The National Organization for Marriage and allies like Bishop Harry Jackson have been looking for some way to overturn marriage equality legislation that became law in the District earlier this year with overwhelming support from the citys elected leadership. But NOM and Jackson havent been doing so well. On the legal front, they were handed one more major defeat this week. The DC Court of appeals rejected their claim that the Board of Elections and Ethics was wrong to prevent an anti-marriage initiative from going before voters, which the BOEE ruled would violate the citys Human Rights Act. From a legal perspective, that leaves only the U.S. Supreme Court as a possible avenue for appeal, which Jacksons lawyers at the Alliance Defense Fund say theyre strongly considering. But NOM is not leaving things to the courts. Weve reported that in recent months that the National Organization for Marriage has been pouring money into DC elections. Turns out that was just a start.
Now theyre planning an even bigger investment in DC politics. In an email yesterday, NOMs Brian Brown took a break from bragging about the launch of his anti-equality bus tour across America to announce this:
One final bit of news: Something else big has just been birthed here in this country, the D.C. Values PAC. Bishop Jackson's heroic leadership has lead to something no one has ever seen before: a coalition of black Democrats leaders and white suburban Christian Republicans to help elect pro-marriage and pro-life black Democrats in the District of Columbia. On Monday I was at Georgia Brown's in D.C. in a room that was 80 percent African-American leaders, including two local commissioners and a candidate for the D.C. City Council. God is making amazing things happen. Old barriers are breaking down, new ideas are springing up--and you are the ones making all of this possible.