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Defense Of Marriage Amendment




While "defense of marriage amendment" is the most common term, titles vary among states. Alabama's amendment is called the "Sanctity of Marriage Amendment," for example." AMENDMENT 774 RATIFIED ", Alabama State Legislature. Accessed 06 January 2006. State defense of marriage amendments are different from the proposed Federal Marriage Amendment , which would ban same-sex marriage in every U.S. State, and the Defense Of Marriage Act , which prevents the federal government from recognizing same-sex marriages. Several states have also adopted their own version of a defense of marriage act, which statutorily prevents recognition of same-sex marriages.


HISTORY

The idea of extending marriage rights to same-sex couples did not become a political issue in the United States until the 1990s. During that decade, several Western European countries legalized civil unions, and in 1993 the ''. 1997-JUL-11, updated 2001-DEC-2 In November 1998, 69% of Hawaii voters approved the amendment, and the state legislature exercised its power to ban same-sex marriage.
"Same-sex marriage ballot measures: Hawaii gives legislature power to ban same-sex marriage" AllPolitics. ''''. 2002. (last update 2005-APR-21). accessed 3 November 2006.
All passed. Yet in November 2003, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Handed Down '' Goodridge V. Department Of Public Health '', legalizing same-sex marriage in that state. Many social and religious conservatives feared that their own state supreme courts would issue such rulings at some point in the future; in order to prevent this, they proposed writing same-sex marriage bans into state constitutions themselves. The following year, eleven "marriage protection amendment" referendums were placed on state ballots.


PURPOSE AND MOTIVATION

Such amendments were advocated in response to the legalization of same-sex marriage in other jurisdictions, notably Canada and Massachusetts .

Some amendments and some proposed amendments forbid a state from recognizing even non-marital Civil Union s and Domestic Partnership s, while others explicitly allow for same-sex unions that are not called "marriage."

The amendments have two main purposes:
  • Prevent the state's courts from interpreting the state constitution to permit or require legalization of same-sex marriage

  • Prevent the state's courts from recognizing same-sex marriages that were legally performed in other states or other countries


Some proponents of such amendments fear that states will be forced to recognize same-sex marriages celebrated in Massachusetts. They point to the Full Faith And Credit Clause , which requires each state to recognize the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of each other state. On the other hand, opponents argue that state constitutional amendments will do nothing to resolve this perceived problem. Traditionally, courts have held that a state is free to decline to recognize a marriage celebrated elsewhere if the marriage violates the state's strong public policy. (§134 of the First Restatement of Conflicts, on Marriage and Legitimacy (1934)). They argue that if the full faith and credit clause did require recognition of same-sex marriages, state constitutional amendments would be trumped by the Federal Constitution due to the Supremacy Clause .


Conservative mobilization

State referendums on defense of marriage amendments have been used as a "get-out-the-vote" tactic by '', October 29, 2006. President George W. Bush 's close political consultant, Karl Rove , has been an enthusiastic proponent and organizer of defense of marriage legislation.

After the 2006 General Elections some activists argued that defense of marriage amendments were starting to lose their potential to mobilize conservative voters. Kevin Cathcart, director of Lambda Legal pointed to the narrow defeat of Arizona's Proposition 107 , which would have rendered civil unions as well as gay marriage unconstitutional.
" Antigay Campaigns Don’t Get the Vote ". November, 2006. Lambda Legal website. Nevertheless, that same election saw 7 such amendments pass; these included bans on civil unions as well as Virginia's amendment, which goes still further.


LITIGATION SURROUNDING THESE AMENDMENTS

Nebraska is one of the states that added an amendment to its constitution to reinforce existing statutes defining marriage between one man and one woman. The amendment passed by a vote of 70 to 30 percent. In May 2005, a Circuit judge ruled the state constitutional amendment violates the United States Constitution.'' Citizens for Equal Protection v. Bruning '' In July 2006, the Eighth Circuit reversed his ruling, reinstating the ban.

In .

In Tennessee , groups sought to keep the amendment from reaching the ballot, though their efforts ultimately failed. On April 21, 2005, a lawsuit was filed by the American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee, the Tennessee Equality Project, and other plaintiffs, claiming that the amendment had not been published in a timely manner between legislative sessions as the state constitution required; specifically, that its newspaper publication had occurred only four months prior to the legislative election in November 2004 rather than the required six. This suit was dismissed at the appellate court level in March 2006 on the ground that the legislature's intent to put the amendment before voters in November 2006 was widely reported in the media, meeting this requirement in spirit if not in letter. This decision was in turn appealed to the Tennessee Supreme Court . The Tennessee Supreme Court rejected the ACLU's case in July 2006, stating that the plaintiffs did not show adequate standing to bring the lawsuit, thereby clearing the way for the amendment to appear on the November ballot. American Civil Liberties Union, et al. v. Riley Darnell, et al. . Accessed November 3, 2006. Hearing Held in ACLU-TN Challenge to Proposed Constitutional Amendment Banning Same-Sex Marriage (January 20, 2006). ACLU of Tennessee. Accessed November 9, 2006.

In Colorado , the United States Supreme Court invalidated the amendment as overly-broad in Romer V Evans .


VARIANTS

Most of the defense of marriage amendments ban civil unions as well as same sex marriage. "Ban on Same-Sex Unions Added to Va. Constitution" , by Chris L. Jenkins, '' Washington Post '', November 8, 2006

Two defense of marriage amendments differ greatly from all others: Hawaii's and Virginia's. The former gives the Hawaii state legislature the authority to ban same-sex marriages but does not explicitly make such unions unconstitutional. Virginia's amendment not only bans same-sex marriage and civil unions, but arguably renders any state recognition of private contracts entered into by unmarried couples unconstitutional. "Marriage Measure Is an Amendment Too Far" , by David Boaz, Cato Institute , November 3, 2006. property rights text of va ballot question no. 1


STATES THAT HAVE VOTED ON AMENDMENTS


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