person” is who is going to stop the moral erosion and the
dissolution of marriage. These are our times and our challenge.
With pornography burgeoning, media corrupting, and the family
assaulted, we may think that the most important thing we can do
is just protect and care for our own family. Yet, these are times
when caring for our own family must involve having a voice in
the shaping of our world.
We can’t bolt the doors, shade the
windows, cut the electricity and hope that our children won’t
be exposed to the world. They are — every day at school, with
friends. It’s in the very air.
That’s why we have created the Family
Leader Network — to stay abreast of the issues and fire up citizens
to have a voice — when their voice matters. We are educating,
organizing and mobilizing family-centered people to shape the
world their children are growing up in and to step forward on
important issues. If you haven’t yet subscribed to the email,
why not? You can do that by clicking here.
Don’t
Sit Out on the Marriage Issue
The definition of marriage is an
issue not to sit out on. Rarely does the Church state a political
opinion, but the First Presidency issued a statement supporting
a constitutional amendment defining marriage. It reads:
That they should make this statement
may indicate how seismic the reverberations will be if marriage
is redefined.
People who don’t understand the issue
assume that redefining marriage is only about a few same-sex couples
having a few new privileges and will not affect society broadly.
Instead it is a radical social idea
whose resulting earthquake would touch every aspect of our society,
including what your children learn in school and your religious
freedom.
Please Call or Write Your Representative
You may be one that doesn’t know
how critical it is that Congress hears from you when critical
bills arise. Before we moved to Washington D.C. and I regularly
sat in on meetings on Capitol Hill, I had no idea that our elected
officials actually paid close attention to faxes, phone calls
or emails from the public. Now I know better because I have sat
in on dozens of meetings where the question was, how are we hearing
from the public on this? How are the emails coming?
In short, legislators and their staff
do pay attention to the response of their constituents on issues.
They have to because they want to be elected again. Their constituents
are their lifeblood. Where the public has fervent feelings on
an issue, it registers with our elected officials. When there
is silence the assumption is that the people just don’t care.
Frankly, those who would redefine
marriage are a powerful interest, and legislators who vote for
marriage amendments often pay a personal cost for it. It’s easier
for them to vote against the amendment rather than incur the ill
will and rancor of the same-sex marriage lobby. That ill will
can be bitter indeed.
Legislators need to know that people
who support marriage are behind them and will step forward to
champion that belief. They need to know that they are not alone
and hanging out on a limb for something that nobody really cares
about.
Congresswoman Marilyn Musgrave is
the sponsor of the Marriage Protection Amendment, and a staffer
from her office told us that it encourages and strengthens them
when they hear from people supporting marriage.
If you care, please let them know.
We often hear that family-centered citizens are just too apathetic
to care, but we don’t believe it.
Those who vote against the amendment
must understand that there are political consequences for thumbing
their noses at marriage.
Many have asked why the House is
taking up the Marriage Protection Amendment when it failed to
get the 2/3 majority required in the Senate. Isn’t this just a
waste of time? We’ll tell you below, but first what you can do
to Take Action now.
Take Action: Contact Your Congressman
or Congresswoman
Here are three things that are simple
that you can do right now to support marriage.
1. Contact your legislator. Click
here
and enter your zip code. Your Representative’s name, email and
other contact information will come up. From this website, you
can send an email that will go directly to your Representative.
In the subject line you can write,
“Vote for the Marriage Amendment” and then a letter
that can be as short as one or two sentences.
2. Sign the petition that will
be presented to the House leadership on Monday, July 17 before
the vote on Tuesday. This is the same petition presented to
the Senate when they considered the amendment. If you have signed
it before, you do not need to sign it again. Click here
to sign the petition.
Currently we have 28,000 who have
signed, but we’d like to deliver far more.
3. Forward this article on to your
friends.
4. Sign up to receive the Family
Leader updates by clicking here.
Why is the House Voting on the
Marriage Protection Amendment?
People sometimes wonder why the U.S.
House of Representatives is voting on the Marriage Protection
Amendment when it already failed to get 2/3 majority in the Senate
this year. An amendment to the U.S. Constitution is not an easy
thing to attain. It requires 2/3 of the members of both houses
to pass it and then passage in ¾ of the states.
When an amendment is brought up before
one of the houses of Congress, two opportunities are presented
— both of which are important. First, the matter becomes discussed
in the public square and in the newspaper. It is an opportunity
to educate the public on the issue. Many of our most important
bills have been brought up again and again in Congress until enough
momentum was gathered for passage.
A ban on partial birth abortion was
brought up for several years before it finally passed Congress
and was signed by the President. This week the House passed a
law regulating and therefore restricting Internet gambling. This
law has been brought up four straight years and passed by one
house of Congress or the other, but never both at the same time.
Passing a law is a process, but passing
an amendment is deliberately difficult so that the Constitution
is not easily tampered with.
Second, bringing up the Marriage
Protection Amendment puts legislators on record so the public
knows where they stand regarding the issue. For example, I live
in Virginia, a state that has 11 Representatives in the House.
Nine of them have voted for the amendment in the past. Only two
have voted “no.” Yet in California with 53 Representatives, I
count at least 36 who have voted against the Marriage Protection
Amendment in the past. Those who care about marriage protection
have their work cut out for them in California.
So, please, raise your voice on this
issue and write or call your Representative. It’s easy. It takes
far less time than reading this article. Just follow the simple
instructions above.