Well today the state of New Jersey became the latest state to join the exclusive club of states that permit gays and lesbians to marry one another. This Reuters piece affirms that the vote was decisive at 42 for and 33 against. The bill awaits Governor Chris Christie’s signature, one that won’t be forthcoming, and the vote margins in either of New Jerseys houses are insufficient to override his veto.
Chris Christie, a self-avowed anti-big government governor, apparently isn’t anti-big government when it comes to legislating morality. When it comes to deciding that the love of one’s life cannot visit their loved one in his or her hospital room, or be included on his or her health insurance policy.
But Christie is clever. Or so he thinks. Christie wants to put the question to a popular vote. That is, representative government is not qualified to decide what the people want – a key principle in representative democracy. This issue, it seems, is so important to Christie that he thinks it should be put on a referendum.
Christie thinks it’s clever because he can duck out of being the Republican governor who bent to the will of the people by signing this legislation into law. But here is the key flaw to his logic.
An issue whose only additional expense, at this point, is the price of the ink that would have been used to sign the bill into law.
Chris Christie is rapidly becoming a poster child for Republican hypocrisy.
1 comment:
Chris Christie is the poster boy for The Biggest Loser show, and probably has a standing offer any time he is out of a guv job. Pays better, too!
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