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California court decision legalizing gay marriage touches
off political uproar
By Ed Hightower
12 June 2008
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The California Supreme Court refused June 4 to stay its decision
issued last month declaring that gay couples had the same right
to marry as heterosexuals. The action came two days after right-wing
opponents of gay marriage successfully placed a constitutional
amendment on the November general election ballot that would overturn
the court decision.
The result is that gay marriage will become legal throughout
the state on Monday, June 16 at 5pm, and then could potentially
become illegal again on November 4 if the referendum wins voter
approval. Current state opinion polls show narrow majorities for
and against gay marriage, depending on how the question is worded.
The campaign to place the referendum on the ballot was financed
by two ultra-right Republicans, billionaire Howard Ahmanson and
Christian radio proprietor Edward Atsinger, as well as the fundamentalist
Focus on the Family organization of Reverend James Dobson.
The diehard opposition of extreme right elements to gay marriage
was demonstrated in Kern County (Bakersfield), in the San Joaquin
Valley, where the county clerk announced that no marriages, gay
or heterosexual, would be performed after June 13.
There were published projections of as many as 20,000 gay marriages
during the June-November window, including 5,000 in
San Francisco alone. The language of the constitutional amendmentdrafted
before the court decision but anticipating itdoes not appear
to be retroactive, although constitutional law experts said there
were no judicial precedents for the enforcement of a measure depriving
people of democratic rights once gained.
In declining to delay implementation of its ruling, the California
Supreme Court rejected pleas from the attorneys general of ten
statesall Republicanswho sought a postponement until
after the November 4 referendum vote. Because California provides
marriage licenses without a residency requirement, these state
officials argued there would be an influx of out-of-state gay
couples who would marry in California and then return to their
home states and file suit demanding recognition of their married
status.
The ten statesAlaska, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Michigan,
Nebraska, New Hampshire, South Carolina, South Dakota and Utahare
among 44 that have some form of legal or constitutional prohibition
of gay marriage, most enacted in the last five years at the instigation
of Christian fundamentalist groups.
California state officials opposed any stay. State attorney
general Jerry Brown, a Democrat, whose office argued vigorously
in favor of the state ban on gay marriage that the court overturned,
said the state Supreme Court decision had decided the issue. Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, also backed the state ban
but said he would oppose the constitutional amendment to overturn
the state court action.
In its May 15 opinion, the California court ruled by a 4-3
majority that retaining the traditional definition of marriage
and affording same-sex couples only a separate and differently
named family relationship will, as a realistic matter, impose
appreciable harm on same-sex couples and their children, because
denying such couples access to the familiar and highly favored
designation of marriage is likely to cast doubt on whether the
official family relationship of same-sex couples enjoys dignity
equal to that of opposite-sex couples.
The court refuted the notion that heterosexual couples would
lose something essential and worthwhile if gay domestic partnerships
were designated as marriage. Extending access to the designation
of marriage to same-sex couples will not deprive any opposite-sex
couple or their children of any of the rights and benefits conferred
by the marriage statutes, but simply will make the benefit of
the marriage designation available to same-sex couples and their
children, the majority declared.
Two separate dissents accompanied the ruling. Neither opposed
gay marriage as such, but argued that the decision to recognize
such relationships legally should be decided on by the legislature
or at the ballot box, not in court.
The history of the ruling dates back to February, 2004, when
San Francisco city officials began issuing marriage licenses to
same sex couples in protest of a ballot initiative from 2000 which
defined marriage in California as between a man and a woman. At
that time religious groups filed suits to stop the issuing of
marriage licenses. The California Supreme Court held then that
it was impermissible for the officials to issue marriage licenses
without a judicial determination that the law in question was
in fact unconstitutional.
In this most recent ruling the same court dealt with the substantive
issues involved in the previous cases.
While the decision is the first by a state supreme court in
an active controversy that requires absolute, to the point of
terminological, recognition of same sex unions as marriages, it
is not without precedent. In 2004 the Supreme Court of Massachusetts
issued an advisory ruling to the state senate that the designation
civil union, even if defined as incorporating all
of the rights accruing to spouses in a marriage, violated the
state constitutions due process and equal protection clauses.
(In 2003 that court had held that a ban on same sex marriage violated
the Massachusetts state constitution).
The original ballot initiative that defined marriage as between
a man and a woman was part of a broader effort by sections of
the ruling elite to disorient sections of the middle class and
working people and divert attention from real social grievances
to largely manufactured cultural issues.
President Bushs 2004 election campaign employed the proposition
of a constitutional ban on gay marriage to mobilize its fundamentalist
base and to appeal to Americans as a president in touch with their
values. That year several states passed ballot initiatives
defining marriage as between a man and a woman. By the 2006 mid-term
elections, however, similar ballot initiatives did not prevent
the Republicans from losing both houses of congress.
The reaction to the ruling from conservative organizations
has been predictably hostile, even hysterical. Randy Thomasson,
president of the Campaign for Children and Families, declared,
marriage is naturally for a man and a woman. If the institution
of marriage is redefined and therefore destroyed in the law, the
wellbeing of children is threatened, both emotionally, socially,
even physically. He did not explain how, in a society where
gay couples may already adopt children, it would physically
harm the children to have their parents and caretakers legally
recognized.
The right to marry and have that relationship legally sanctioned
is an elementary democratic right. Under the current regime in
most US states, gay couples are deprived of hundreds of benefits
that heterosexual couples receiveone study in New York state
found 1,324 separate provisions, ranging from hospital visitation
rights to property rights and health insurance benefits.
It is noteworthy that six of the seven California Supreme Court
justices were appointed by Republican governors. They divided
3-3, with the lone Democratic appointee breaking the tie. The
decision thus is hardly the product of judicial radicalism.
Several justices on both sides of the ruling suggested that
including gays would strengthen rather than weaken the institution
of marriage, a step they argued would be beneficial for social
stability as a whole. This position has been espoused as well
by such conservative commentators such as Andrew Sullivan and
David Brooks of the New York Times.
Sullivan argues for expanding the right to marriage because,
by setting up relationships that do the husbanding
work of family, such couples relieve the state of the job of caring
for single people without family support.
Arguing along more explicitly moralistic grounds, Brooks has
suggested that marriage, as the antidote to contemporary moral
decline, should be made available to homosexuals. With so many
marriages ending in divorce, so many unmarried couples cohabitating,
and so many children being born out of wedlock, it is the states
duty to endorse marriage by gay couples willing to make moral
commitments, renewed every day through faithfulness, which domesticate
all people.
See Also:
US election: Referendum
votes reveal social discontent
[11 November 2006]
Hillary Clinton and
New Yorks gay marriage ruling: a calculated bow to the right
[15 July 2006]
Republicans anti-gay
marriage amendment: a cynical and reactionary maneuver
[9 June 2006]
Anti-gay measures
threaten democratic rights
Ballot initiatives seek to bar same-sex marriage
[2 November 2004]
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