“Justice that arrives like a thunderbolt”: On same-sex marriage “the fight is over”

June 26 has been solidified as the historic date for LGBT history in

From the U.S. Supreme Court Collection

From the U.S. Supreme Court Collection

the United States. It is the day in 2003 when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that states could not enforce laws prohibiting same-sex adults from having intimate relations. It is the day in 2013 when a Supreme Court procedural ruling enabled same-sex couples to marry in California. It is the day in 2013 when the Supreme Court ruled that the federal government could not deny married same-sex couples the same benefits it provides to married male-female couples.

And this year, in a widely expected yet stunning victory for LGBT people nationally, June 26 is the day the U.S. Supreme Court ruled  that state bans on marriage for same-sex couples are unconstitutional.

This latest decision, Obergefell v. Hodges, requires states to both issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples and to recognize marriage licenses obtained in other states by same-sex couples.

The 5 to 4 decision authored by Justice Anthony Kennedy strikes down bans that have been enforced in 13 states and is expected to secure the lower court decisions that struck down bans in nine other states.

Kennedy wrote that “the right to marry is a fundamental right inherent in the liberty of the person, and under the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment couples of the same-sex may not be deprived of that right and that liberty.”

“The Court now holds that same-sex couples may exercise the fundamental right to marry. No longer may this liberty be denied to them. “

President Obama, at an impromptu press conference outside the oval office Friday morning, said the decision was “justice that arrives like a thunderbolt.”

“Today, we can say in no uncertain terms that we’ve made our union a little more perfect,” said the president, in remarks that sounded, at times, unscripted. He said the decision “affirms what millions of Americans already believe in their hearts: that when all Americans are treated equal, we’re all more free.”

LGBT organizations all over the country began issuing press releases declaring the decision “historic,” “amazing,” and “landmark.”

In Obergefell, which includes cases from four states, Kennedy was joined in the majority opinion by the court’s four more liberal justices: Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan.

Chief Justice John Roberts led the dissent, joined by Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, and Samuel Alito.

Chief Justice Roberts, who read from his dissent on the bench Friday morning, said “a State’s decision to maintain the meaning of marriage that has persisted in every culture throughout human history can hardly be called irrational.”

“In short, our Constitution does not enact any one theory of marriage,” wrote Roberts. “The people of a State are free to expand marriage to include same-sex couples, or to retain the historic definition.”

Justice Scalia, who is known for his harshly worded disagreements, derided Kennedy’s majority opinion, characterizing it as “pretentious” and “egotistic” and said it “has to diminish this Court’s reputation for clear thinking and sober analysis” and caused him to want to “hide my head in a bag.”

Openly gay U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin called the majority decision a “huge, huge milestone in our quest for freedom and human equality.” On MSNBC just minutes after the decision was released at 10 Friday morning, she called the decision “sweeping” and predicted it would help promote “full equality” for LGBT people in other arenas, including employment and public accommodations.

“We’ve always known that discrimination is wrong,” said Baldwin, “but to have the Supreme Court in such a bold fashion say that it is now unconstitutional is just remarkable progress.”

A large crowd of LGBT people and supporters and media crowded the steps before the Supreme Court building plaza Friday morning. The Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington could be heard singing the national anthem at 10:35, with onlookers waving rainbow and Human Rights Campaign equal-sign flags.

Mary Bonauto, the openly gay attorney who argued against the state bans on marriage for same-sex couples, told the Supreme Court gathering that the decision is “momentous” and “a landmark ruling for love and for justice.” In her remarks to the crowd, and then later to a reporter, Bonauto noted the decision was released on a day when the country is in deep mourning over the racially motivated killings of nine African Americans at a Bible study inside Charleston, South Carolina’s historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church.

Bonauto said it was important that all people be treated equally and be protected from violent acts of discrimination. She told MSNBC that the court’s decision shows “we do have a fundamental right to marriage” but that the “nation remains divided about this even as a majority of people support loving and committed couples taking this step to marry.”

