Editorial
An emergency call to action to protect marriage
By JAMES A. SMITH SR.
Executive Editor
Published January 24, 2008
A
multi-year effort to allow Florida voters the opportunity to protect marriage
is in serious jeopardy of not making the 2008 November ballot unless concerned
citizens act immediately and decisively to collect an additional 22,000
petitions before Jan. 29.
Since
Florida Baptists have been in the lead of this vital effort since its
beginnings, it's incumbent upon our churches to mobilize in the next few days
to ensure the Florida Marriage Protection Amendment reaches the 611,009
threshold of necessary petitions in order to qualify the measure for the
ballot.
The
shocking news that the marriage amendment had fallen back below the number of
petitions necessary after eclipsing the requirement in December is well summarized
in our page one story this week. As John Stemberger, chairman of
Florida4Marriage.org, said, the time for finger-pointing to discover the
culprit for this troubling turn of events will come later. Now, however, is the
time to act.
Unless
Florida Baptists and other concerned citizens can gather about 22,000 petitions—and since many submitted petitions are invalidated (for various reasons like
duplication, the signer is not a registered voter, or other errors)—collecting perhaps as many as 50,000 petitions will be needed to make sure the
marriage amendment qualifies for the ballot.
To
date, 27 states have approved state constitutional amendments to protect
traditional marriage against the whims of judges who wish to force states to
accept "gay marriage." It would be a serious set-back to this effort to protect
marriage if Florida would fail to even qualify a marriage amendment for the
ballot, even though the number of petitions necessary to get the measure on the
ballot far exceeds that of any other state—ever! The advocates of "gay
marriage" would take great glee at such a failure. More importantly, Florida
would be vulnerable to a judicial ruling finding a constitutional "right" to
"gay marriage."
The
time to act is now. Here's what churches can do:
•
At every public meeting between now and Jan. 29—and especially Sunday
morning, Jan. 27—a strong appeal should be made urging members who are
registered voters and who have not previously signed a petition to sign the
Florida Marriage Protection Amendment petition. Petitions can be downloaded
from www.Florida4Marriage.org or the Witness Web site.
•
The petitions must be received by close of business on Tues., Jan. 29 at the
Orlando office of the Florida Coalition to Protect Marriage, 4853 S. Orange
Ave., Orlando, FL 32806. Petitions that cannot be hand-delivered to the
coalition headquarters must be received before the close of business and should
to be sent by overnight delivery to ensure its timely delivery.
• NOTE: Petitions cannot be sent directly to the local county supervisor of
elections offices. They must be submitted by the sponsoring organization, the
Florida Coalition to Protect Marriage.
•
Contribute to the cause. Funds are urgently needed to finish this effort.
Donations can be accepted at www.Florida4Marriage.org.
Because
state elections officials will no longer provide a running tally of certified
petitions, we will be in the dark, not knowing if enough petitions have been
collected until after the deadline has passed. This fact further underscores
the need for every concerned citizen to take every available effort to act
immediately and collect as many new petitions as possible between now and Jan.
29.
There
will be a time to look back and ask serious questions of state and local elections
officials and determine who is at fault for this terrible state of affairs—as
well as to determine what possible remedy may exist for wronged efforts, like
the Florida Coalition to Protect Marriage, including whether the Florida
Legislature has a role to play.
Nevertheless,
for now our first concern must be getting more petitions. For the sake of
traditional marriage in the Sunshine State, please act today.