Christendom College club pulls out of College Republicans over homosexuality
FRONT ROYAL, Virginia, (LifeSiteNews)
– The Republican club at Christendom College, Virginia's renowned orthodox
Catholic college, has left the national and state College Republicans over a
debate surrounding sexual orientation.
On February 1, the Christendom College Republicans announced
they had withdrawn from the College Republican National Committee (CRNC) and
the College Republican Federation of Virginia (CRFV) after the CRFV voted
overwhelmingly to add sexual orientation as a protected class to the chapter's
constitution.
"This proposed amendment to the CRFV Constitution
institutionalizes the values that the Republican Party stands for: being
inclusive of all individuals who believe in the conservative principles of the
Republican Party," said a CRFV press release dated December 14, 2015.
"The vote to announce this potential amendment was unanimously supported
by all voting members of the CRFV Executive Board and any College Republican
chapter chairs who attended the RPV Advance."
In full, the amendment read: "The College Republican
Federation of Virginia does not discriminate against its membership based on
citizenship, color, disability, gender, race, religion, national origin or
sexual orientation."
After state chapters voted overwhelmingly on January 30 to pass
the amendment, the Christendom College Republicans announced they were being
renamed the Christendom Political Action League (CPAL) and would no longer
affiliate with either the state or national College Republicans.
"Why ... must we, as members of the Republican Party[,]
constantly be faced with capitulation to the opposing members of political
factions?" asked a CPAL press release issued on February 1. "When
will we, as the conservative future of America, choose to throw off the
conventional wisdom of those who claim to represent a majority of the people,
who are utterly disconnected from the actual issues facing this nation, our
nation, and not play petty politics in an attempt to gain the supporters of the
other party?"
CPAL cited "the persisting uncertainty surrounding the
effects that this amendment will have upon the future of the CRFV and its
chapters" as a primary reason for its disassociation.
"Since we're a Catholic school and our own chapter's
non-discrimination policy has functioned fine for us, we didn't want to take
part in this," a CPAL spokesperson told LifeSiteNews. "We had time to
make arguments [before the CRFV vote], and out of 122 delegates in attendance,
we had two speak against the amendment."
The spokesperson explained that while the then-president of CRFV
had said any conflicts with the state chapter's constitution and a college's
constitution would give the college's preferences priority, "the Executive
Board" of the CRFV "didn't give us a direct answer."
"We were concerned that someone could go to the CRFV constitution and say that since we're a CR chapter of the CRFV, we would have to include [students with same-sex attractions], even if they were engaging in activities against Catholic teachings," explained the spokesperson, who said the CRFV Executive Board declined to distinguish between attractions and actions of people with same-sex sexual attractions.
"We were concerned that someone could go to the CRFV constitution and say that since we're a CR chapter of the CRFV, we would have to include [students with same-sex attractions], even if they were engaging in activities against Catholic teachings," explained the spokesperson, who said the CRFV Executive Board declined to distinguish between attractions and actions of people with same-sex sexual attractions.
Polling throughout 2015 showed nearly 75 percent of Millennials
– adults born after 1980 – backed redefining marriage, with about six in ten
Millennial Republicans holding the same position. This has many GOP strategists
concerned about the party's formal opposition to redefining marriage, which is also the popular position among Republicans in
general.
Those concerned include CRNC chairwoman Alex Smith, who told The
Hill that "Dignity, respect and fairness are a huge part of what this
generation wants to see in this debate" and said, "If [Republicans]
don't strike the right tone on gay rights – we could start to see the door
close on us even if we have the right ideas on the economy that millennials
want."
The CRNC declined to comment on Christendom's departure from the CRNC and CRFV, and likewise did not answer questions about what "the right tone" is with the marriage fight and whether the CRNC supports redefining marriage.
The CRNC declined to comment on Christendom's departure from the CRNC and CRFV, and likewise did not answer questions about what "the right tone" is with the marriage fight and whether the CRNC supports redefining marriage.
CRFV chairman Ben Dessart did not respond to multiple requests
for comment.