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When Republicans sought passage of a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage in 2006, he said, "I think this is motivated, frankly, by a dislike of those of us who are gay and lesbian," and he objected to "people taking batting practice with my life." Yet he also had a clear-eyed view of what was politically possible. In 2004, he said San Francisco's decision to challenge state law and grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples could damage efforts by gay rights advocates in Massachusetts to legalize gay marriage through the courts. "When you're in a real struggle, San Francisco making a symbolic point becomes a diversion," he said, expressing concern that an image of lawlessness and civil disobedience in one city would hurt efforts elsewhere. As a longtime member of the House committee that oversaw the banking and housing industries, he often worked to expand affordable housing and end redlining, a practice in which banks are accused of imposing onerous lending conditions on residents of inner cities and other poor neighborhoods. As chairman in 2008, he was a lead Democrat in drafting $700 billion legislation that President George W. Bush supported to bail out financial institutions. A year later, with Obama in the White House, he turned his attention to a far-reaching bill to overhaul regulations covering the banking and financial industries. The measure passed the House in December of 2009 without a single Republican vote, and it wasn't until July 2010 that the Senate approved its version of the bill and a 1,300-page compromise was pushed through both houses and signed by the president. "I, along with many others, did not see the crisis coming" that ultimately brought the economy to its knees, he said at his retirement news conference. At the same news conference, he acknowledged making an error nearly two decades ago when President George H.W. Bush sought backing for U.S. troops to help push Iraqi forces out of oil-rich Kuwait. "I voted against Bush the first's request to go into Iraq and that was because I thought he'd do what his son did, which is screw it up," he said.
[Associated
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