Back in 1990, Texas Republican gubernatorial candidate Clayton Williams was leading his Democratic opponent in the polls by a 20-point margin â until he stuck his Texas-sized boot in his mouth by likening rape to bad weather.
âIf itâs inevitable, just relax and enjoy it,â the Texas oilman joked, dooming his campaign.
I guess itâs a good thing Mr. Williams doesnât live here in Nevada, because there are three political inevitables on the horizon that we surely would not want him commenting on.
The first is gay marriage, which has actually been inevitable for a long time; itâs just that a lot of people are only now beginning to realize it.
When the notion was first put forward in Hawaii in the 1990s, it was a state issue. But once Congress and President Clinton got involved and passed DOMA, the Defense of Marriage Act, it became a federal issue.
And the 1960s Supreme Court decision in the âLovingâ case â which declared marriage a ârightâ â all but guarantees that gay marriage will soon no longer be a state issue, but the law of the land ... the entire land, including Nevada.
Indeed, as long as the government extends special benefits to married couples, the argument is no longer about defending the âtraditional definition of marriage,â but equal protection under the law. So the big mistake for traditional marriage supporters isnât in letting gays into the institution of marriage; it was letting the government into it.
The second inevitable in Nevada is the lawful use and possession of marijuana. Not just medicinal marijuana; recreational as well.
Itâs a generational thing. The âReefer Madnessâ generation is dying off and the largest segment of the voting-age population is now baby boomers who grew up smoking weed in the 1960-70s.
While marijuana advocates certainly arenât about to admit it, âmedicalâ marijuana was just the proverbial camelâs nose under the tent. And once smoking a doobie became acceptable for cancer patients, it was a short, inevitable step to general acceptance.
Of course, it hasnât hurt that the nationâs Drug War has been an expensive, miserable failure.
The third inevitability is the re-election of Gov. Brian Sandoval.
Upon recent announcements that State Sen. Tick Segerblom (D) and Clark County Commissioner Steve Sisolak (D) would not challenge the incumbent, the Left and much of the mainstream media (but I repeat myself) bemoaned the fact that Democrats wouldnât have a gubernatorial candidate this year.
I beg to differ.
Gov. Sandoval has raised taxes, increased spending, grown government, implemented ObamaCare, expanded Medicaid, given driverâs licenses to unlawful immigrants and done absolutely nothing for school choice. In reality itâs conservative REPUBLICANS who donât have a gubernatorial candidate this year!
Relax and enjoy it.
Chuck Muth is the president of Citizen Outreach, a conservative grassroots advocacy organization. He can be reached at www.MuthsTruths.com.