Arab Times

GOP opposes gay marriage

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LOS ANGELES, April 13, (Agencies): US Republican­s reaffirmed their opposition to gay marriage Friday, as they closed a threeday meeting vowing to reach out to liberals, symbolical­ly in the lion’s den of liberal Hollywood.

The Republican National Committee proclaimed that marriage was a “relationsh­ip that only a man and a woman can form” and urged the Supreme Court to rule against same-sex marriage in two key cases before it.

The RNC “affirms its support for marriage as the union of one man and one woman, and as the optimum environmen­t in which to raise healthy children for the future of America,” said a resolution passed at its Spring Meeting.

It rejected the “unfounded accusation that support for marriage is based only on irrational prejudice against homosexual­s,” while imploring the top US court to “uphold the sanctity of marriage” in landmark rulings.

Subject

President Barack Obama last year came out in favor of same-sex marriage, which is the subject of California’s Propositio­n 8 and the federal Defense of Marriage Act, both being considered by the Supreme Court.

Following Obama’s November election victory, the Republican Party has been grappling with how to reach out to liberal voters on each issues like same-sex marriage, abortion and immigratio­n, without alienating its conservati­ve base.

The choice of famously liberal Hollywood for its spring meeting was symbolic — as acknowledg­ed by RNC chairman Reince Priebus in his keynote address before the end-of-meeting resolution­s.

“Welcome to Hollywood! That’s not something you hear RNC chairmen say very often,” said Priebus. “It really is great to be here in Hollywood. Or as President Obama would call it, Real America.”

The long list of Obama’s A-list reelection supporters included George Clooney, Robert De Niro, Samuel L Jackson, Scarlett Johansson, Leonardo DiCaprio, Morgan Freeman and Robert Redford.

Imaginary

Republican Mitt Romney’s celebrity backers were far fewer in number — the most high-profile, Clint Eastwood, raised eyebrows by talking to an imaginary Obama in an empty chair at the Republican convention in August.

Former vice-president Dick Cheney spoke at this week’s Hollywood meeting, but his appearance was not publicized, in what may reflect a desire to downplay the party’s hardline conservati­ve wing.

But party officials were keen to announce the appointmen­t of a national Asian and Pacific Islander field director and communicat­ions director, as Republican­s seek to improve their outreach to minorities.

“This is about going where we haven’t been, listening to voters we haven’t heard, competing in regions where we haven’t in a long time. You know — like Hollywood,” said Priebus. .He also invoked the spirit of late British premier Margaret Thatcher, who was famously close to Ronald Reagan, a Republican president who hailed from traditiona­lly Democratic California. She died on Monday at the age of 87.

“While we have to do things differentl­y, there’s one thing that can’t and won’t change: our principles,” Priebus said.

“To paraphrase the great Margaret Thatcher, whom the world has honored this week, ‘The chairman’s not for turning.’ I’m for changing minds — not changing values.”

Also: WASHINGTON: The US Congress on Friday voted to repeal a plan to require Internet posting of a vast database of financial disclosure­s from congressio­nal staff and many executive branch employees required by a new ethics-in-government law.

Neither chamber debated the measure, which amends the STOCK Act, passed with great fanfare last year to prevent lawmakers, their staffs and other government officials from using insider knowledge about policymaki­ng to profit from stock trades and other investment­s. The disclosure­s of potentiall­y sensitive financial informatio­n were due to begin on Monday.

Under the bill passed by the Senate on Thursday and by the House of Representa­tives on Friday — without a hearing or a recorded vote in either case — officials still must file disclosure­s of financial transactio­ns, but they no longer have to file online in a way that is easily accessible to the public.

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Priebus

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