US Democratic presidential candidates address gay rights

US Democratic presidential contenders sought to underscore their differences with Republicans on gay and lesbian rights, but leading candidates also faced sharp questions on their reluctance to embrace marriage for same-sex couples.

US Democratic presidential contenders sought to underscore their differences with Republicans on gay and lesbian rights, but leading candidates also faced sharp questions on their reluctance to embrace marriage for same-sex couples.

In a Los Angeles forum focusing on gay issues sponsored by a gay-rights organisation and aired on a gay-oriented cable channel, Sen. Barack Obama argued that civil unions for same-sex couples wouldn’t be a “lesser thing” than marriage. He disputed that his position on same-sex marriage made him a vestige of the past rather than an agent of change.

Obama belongs to the United Church of Christ, which supports gay marriage, but Obama has yet to go that far.

“If we have a situation in which civil unions are fully enforced, are widely recognised, people have civil rights under the law, then my sense is that’s enormous progress,” the Illinois Democrat said.

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson said the nation was on “a path to full inclusion” but added: “In my judgment, what is achievable is civil unions with full marriage rights.”

New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton echoed support for civil unions. “I will be a president who will fight for you,” she said.

But she also said she made a mistake in March when she steered around a question on whether homosexuality was immoral. She was asked about it at the time after Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said he considered homosexual acts immoral and similar to adultery. He later said he should have not expressed his personal views. Clinton later issued a statement saying she did not think being gay was immoral.

“It was a mistake,” Clinton said. “I should have put it in a broader context.”

Six of the eight Democratic candidates answered questions at an event described as a milestone by organisers. It marked the first time that major presidential candidates appeared on TV specifically to address gay issues, organisers said.

Obama called the event “a historic moment … for America”.

The two-hour forum, held in a Hollywood studio with an invited audience of 200, was co-sponsored by the Human Rights Campaign, a gay-rights group active in Democratic politics, and Logo, a gay-oriented cable TV channel that aired the forum live.

“Tonight was an important night in the fight for equality,” Human Rights Campaign President Joe Solmonese, who was on a panel posing questions to the candidates, said in a statement.

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