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Rick Perry's Comparison Of Homosexuality To Alcoholism Is Nothing New From The Anti-Gay Right

Surprise! Yesterday, the same Republican politician who tried to save his foundering presidential campaign with a gay-baiting TV ad(link is external) defended ex-gay therapy and compared homosexuality to alcohol abuse.

Speaking at a summit in California, Texas Gov. Rick Perry responded to questions about the Texas Republican Party’s endorsement of ex-gay therapy(link is external) in its new far-right platform(link is external) by arguing that homosexuality is like alcoholism(link is external): “Whether or not you feel compelled to follow a particular lifestyle or not, you have the ability to decide not to do that. I may have the genetic coding that I’m inclined to be an alcoholic, but I have the desire not to do that, and I look at the homosexual issue the same way.”

Perry is far from the only Republican figure to have expressed this view.

Another former GOP presidential candidate who is also considering a second run, Gov. Mike Huckabee, likened homosexuality to alcoholism in a 2009 interview(link is external) with Esquire:

Huckabee says he doesn't know if homosexuality is inborn, but he believes you can control the behavior. He compares homosexuality to obesity or alcoholism: "Some people have a predisposition to alcoholism. Does that mean they're not responsible for getting drunk? No."

Fellow 2012 presidential contender Rick Santorum cited “people who were gay and lived a gay lifestyle and aren’t anymore(link is external)” as a reason to oppose gay rights. Michele Bachmann’s husband heads a clinic that practices(link is external) ex-gay therapy(link is external). Ted Cruz’s father and political adviser, Rafael Cruz, has defended ex-gay therapy as legitimate “biblical” counseling, adding, “sexual orientation is a choice, it’s not a civil right(link is external).”

Republican National Committeeman Dave Agema recently got in trouble(link is external) with his own party after he, among other offensive remarks, compared gay people to alcoholics(link is external). So did top Religious Right leaders Mat Staver(link is external) and Tony Perkins(link is external). Robert Jeffress, a Texas pastor close to Perry(link is external), also “equates being gay with alcoholism or a genetic proclivity toward violence(link is external),” according to the Dallas-based D Magazine.

Despite story after story about the GOP’s purported shift on gay rights, the party is still mired in anti-gay bigotry.