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Steele: Gay marriage costs small business

ASSOCIATED PRESS
RNC Chairman Michael S. Steele advises Republicans in Savannah, Ga., how to appeal to young voters and minorities without sacrificing core conservative principles.ASSOCIATED PRESS RNC Chairman Michael S. Steele advises Republicans in Savannah, Ga., how to appeal to young voters and minorities without sacrificing core conservative principles.

SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) | Republicans can reach a broader base by recasting gay marriage as an issue that could dent pocketbooks as small businesses spend more on health care and other benefits, Republican National Committee Chairman Michael S. Steele said Saturday.

Mr. Steele said that was just an example of how the party can retool its message to appeal to young voters and minorities without sacrificing core conservative principles. Mr. Steele said he used the argument weeks ago while chatting on a flight with a college student who described herself as fiscally conservative but socially liberal on issues like gay marriage.

“Now all of a sudden I’ve got someone who wasn’t a spouse before, that I had no responsibility for, who is now getting claimed as a spouse that I now have financial responsibility for,” Mr. Steele told Republicans at a state convention in traditionally conservative Georgia. “So how do I pay for that? Who pays for that? You just cost me money.”

As Mr. Steele talked about ways the party could position itself, he also poked fun at his previous pledge to give the Republican Party a “hip-hop makeover.” “You don’t have to wear your pants cut down here or the big bling,” he said.

Maine, Vermont and Iowa have legalized gay marriage in recent weeks, and a Quinnipiac University poll released earlier this month found that 57 percent of people questioned support civil unions that provide marriagelike rights. Although 55 percent said they opposed gay marriage, the poll indicates a shift toward more acceptance.

Mr. Steele has been criticized by some social conservatives after GQ magazine quoted him as saying he opposed gay marriage but wasn’t going to “beat people upside the head about it.”

Mr. Steele, a Catholic and former lieutenant governor of Maryland, was elected chairman of the Republican National Committee earlier this year.

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