US Supreme Court rebuffs marriage equality opponents
- © AFP | Marriage equality demonstrators in front of
the US Supreme Court in Washington DC in June.
Latest update :
2014-10-06
The US
Supreme Court unexpectedly cleared the way on Monday for a dramatic expansion
of gay marriage and may have signalled that it’s only a matter of time before
same-sex couples can marry in all 50 states.
Rejecting appeals from
five states seeking to preserve their bans, the Supreme Court
effectively made such marriages legal in 30 states,
up from 19 and Washington, D.C., taking in every region of the country.
While the ruling stops
short of resolving for now the question of same-sex marriage nationwide, it is
a major victory for advocates of gay marriage. It continues a dramatic
turnaround on the issue across the United States in recent years, with gay
marriage generally winning approval in court cases, state legislatures and
public opinion polls.
Almost immediately,
exuberant couples began receiving marriage licenses previously denied to them.
“This is the dream day,” said Sharon Baldwin, a plaintiff in a challenge to
Oklahoma’s ban, as she and her partner got their license in the Tulsa County
Clerk’s Office.
Lindsey Oliver, 30, and
Nicole Pries, 42, received the first same-sex marriage license issued from the
Richmond Circuit Court Clerk’s office in Virginia.
Directly affected by
Monday’s orders were Wisconsin, Indiana, Oklahoma, Utah and Virginia. Officials
in those states had appealed lower court rulings in an effort to preserve their
bans. Couples in six other states – Colorado, Kansas, North Carolina, South
Carolina, West Virginia and Wyoming – should be able to get married in short
order since those states would be bound by the same appellate rulings that have
been on hold.
Gay marriage has been a
volatile social issue in America over the past decade, one that has veered from
helping Republicans turn out their conservative base during George W. Bush’s
re-election campaign in 2004 to one that now vexes the party. Public support
has swung rapidly in favor of same-sex marriage in recent years. That’s a big
shift since the Massachusetts Supreme Court declared the state’s marriage ban
unconstitutional in 2003, prompting states around the U.S. to pass marriage
bans.
Lower courts have
overturned one same-sex marriage ban after another following the Supreme
Court’s landmark decision in June 2013 that partially struck down a Clinton-era
federal law that defined marriage as between a man and a woman. Gay marriage
proponents have since enjoyed a stunning string of legal victories, winning
more than 20 court decisions around the U.S. Cases were filed in the 31 states
that prohibit same-sex marriage.
While county clerks in a
number of states quickly began issuing licenses to gay and lesbian couples, in
some other states affected by the court’s action officials did not sound ready
to give up the fight. However, their legal options are limited.
Monday’s terse orders
from the court were contained among more than 1,500 rejected appeals that had
piled up over the summer. The outcome was not what either side expected or
wanted. Both gay marriage supporters and opponents had asked the court to
resolve whether the Constitution grants same-sex couples the right to marry
nationwide.
The justices did not
explain why they decided to leave that question unanswered for now. They may be
waiting for a federal appeals court to break ranks with other appellate panels
and uphold state laws defining marriage as between a man and a woman. Or they
may see little role for themselves as one court after another strikes down
state marriage bans.
Still, the import seemed
clear. What the justices did in virtual silence Monday “has to send a signal to
the other courts of appeals that the Supreme Court does not think it’s so wrong
to allow same-sex couples to marry, and that even conservative justices don’t
think they have a good shot at getting five votes. And that sends a message
that this essentially is over,” said Jon Davidson, legal director of Lambda
Legal, an advocacy group for gay rights.
Leaders of the National
Organization for Marriage predicted a backlash in the form of renewed efforts
to pass a constitutional amendment defining marriage as the union of a man and
a woman.
“The notion that the people have nothing to say about this – that unelected judges are going to decide it for us – that’s preposterous,” said John Eastman, the organization’s chairman.
“The notion that the people have nothing to say about this – that unelected judges are going to decide it for us – that’s preposterous,” said John Eastman, the organization’s chairman.
However, efforts to pass
such an amendment have gained little traction, even in past years when support
for same-sex marriage was less robust. NOM’s president, Brian Brown,
acknowledged that any renewed efforts would be “long and arduous.”
Evan Wolfson, president
of Freedom to Marry, called on the high court to “finish the job” with a
national ruling. Wolfson said the court’s “delay in affirming the freedom to
marry nationwide prolongs the patchwork of state-to-state discrimination and
the harms and indignity that the denial of marriage still inflicts on too many
couples in too many places.”
On the other side, Ed
Whelan of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, an opponent of same-sex
marriage, also chastised the court for its “irresponsible denial of review in
the cases.” Whelan said it is hard to see how the court could eventually rule
in favor of same-sex marriage bans after having allowed so many court decisions
striking down those bans to remain in effect.
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