February 25, 2010
Crowd asks politicians to 'let us vote' on gay marriage
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- About 150 people gathered outside the state Capitol on Thursday to say they want voters to decide whether the West Virginia Constitution should ban same-sex marriage.

"We are here today to say, let us vote," said Jeremy Dys, president of the Family Policy Council of West Virginia, which organized the rally.

Earlier this week, Democrats in the House of Delegates blocked a Republican move to force a vote on the "Marriage Protection Amendment." That bipartisan resolution calls for a statewide referendum on whether to amend the state constitution to define marriage as between one man and one woman.

Now, opponents of same-sex marriage are focusing on a similar measure (SJR14) in the state Senate.

People at the rally stood and chanted, "Let us vote!" They waved signs with the same slogan.

Some said they wanted politicians to stand up on the issue.

"We don't feel they're representing us by not allowing this to come to a vote," said Terri McCormick of Cross Lanes.

West Virginia already has the Defense of Marriage Act, which bars the state from recognizing gay marriages performed elsewhere. Those who want a constitutional ban say the existing law could be challenged in court. 

McCormick's brother, Michael Kidd of Hurricane, fears that if voters don't amend the constitution, judges will allow same-sex marriage.

"Just the very thought that homosexuals cannot procreate is proof enough that [gay marriage] is not in God's will," he said.

House Minority Leader Tim Armstead, R-Kanawha, was the only legislator to address the rally, saying that lawmakers must respond to people's desire to vote on marriage.

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