“Today is a monumental victory and a giant leap towards full equality,” said Human Rights Campaign Executive Director Chad Griffin, to an MSNBC reporter on the steps of the Supreme Court. But he, too, added that there is much more to do.

“While we’re all out here celebrating today because marriage equality has come to every state in the country,” said Griffin, “we also have to remember that still today in America, in this country, in a majority of states, the moment this decision is realized and couples get married, in a majority of states, they can be married at 10 a.m., fired from their jobs by noon, and evicted from their homes by 2 simply because there are no explicit federal protections as it relates to non-discrimination in this country.”

But Shannon Minter, legal director for the National Center for Lesbian Rights who was involved in one of the four cases under appeal, said the majority opinion includes discussions that are likely to help equality for LGBT people in many other arenas.

“The court’s ruling that fundamental rights cannot be limited based on historical patterns of discrimination will be helpful to LGBT people in other fundamental rights cases, such as those involving the fundamental right to procreative freedom, to vote, to create a family, and to travel,” said Minter. “The court’s emphasis that the constitution protects a broad liberty to self- determination and expression will be helpful to transgender litigants in many contexts.” And Minter said the majority’s discussion of parenting will be “enormously helpful in other parenting cases.”

The Human Rights Campaign announced it was sending letters to each governor of the 13 states plus Missouri (which allows marriage but only in certain jurisdictions) to urge “immediate” and “full compliance with the law.”

In some of those states, efforts have been underway for some time to find a way to defy the widely anticipated Supreme Court decision. The North Carolina legislature passed a bill to let public officials who issue marriage licenses and can conduct ceremonies to refuse to administer the paperwork or perform the ceremony by claiming “sincerely held religious objections.” The governor vetoed the measure but on June 11, the legislature overrode the veto.

In Arkansas, the state supreme court ordered marriage clerks to stop issuing licenses to same-sex couples, but on June 9, a state judge declared that more than 500 licenses issued to same-sex couples before the state supreme court order was issued would be considered valid. The Texas Supreme Court has taken a similar tact.

The Obergefell appeals challenged a Sixth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals decision that upheld the bans in four states (Ohio, Kentucky, Michigan, and Tennessee). It said the bans had to be upheld because the Supreme Court, in 1972, dismissal a marriage appeal by a same-sex couple, and that the issue should be left to the democratic process of each state. The majority opinion in Obergefell explicitly overruled the 1972 case, Baker v. Nelson, and said the democratic process is acceptable “so long as that process does not abridge fundamental rights.”

Asked by a reporter about the possibility of some states attempting to avoid compliance with the decision, Bonauto of Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders said that possibility is basically futile. Some states might wait until the Supreme Court issues its formal “mandate” to abide by the decision, she said, and that mandate might take 30 days or more to filter down to the state levels. But, said Bonauto, “on the marriage question, the fight is over.”

“What a glorious day for equality, justice and love,” said Kevin Cathcart, executive director of Lambda Legal, which was involved in the Obergefell case from Ohio. “For the first time, LGBT people in America will live in a nation that respects their love and their families. June 26 is a day that will stand out forever as a day of victory in the history of the LGBT rights movement in America.  On this very day in 2003, Lambda Legal won Lawrence v. Texas, a groundbreaking Supreme Court ruling striking down state laws that made lesbian and gay people criminals for having private intimate relationships. And two years ago on this day, the Supreme Court issued its historic ruling inU.S. v. Windsor. Today, the Constitution and our democracy shine brightly again. ”

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One Response to “Justice that arrives like a thunderbolt”: On same-sex marriage “the fight is over”

  1. Charles Gage says:

    It’s been a long time coming but when it did arrive, it seems to have arrived sooner than expected. The changes we’ve seen in just a few short years. Amazing.

    It’s interesting to read NOM’s response to this – no doubt written weeks ago. Brown and his crowd seem now to be in it just for the money. They claim they are going to work hard to overturn today’s ruling. Good luck with that. The ship has sailed, the shouting is over, and the fat lady has sung her last note. I suspect Brian Brown and NOM will become yet another toothless organization and join the ranks of the KKK and the John Birch Society. Done and done, is what I say.

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