Same-sex marriage will not be an issue in next yearâs legislative session, said the highest-ranking Democrats from both chambers of the Iowa legislature.
âOur goal is, hopefully for a long time, to do nothing on this issue,â Iowa House Speaker Pat Murphy, D-Dubuque, said. âTo let people know that on April 3 there was a ruling, and on April 27 there were a lot of people who said the end of the world was coming. Well, itâs a month later, and the sun is still shining, the grass is still green and people are enjoying their lives and living in more dignity because of whatâs happened.â
Murphy and Senate Majority Leader Mike Gronstal, D-Council Bluffs, spoke Thursday night at a reception in their honor hosted by One Iowa, the stateâs largest gay rights organization. The day the Iowa Supreme Court overturned the stateâs ban on same-sex marriage, Gronstal and Murphy issued a joint statement praising the decision and closed the door on legislative action to overturn it. Over the course of the sessionâs final weeks, both men repeatedly beat back attempts to push through a constitutional amendment overturning the courtâs decision.
Also speaking at the event was former Democratic National Committee chair Howard Dean, who, as governor of Vermont, signed the countryâs first civil unions bill into law nearly ten years ago. Dean applauded Gronstal and Murphy for their efforts.
âThe reason I am proud of them is that they have done something that is not easy to do,â Dean said. âThis is an incredibly emotional issue; I donât have to tell you what the backlash is. But people in politics who have to face voters, this is the tough thing to stand up for. When people take risks like this on your behalf, you have got to support them.â
The summer after the Vermont civil unions bill was signed, Dean said the rhetoric became so heated he wore a bulletproof vest most of the time. Flash forward to last month and Vermontâs legislature was able to overwhelmingly pass a bill legalizing same-sex marriage. That shows how much opinion can change over time.
âOnce somebody stands up and says who they are, itâs impossible to discriminate against them,â he said. âMost decent human beings can say terrible things about somebody they donât know anything about. They canât say those things about friends and neighbors.â
Despite the praise, Gronstal said he didnât stand up for same-sex marriage in order to win support.
âWe do have to face the voters, but we also have to face ourselves every morning,â he said. âWe have to be able to look ourselves in the mirror every day. And by the way, we didnât do this for the GLBT community. We did this for everybody.â
The goal now, Murphy said, is to make sure the work doesnât stop and groups like One Iowa continue to fight to elect âopen-minded people who are willing to protect the rights of the people of this state.â
Dean agreed, saying if Iowa fails, the entire gay rights movement could fail.
âWe have to make sure they get re-elected,â he said. âIf they lose, this sets back the movement. People around the country will say: âLook what they did in Iowa, and look at the price Democrats had to pay.â So it makes a big difference.â

























