US gay rights battle brewing in CA

by Susan Marie Kovalinsky | December 18, 2009 at 07:33 pm
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Trial to begin January 11 in San Francisco high court 


SAN FRANCISCO  The biggest U.S. gay rights battle next year is brewing in a California federal court as raucous fights over same-sex marriage in state legislatures and at state ballot boxes subside.  ~ Reuters 

Quote

Opposing attorney Charles Cooper says restricting marriage to a man and a woman reflects a reasonable government position that heterosexual couples are best for families. It is not a question of hate, and gays and lesbians have plenty of political power, making special court protection unnecessary.
Reuters online

2010 will be the year of  gay advocacy's  renewed fight for same sex marriage. 

 Although some believe that proponents  are re-doubling their efforts to lose the war,  experts say that it is not the ballot box,  nor the voting booth,  to which advocates should turn,  but as in Canada,  equality can only come about at the Federal constitutional level.

 So much for the "let the states decide" commercials of gay advocates in the past . . . 

Of course that was when Republicans were  threatening a federal amendment to the US constitution to short circuit the whole argument. 

After defeats in Maine and New York,  and with Republican as well as some Democrats in the New Jersey senate refusing to back it,  it seems that states' referendum is not the way for gay marriage to be enacted. 

In part, 2010 will reflect a growing move by same-sex marriage advocates to building support for their civil rights cause outside of the election process.

The federal challenge to California's ban may be the only conflict in clear sight after a mixed 2009 that saw Iowa, Vermont, New Hampshire legalize gay marriage and Washington, D.C., vote for legalization, while there were setbacks in other states that had been expected to follow.

"The focus is very much on this one case," said Andy Pugno, a California lawyer who successfully defended California's ban in the state supreme court and is helping in the federal defense as well.

New York state legislators failed to back gay marriage and a New Jersey effort has hit snags and has a few weeks to act before a new governor who opposes such gay unions takes office. Maine voters rejected same-sex marriage by a thin margin similar to the California 2008 ban, which is being contested in the San Francisco federal court.

"We believed that this is something that needs to be vindicated at the federal constitutional level, and I think that that is reinforced by what's happened in Maine and what did not happen, for example in New Jersey, and what did not happen in New York," said David Boies, one of the lead lawyers in the federal case.

Massachusetts legalized gay marriage in 2004 and California had a summer of legalization in 2008 before voters banned it.

Trial is set to start January 11 in San Francisco. Boies and co-lead Ted Olson argue that marriage is a U.S. constitutional right too fundamental to limit and that gays and lesbians are a discriminated group that deserve special court protection.

Opposing attorney Charles Cooper says restricting marriage to a man and a woman reflects a reasonable government position that heterosexual couples are best for families. It is not a question of hate, and gays and lesbians have plenty of political power, making special court protection unnecessary.

OF PERSUASION AND BALLOT BOXES

Thus far every success for gay marriage has come in court or by legislators -- never in a referendum.

"We are winning when people have a voice in the matter," said Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, an influential conservative Christian lobby and activist group.

Major gay rights groups are focusing on a campaign to build support, creating a "ripple effect" as allies convert friends and associates, according to Marty Rouse, national field director of Human Rights Campaign.

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Hugh Askew

"Thus far every success for gay marriage has come in court or by legislators -- never in a referendum."

In other words, people do not want homosexual marriage legalized. Thus the statement:

"We are winning when people have a voice in the matter,"

Take away the voice of the people, by ignoring them and their votes, the homosexuals that are demanding special rights through the courts, will find a backlash hard for them to ignore.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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Hugh Askew
First Flagged at 9:00 PM, Dec 18, 2009 by Hugh Askew

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