Justice Kennedy |
The pro-gay rights rulings of Supreme Court #Justice Anthony Kennedy have
been a key spark in the march toward legalized #gay marriage. To counter
the trend, same-sex marriage opponents now are seizing upon other
opinions by Kennedy himself.
It was Kennedy who last month defended the right of voters to decide
sensitive issues, in a ruling that upheld Michigan's ban on taking race
into account in college admissions.
At least five states have invoked Kennedy's opinion in the Michigan case
to argue that voters and elected officials, not judges, should choose
whether same-sex couples can be married or have their marriages
recognized within their borders.
"This case is not about how the debate about same-sex marriage should be
resolved. It is about who may resolve it," Tennessee's governor and
attorney general said in an appellate brief filed Thursday, using
language lifted almost word for word from Kennedy's Michigan opinion.
The sentence merely substituted "same-sex marriage" for "racial
preferences." Tennessee is asking the Cincinnati-based 6th #U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals to undo a preliminary ruling that forced the state to
recognize same-sex marriages from other states.
Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette, who also defended the ban on
consideration of race, said in a filing with the same appellate court on
Wednesday, "As Justice Kennedy recently explained, 'it is demeaning to
the democratic process to presume that the voters are not capable of
deciding an issue of this sensitivity on decent and rational grounds.'"
Schuette added, "There is no authority in the Constitution of the United
States or in this court's precedents for the judiciary to set aside
Michigan laws that commit this policy determination to the voters."
Lawyers in support of state and county officials in Oklahoma, Utah and Virginia have made similar arguments.
But #fighting Kennedy with Kennedy may be an uphill battle. The
77-year-old justice has also written the high court's three strongly
pro-gay rights decisions in the past 18 years, with powerful language
about the dignity of gay and lesbian Americans and the humiliation felt
by children who are being brought up by same-sex parents who may face
discrimination.
In the most recent case, the court struck down part of the federal
@#anti-gay marriage law in June, and Kennedy's opinion has since been
cited in an unbroken string of lower-court rulings in support of
same-sex marriage.
To be sure, Kennedy's opinion in that case, U.S. v. Windsor, did not
strike down state laws against same-sex unions. It dealt only with a
federal law that denied a range of marriage benefits to same-sex couples
who were legally married. But federal judges have leaned heavily on its
reasoning to strike down restrictive marriage laws, as have lawyers for
same-sex couples.
Peggy Tomsic, representing same-sex couples in Utah, said the Michigan
case confirms the distinction between policy, where deference to the
voters by courts is appropriate, and individual constitutional rights.
The Michigan case "did not and could not hold that voters can deny
constitutional rights," Tomsic said in a letter to appellate judges in
Denver. The Supreme Court has held that in regulating marriage, states
must respect constitutional rights.
"That principle remains true whether marriage is regulated by state
ballot initiatives or through ordinary legislation," Tomsic said.
In the first of the three high court rulings, in 1996, Kennedy wrote for
the court's majority when it overturned a voter-approved Colorado
constitutional amendment forbidding laws to protect gays and lesbians in
the state. In the second, the court overturned state laws making gay
sex a crime.
Judges on the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Virginia,
will weigh the competing writings of Kennedy when they hear argument on
Tuesday over the Virginia prohibition on same-sex marriage.
Source: ABC News
Source: ABC News
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