It comes 10 years after
Biden first voiced support for same-sex marriages on Meet the Press.
(CNN) -- One
Sunday morning in May of 2012, Vice President Joe
Biden shocked the country with an unexpected declaration delivered in
an interview on NBC's Meet the Press: He came out in public support
of same-sex marriage for the first time.
"I am
absolutely comfortable with the fact that men marrying men, women marrying
women, and heterosexual men and women marrying another are entitled to the same
exact rights, all the civil rights, all the civil liberties," Biden said
when asked
whether he was comfortable with same-sex marriage.
Those words --
which Biden insisted in subsequent years were unplanned -- marked a stunning
personal evolution for the longtime creature of Washington, who as senator had
voted to block federal recognition of same-sex marriages and previously
insisted that marriage should only take place between a man and a woman. The
interview would also turn out to be a watershed moment in modern American
politics, prompting then-President Barack Obama to stake out the same position
several days later and giving permission to other national leaders to also
follow suit.
This week, a
little more than 10 years after that famous TV moment, Biden is marking another
important milestone as a staunch protector of LGBTQ rights. Now halfway through
his first-term as president, Biden will sign into law on Tuesday a bill passed
last week by Congress that mandates federal recognition for same-sex and
interracial marriages.
The White
House is planning to mark the occasion with a ceremony built to a scale that it
believes is fitting of the moment, with one official saying in the days leading
up to Tuesday that it was planning to simply "go all out."
Among the
guests invited to the bill signing at the White House are prominent members of
the LGBTQ community and activists. They include, according to a White House
official, Judy Kasen-Windsor, widow of gay rights activist Edie Windsor;
Matthew Haynes, co-owner of Club Q, the LGBTQ club in Colorado Springs where a gunman
last month killed five people in a mass shooting; Club Q shooting survivors
James Slaugh and Michael Anderson; and a number of plaintiffs from cases that
culminated in the landmark civil rights case Obergefell vs. Hodges, in which
the Supreme Court ruled in 2015 that same-sex couples can marry nationwide.
Officials also
said that Biden's 2012 Meet the Press answer -- and the
cultural transformation that it helped usher in surrounding the national
conversation about same-sex marriage -- was expected to be a prominent theme of
Tuesday's bill-signing event. Biden planned to invoke and quote directly from
those comments in his remarks, a White House official told CNN.
"That
single interview was a transformative moment in Biden's development as a
politician. In the Senate, as a presidential candidate and as vice president,
he always had been very cautious around LGBT issues, afraid of taking any
position that opponents could use to portray him as a left-winger," Sasha
Issenberg, author of "The Engagement: America's Quarter-Century Struggle
Over Same-Sex Marriage," told CNN. "But the reception to what he said
on Meet the Press was universal praise within his party,
especially from LGBT advocates and donors who had previously been skeptical of
him."
Basking in the
hero-treatment from liberal activists, Biden would go on to aggressively
associate himself with LGBT causes in the years to come, and has in
particularly been "unusually bold" when it comes to transgender
rights, Issenberg said.
The passage of
the same-sex marriage legislation in Congress last week also marked a capstone
to a year that produced a notable number of bipartisan packages. The bill passed in the House with 39 Republicans joining
Democrats in support, after getting through the Senate with 12 Republican
senators.
Such a bill
had seemed improbable for many in Washington not that long ago, even as public
opinion on same-sex marriage has continued to shift over the years: 68% of Americans supported same-sex marriage in 2021,
up 14 percentage points from 2014, according to surveys from the nonprofit,
nonpartisan Public Religious Research Institute.
But the public
rallying and push to pass federal protections for same-sex and interracial
marriage intensified this year after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade,
sparking fresh fears that the nation's highest court would also reconsider
other existing rights around marriage equality.
The day the
Supreme Court's landmark ruling was issued in June, Biden warned that Justice
Clarence Thomas "explicitly called to reconsider the right of marriage
equality, the right of couples to make their choices on contraception. This is
an extreme and dangerous path the Court is now taking us on."
He would go on
to give similar warnings on the campaign trail leading up to the midterms:
"We want to make it clear: It's not just about Roe and choice. It's about
-- it's about marriage -- same-sex marriage. It's about contraception. It's
about a whole range of things that are on the docket," he said at a
Democratic National Committee reception in August.
Philanthropist
and Democratic donor David Bohnett, who has been an outspoken gay- and
transgender-rights activist and longtime supporter of Biden, told CNN that
Tuesday's bill signing could not come at a more crucial moment.
"[Biden]
has demonstrated his support for decades for lesbian and gay civil rights, and
Tuesday's signing into law is a reaffirmation of that during this time when
rights are under assault," Bohnett said. "I think we're here in
response to the hateful and discriminatory actions and tactics by so many in
the right-wing and so many that want to dismantle the rights that we fought so
hard for a long time."
The-CNN-Wire
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