K.S. Rajan (25
March 2013)
"Obama views on
same-sex marriage reflect societal shifts"
Obama views on same-sex marriage reflect societal shifts
By Bill Mears, CNN Supreme Court Producer
March 23, 2013 -- Updated 1715 GMT (0115 HKT)
Watch this video
Obama weighs in on Prop 8
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Obama now supports right to same-sex
marriage, putting him at odds with conservatives
It has been a personal and political
evolution for the president on a major social issue
Supreme Court will hear arguments in two
appeals on Tuesday and Wednesday
Political stakes are high in appeals of
federal and California same-sex laws
Washington (CNN) -- President Barack Obama once believed
marriage was only between a man and a woman.
He then backed civil unions for gay and lesbian couples,
granting them many of the same rights and privileges as married
heterosexuals.
Now he firmly supports a constitutional right that has put him
at odds with many social conservatives.
It is a personal and political evolution that in many ways
reflects the country as a whole. Shifting public opinion and old
fights over judicial power are at the nexus of perhaps the most
important social issue the high court has addressed in recent
years: same-sex marriage.
Obama promotes gay rights in speech
There about 120,000 legally married homosexual couples in the
United States. Many thousands more seek the same thing. But it
may be 10 people who have the power to force immediate, real
change on this legal, political, and social issue: the nine
justices and Obama himself.
How U.S. political leaders and the Supreme Court act in coming
months could set the template for years on a contentious topic
that shows no sign of cooling.
"The argument that the Obama administration has made is the
Supreme Court should look at these laws very carefully because
gays and lesbians are a group that have been subject to
discrimination in the past and will be subject to discrimination
going forward," said Amy Howe, a legal analyst and editor of
SCOTUSblog.com.
Kevin has a family: A same-sex couple's remarkable journey
"So the Supreme Court would need to subject these laws to what
we call a very stringent standard of review" balancing the
government's justification for enacting them, she added.
Two separate appeals to be argued Tuesday and Wednesday will
once again put the high court at center stage, a contentious
encore to its summer ruling upholding the health care reform law
championed by Obama.
Nine states and the District of Columbia allow same-sex
marriage, including Washington, Maryland, Maine, Iowa, New
Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New York.
Another nine have civil union or strong domestic partnership
laws.
The high court will consider two appeals.
The first involves the federal Defense of Marriage Act. DOMA is
a 1996 law that defines marriage between one man and one woman.
That means federal tax, Social Security, pension, and bankruptcy
benefits, family medical leave protections, and other provisions
do not apply to gay and lesbian couples.
Edie Windsor, an 84-year-old New York woman, is the key
plaintiff. She was forced to pay more than $363,000 in extra
estate taxes when her longtime spouse, Thea Spyer, died.
The second case involves California's Proposition 8, a 2008
referendum that abolished same-sex marriage after the state's
highest court ruled it legal.
Gay couple fights for right to marry in epic high court battle
The Supreme Court is being asked to establish same-sex marriage
as a constitutional right, but could also decide a more narrower
question: Whether a state can revoke that right through
referendum once it has already been recognized.
Running for the Illinois state senate in 1998, Obama said he was
"undecided" about whether to legalize same-sex marriage.
Fast-forward six years to when he ran for U.S. Senate. He then
declared a belief that marriage is between a man and a woman.
The stance began an internal process over time that was by his
admission, anything but smooth.
"My feelings about this are constantly evolving. I struggle with
this," he said in 2010, two years into his presidency.
"At this point, what I've said is that my baseline is a strong
civil union that provides them the protections and the legal
rights that married couples have," Obama said at the time.
Eight such states have civil union or strong domestic
partnership laws-- Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Nevada, New
Jersey, Oregon, and Rhode Island. But it is the California case
that really has drawn the Obama administration into the fight.
Obama signaled earlier this month he was prepared to assert a
vigorous constitutional right to marriage, but confine it for
now only to the Proposition 8 matter and perhaps to the seven
other states with civil union laws like California's.
The Justice Department argues civil union and domestic
partnership laws may themselves be unconstitutional and that
those states should go all the way and grant same-sex couples
full marriage rights.
It's called the eight-state strategy.
"The object of California's establishment of the legal
relationship of domestic partnership is to grant committed
same-sex couples rights equivalent to those accorded a married
couple. But Proposition 8, by depriving same-sex couples of the
right to marry, denies them the dignity, respect, and stature
accorded similarly situated opposite-sex couples under state
law," the Justice Department said in its brief on the case.
