The
Log
Cabin
Republicans
said
that
the
party’s
presidential
nomination
remains
“anyone’s
to
win”
after
Mitt
Romney
this
week
won
the
Michigan
primary.
Patrick
Sammon,
president
of
the
gay
partisan
group,
said
Romney’s
win
scrambles
an
already
unpredictable
race.
“It’s
clear
this
race
is
going
to
go
on,
I
think,
for
a
while,”
he
said.
“It’s
a
wide
open
race
and
I
think
it’s
anyone’s
to
win.”
Log
Cabin
has
targeted
Romney
in
campaign
ads
during
the
primary
season.
Frank
Ricchiazzi,
who
helped
found
the
organization
three
decades
ago,
told
the
Blade
in
October
that
Romney
is
an
opportunist
who
has
shifted
his
position
on
many
issues.
“There’s
one
candidate
who
has
double-talked,
flip-flopped
and
backstabbed,”
he
said.
“And
we
feel
that
should
be
exposed.”
Romney,
a
former
Massachusetts
governor,
won
the
Jan.
15
primary
after
taking
39
percent
of
the
Republican
vote.
Sen.
John
McCain
of
Arizona
took
30
percent
of
the
vote,
and
former
Arkansas
Gov.
Mike
Huckabee
had
16
percent
of
the
vote.
Huckabee
won
the
Iowa
caucuses
Jan.
3,
while
McCain
won
the
New
Hampshire
primary
Jan.
8.
“This
is
exciting,
but
nerve
racking
because
the
stakes
are
incredibly
high,”
Sammon
said.
“The
direction
of
the
party
is
going
to
be
much
different
based
on
who
wins
this
nomination
process.
So
the
stakes
are
high.”
Republican
presidential
contender
Ron
Paul
has
taken
“moral
responsibility”
for
not
better
monitoring
a
newsletter
that
bore
his
name
and
repeatedly
attacked
gays.
The
attacks,
which
were
published
almost
18
years
ago
and
came
to
light
through
an
article
this
month
in
The
New
Republic,
included
a
lament
that
gays
were
becoming
increasingly
open
about
their
sexual
orientation.
“I
miss
the
closet,”
says
an
unsigned
article
printed
in
the
June
1990
issue
of
the
Ron
Paul
Political
Report.
“Homosexuals,
not
to
speak
for
the
rest
of
society,
were
far
better
off
when
social
pressure
forced
them
to
hide
their
activities.”
Another
article
in
the
January
1994
edition
says
“gays
in
San
Francisco
do
not
obey
the
dictates
of
good
sense.”
“These
men
don’t
really
see
a
reason
to
live
past
their
fifties,”
the
article
says.
“They
are
not
married,
they
have
no
children,
and
their
lives
are
centered
on
new
sexual
partners.”
The
same
issue
also
includes
a
passage
that
says
gays
“enjoy
the
attention
and
pity
that
comes
with
being
sick.”
In
a
statement,
Paul
said
the
newsletter’s
content
was
not
written
by
him
and
does
not
“represent
what
I
believe
or
have
ever
believed.
I
have
never
uttered
such
words
and
denounce
such
small-minded
thoughts.”
Paul
said
the
newsletter,
while
published
under
his
name,
did
not
receive
his
review
or
approval.
Scott
Tucker,
spokesperson
for
Log
Cabin
Republicans,
questioned
Paul’s
explanation.
“We’re
pleased
that
Congress-man
Paul
has
disavowed
the
remarks
that
appeared
in
a
newsletter
bearing
his
name,
but
his
explanation
that
he
had
never
read
them
just
doesn’t
add
up.”
But
Jesse
Benton,
a
campaign
spokesperson,
said
Paul
remains
“the
staunchest
advocate
of
individual
rights
and
personal
freedom
in
Washington.”
“He
has
been
endorsed
by
Andrew
Sullivan
and
a
strong
Gays
for
Ron
Paul
coalition
provides
him
tremendous
support,”
he
said.
“Ron
has
for
over
a
decade
taken
moral
responsibility
for
these
appalling
comments
made
under
his
name,
but
these
ugly
words
stand
anathema
to
what
he
believes
and
has
fought
for
for
35
years.”
With
their
work
in
Iowa
and
New
Hampshire
behind
them,
Human
Rights
Campaign
staffers
have
become
active
in
other
presidential
primary
states.
Efforts
are
underway
in
Florida,
Minnesota
and
Nevada
to
educate
and
mobilize
voters.
Nevada
holds
its
presidential
caucuses
Jan.
19,
while
Florida
voters
go
to
the
polls
Jan.
29,
and
the
Minnesota
caucuses
occur
Feb.
5.
HRC
President
Joe
Solmonese
said
the
efforts
in
Minnesota,
which
include
workshops
across
the
state
teaching
voters
more
about
the
caucus
process,
are
representative
of
the
organization’s
efforts
“to
elect
fair-minded
candidates”
across
the
nation.
“It
is
imperative
that
the
GLBT
community
and
its
allies
represent
themselves
effectively
during
the
caucuses
to
advance
the
cause
of
equality,”
he
said.
“By
attending
the
trainings
and
engaging
in
the
process,
our
community
can
harness
its
political
power.”

A
spokesperson
for
Rep.
Ron
Paul
says
the
Texas
lawmaker
takes
‘moral
responsibility’
for
not
better
monitoring
a
newsletter
that
bore
his
name
and
attacked
gays.
(Photo
by
M.
Spencer
Green/AP) |
|
The
workshops,
coordinated
by
an
HRC
staffer
and
done
in
conjunction
with
OutFront
Minnesota,
consist
of
mock
caucuses
wherein
participants
practice
discussing
gay
issues
and
offering
related
resolutions.
Meanwhile,
an
HRC
staffer
in
Nevada
is
planning
a
rally
for
the
eve
of
the
Jan.
19
caucuses.
Organizers
said
the
rally,
set
for
5
p.m.
Jan.
18
at
the
Clark
County
Government
Center
in
...