Editorial: Sen. Tom Birmingham: 'Leader'
or 'Dictator'?
MassNews Staff
September 9, 2002
Sen. Tom Birmingham says he is a "leader"
as a result of breaking the law by adjourning the
Constitutional Convention on July 17 without a vote
on the "Protection of Marriage" Amendment.
He says, "There's no point in having
a position of leadership if you're not going to exercise
that leadership in a way that's consistent with your
values."
How do we explain to the Senator that
it's not "leadership" when he breaks the
law simply because he thinks it is a good idea?
That's what dictators do, not leaders.
In a democracy, we obey the law - no
matter who we are.
The newspaper which reported his statement,
Bay Windows, put it this way. "In fact, Birmingham
said he never doubted his actions on the amendment
proposal. 'I really didn't because of two things.
One is, I, as president of the Senate, I'm presiding
officer of the convention,' he explained. 'There's
no point in having a position of leadership if you're
not going to exercise that leadership in a way that's
consistent with your values. I don't want that to
sound arrogant - I don't have a monopoly on all the
right ideas but I had no question about what was the
right way to dispose of this mean-spirited attempt
to amend our constitution. So what's the point of
being in a position like mine if you can't do what
you think is the right thing when the opportunity
arises?
"'Secondly,' he continued, 'and
as corny as this sounds, I think the best way to advance
yourself politically is to do the best you can in
the position you're in. I did what I thought was right
in the position I'm in.'"
Birmingham's conduct is especially troublesome
when it wasn't his values that were driving him -
but the desire to keep his union bosses happy. Everyone
knows that Birmingham did what he did because he was
being pressured by the unions and other liberals like
the ACLU. It is the unions who have the money and
power.
We saw him get a small part of his reward
when some gay groups gave him $13,000 at a ceremony
last month. We know that the large homosexual group,
Human Rights Campaign, took $275,000 out of Boston
last fall towards its $8 million budget after a banquet
here. How much of that goes back to Massachusetts
politicians, we will never know, but no one doubts
that it is considerable.
Even Bay Windows acknowledged that Birmingham
"engineered" the illegal vote.
It Has Hurt Him
The Senate President admitted that his
illegal conduct has hurt him, said the newspaper:
"Birmingham, who has consistently
polled third behind O'Brien and Reich, acknowledged
that he has 'taken some hits' because of his stance
against the ballot initiative-negative e-mails, hate
mail, jeers along the campaign trail -- but he's long
since given up on pleasing everyone. 'This is one
of those issues that if people choose to reject my
candidacy over it, I'll sleep at night knowing I did
what I thought was right in my heart. What I couldn't
bear to do would be to take a poll or to put my finger
to the wind and behave accordingly and then find out
I had the wrong pollster or the wind changed. If you
do what you believe is right -- and I want to win
this election -- but this is what I thought was right,
if people want to reject me because of that, I can
live with that. I'll sleep at night."
Lawsuit Another Bother
As for the lawsuit which has been filed
against Birmingham in the Supreme Judicial Court by
Mass. Citizens for Marriage to clarify his responsibilities
when the Referendum comes before him again this year,
Bay Windows reported this:
"And now he's been slapped with
a lawsuit by the Massachusetts Citizens for Marriage,
the sponsors of the initiative, both personally and
in his capacity as Senate president. The MCM has asked
the Supreme Judicial Court to clarify whether Birmingham
acted illegally in adjourning the convention. The
candidate, however, is unmoved by the legal action.
'I'm being sued not only institutionally but personally,
which I interpret as an effort to intimidate me and
try to pressure me to change my position -- it's not
going to happen,' he asserted. 'It's not going to
happen. And I think to the extent that I'm named personally
it's frivolous. But you know it's certainly not going
to have the desired effect. And so we'll deal with
that and get that disposed of, I'm quite confident.
"'But look I'm a big boy,'
Birmingham added. 'I took a stand fully knowing what
the reaction of the other side would be and would
have to be completely removed from the process not
to know. I got all the e-mails and everything else
beforehand, so this reaction doesn't surprise me.
It doesn't faze me either.'"
It doesn't faze him because he knows
the unions will continue to take care of him What
kind of message does that send to us law-abiding citizens
who try to follow the rules?
Please call Gov. Swift today and tell
her to do her duty as required under the Constitution
and call the Legislature back for the vote they are
required to take this year.