Did you read the quote from above? Also, a few pages back I posted several long quotes from a pre-Vatican 2 theologian addressing these objections, and the third quote I give answers what you are saying here, that no, this does not render the marriage invalid.
Of course, but the question is whether something like being a sodomite (not just having committed the act) is not necessarily accidental, but more substantial or essential. I've seen it argued that it's an essential issue because it relates directly to the marital debt. I find the argument that a chronic sodomite (thus inclined) is a deception that's essential vs. accidental to be rather convincing. For someone to have been a chronic fornicator with the opposite sex is in an entirely different category. In either case, except in the case of obvious legal issues (like established fact of prior marriage) or something obvious, the Conciliar hierarchy simply cannot be trusted to render a Catholic verdict.
I also disagree with the quotes that some kind of internal withholding of consent can invalidate the marriage. By pronouncing the vows you intend to do what the Church is expecting and the marriage is contracted. More nonsense about "internal consent" misinterpreted there (a common problem with pre-V2 theology).