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The Washington Times Online Edition

Gay marriage foes gear up

Associated Press
Proposition 8 supporter Jeff Zaine (right) asks Dionisio Tonel about his thoughts on gay marriage Saturday during a poll of voters in Elk Grove, Calif. If passed by voters in November, Proposition 8 would amend the California Constitution to make same-sex marriage illegal in the state.Associated Press Proposition 8 supporter Jeff Zaine (right) asks Dionisio Tonel about his thoughts on gay marriage Saturday during a poll of voters in Elk Grove, Calif. If passed by voters in November, Proposition 8 would amend the California Constitution to make same-sex marriage illegal in the state.

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) | Michael Bumgarner said he has never campaigned for a political cause before, but his strong opposition to same-sex marriage has prompted him to join thousands of volunteers going door to door in support of a ballot initiative that would ban gay nuptials here.

“I’ve never stumped before, but I want to be a part of this,” Mr. Bumgarner said. The retired insurance executive and devout Mormon said his late mother would “turn over in her grave” if she knew that gays and lesbians could marry.

With less than 11 weeks until Election Day, supporters of Proposition 8 are ramping up their field organization and refining their message as they seek to persuade California voters to shut the door on same-sex marriage. It’s the first time voters will be asked to weigh in on the issue in either California or Massachusetts — the states where gays have won the right to wed.

An estimated 15,000 backers of the measure, most of them members of Mormon, Catholic and evangelical Christian churches, knocked on doors and distributed campaign literature to registered voters throughout the state this weekend and last, said Jennifer Kerns, a spokeswoman for the “Yes on 8” campaign.

The initiative is a constitutional amendment, similar to those enacted in 26 other states, that would overturn the California Supreme Court decision that legalized same-sex marriage. It needs a simple majority of votes to pass.

Ron Prentice, director of the coalition of religious and social conservative groups that qualified the amendment for the November ballot, said the group has ordered 1 million yard signs and 1 million bumper stickers.

“Unless the people are angry, nothing will happen,” he said. “We are going to change the Constitution and say on Nov. 4, ‘Judges, you can’t touch this.’ ”

For now, the campaign’s goal is to identify supporters and voters who are unaware or haven’t made up their minds about the measure, said Al Almendariz, a retired air traffic controller and a Mormon.

He led a team of five people canvassing a suburban neighborhood southeast of Sacramento on Saturday, and their script was concise. The volunteers told people who answered their doors that they were with the Proposition 8 campaign, an effort that would define marriage as being between a man and a woman. They didn’t mention same-sex marriage unless a resident brought it up.

The literature that volunteers distributed was intended to reinforce the campaign’s message that the amendment is “pro-marriage and children” instead of anti-gay.

“California should do more to encourage families to stay together,” reads the pamphlets illustrated with close-ups of heterosexual couples posed cheek to cheek.

Frank Schubert, who is co-managing the “Yes on 8” campaign, said the outreach effort is designed to counter the message of gay rights advocates, who are portraying the upcoming vote as a matter of fairness and equality.

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