Daily News (Los Angeles)

Republican­s reject gay marriage, abortion platform shift

- By Lindsey Holden The Sacramento Bee

Greg Gandrud and Randall Jordan are both Central Coast Republican­s — but they could not disagree more on a vision for the future of their party.

Jordan, the California GOP Central Coast vice chair, told a regional meeting at the state convention Saturday he does not believe the party should embrace LGBTQ members while Republican­s are fighting for “parental rights” and forced outing in schools.

Moments later, Gandrud, the openly gay California GOP treasurer, had a different message for those packed into the Anaheim hotel meeting room. He said the party needs to be more inclusive and welcome people like him to win elections.

Jordan and Gandrud's disagreeme­nt is one that is dividing the California GOP as it figures out how to regain influence in a state where Democrats reign.

Some reject the “big tent” approach as a compromise of values and want to double down on the status quo or shift even more to the right. Others argue Republican­s need to adapt to a modern California and work to attract a broader swath of voters.

The fight played out this weekend over the California GOP platform, a document few voters likely care about. But it is the place where conflicts over a party's values and policies are resolved, or not.

“We just should be welcoming and make sure everybody knows they're welcome in the Republican Party,” Gandrud said. “We have solutions to the things that people really care most about.”

Hard-right California GOP members won during the convention weekend by killing a four-page draft version of the party platform that would have eliminated the “one man and one woman” definition of marriage. It also would have revised the platform's “right to life” section to say GOP members “want to see the number of abortions reduced,” rather than ending them entirely.

More conservati­ve Republican­s wanted the party to re-adopt a version of the 2019 platform, a 14-page document with a decadesold framework that maintains same-sex marriage opposition and stronger language against abortion.

Members opposed to the draft actively lobbied against it on Saturday, wearing stickers and carrying red signs that said, “RE-ADOPT. STAY UNITED.”

Log Cabin Republican­s, a conservati­ve LGTBQ organizati­on, supported the draft. Other Republican­s also welcomed the opportunit­y to change the platform and include new provisions around recent GOP concerns.

Betsy Mahan, chair of the Sacramento County Republican Party, wanted to add language supporting election integrity, and opposing gender-affirming care for minors.

She said “misinforma­tion” about whether the draft could include old language or be amended helped tank that version.

“There were a number of issues that these people were here for that could have been resolved,” she said of the opposition. “But the people who led the effort, they're just trying to make a point that they had some power — that's really all it was about. And it's a shame, because our party hurts as a result.”

Jordan, who also serves as chair of the San Luis Obispo County Republican Party, was strongly against the draft and moved to help quash it.

When the California GOP recognized the Log Cabin Republican­s as a chartered group in 2015, Jordan said, those who pushed for the organizati­on's acceptance agreed not to attempt any change to the definition of marriage. He was not happy to see that altered in the draft.

“I think we have lost so many people in our party that were true Republican­s,” he said. “As soon as we started losing our values, and we started being the big tent, I think they left us. They either left the state or they left our party, and now they're no party preference.”

Those who drafted the newer platform say the party's rejection will force candidates to campaign on an older set of principles that will not be popular in certain areas.

“What I worry about is our Assembly and our state Senate candidates who now have to take this flawed, outdated platform that's 20 years old and have to sell that to the voters in places like South Central or Watts or Hillcrest or the Castro,” said Charles Moran, president of Log Cabin Republican­s, who lobbied for the draft platform.

“They're going to be woefully ill-equipped because this group of people decided to make choices about what conservati­sm means in the state of California,” he added. “And it takes away the ability of candidates to do that.”

But state Senate Minority Leader Brian Jones, RSan Diego, opposed the draft, saying he thinks the platform needs updates, but “right now is not the right time.”

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