Gay rights groups had privately urged Obama and his top aides to
go beyond his previous personal rhetoric in support of the
right, and come down "on the side of history" in this legal
struggle.
This was all set in motion in the heat of the president's
re-election campaign in what government sources described as a
quickly arranged political strategy.
Married same-sex couple awaits epic appeal
"At a certain point, I've just concluded that for me personally
it is important for me to go ahead and affirm that I think
same-sex couples should be able to get married," Obama told ABC
News.
Perhaps bowing to political caution in an election year, Obama
explained he "hesitated on gay marriage" partly because he
thought civil unions "would be sufficient."
"I was sensitive to the fact that for a lot of people, the word
marriage was something that invokes very powerful traditions and
religious beliefs," he said.
A new national survey indicates a small majority of Americans
backs such marriages but there are generational and partisan
divides as well as a gender gap.
According to a CNN/ORC International poll, 53 percent of the
public think marriages between gay or lesbian couples should be
legally recognized as valid, with 44 percent opposed.
"There are big differences among younger and older Americans,
with the youngest age group twice as likely than senior citizens
to support same-sex marriage," says CNN Polling Director Keating
Holland. "Women are also more likely to call for legal
recognition of gay marriage than men. And only three in ten
Americans who attend religious services every week support
same-sex marriage while six in ten Americans who don't attend
church weekly feel that way."
Former President Bill Clinton, who signed the marriage law into
effect 17 years ago, said this month he now backs the right of
homosexuals to marry. So, too, does his wife, former Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton, a possible Democratic presidential
candidate in 2016.
But others on the right say society benefits from preserving a
view of marriage that has been in place for centuries.
The authors of a new book, "What is Marriage? Man and Woman: A
Defense," say, "Redefining marriage would, by further eroding
its central norms, weaken an institution that has already been
battered by widespread divorce, out-of-wedlock child bearing and
the like."
Academics Robert George, Sherif Girgis, and Ryan Anderson say
marriage should be more than "commitment based on emotional
companionship," and has been practiced for a specific reason
throughout this country's history.
"All human beings are equal in dignity and should be equal
before the law. But equality only forbids arbitrary
distinctions," they argue. "And there is nothing arbitrary about
maximizing the chances that children will know the love of their
biological parents in a committed and exclusive bond. A strong
marriage culture serves children, families and society by
encouraging the ideal of giving kids both a mom and a dad."
Line forms days ahead of Supreme Court same-sex argument
The DOMA and Prop 8 cases will test the delicate line over
constitutional limits from both congressional, presidential, and
judicial power.
All nine justices will have an equal voice in both oral argument
and an eventual ruling, but it may be one member of the court
whose views may count most in the high-stakes quest for five
votes.
Justice Anthony Kennedy authored the landmark 1996 Romer v.
Evans ruling, striking down a Colorado constitutional amendment
that forbid local communities from passing laws banning
discrimination against gays.
The moderate-conservative wrote for the 6-3 majority, rejecting
the state's argument the law only blocked gay people from
receiving preferential treatment or "special rights."
In dissent Justice Antonin Scalia criticized the court for
placing what he said was "the prestige of this institution
behind the proposition that opposition to homosexuality is as
reprehensible as racial or religious bias."
In 2003, Kennedy authored the court's decision overturning state
laws criminalizing homosexual sodomy.
At the time though, he cautioned the court was not endorsing the
idea of same-sex marriage, saying the private conduct case at
hand "does not involve whether the government must give formal
recognition to any relationship that homosexual persons seek to
enter."
That caution was further articulated this month by Kennedy, when
he said some issues are best left to the other branches.
"I think it's a serious problem. A democracy should not be
dependent for its major decisions on what nine unelected people
from a narrow legal background have to say," Kennedy said.
By patiently letting legislatures and the voters decide the
social and practical implications of same-sex marriage over the
past decade, the high court is now poised to perhaps offer the
final word on tricky constitutional questions.
Or not.
The split 5-4 conservative-liberal bench has the option of
ruling broadly or narrowly-- perhaps taking a series of
incremental cases over a period years, building political
momentum and public confidence in the process.
The Prop 8 case is Hollingsworth v. Perry (12-144). The DOMA
case is U.S. v. Windsor (12-307).