The pros and cons of same-sex marriage will get an airing here March 4 in oral arguments before the California Supreme Court, the court announced Wednesday.
In dispute is the constitutionality of the state's marriage statutes,
which currently limit marriage to couples of the opposite sex.
The contentious issue, launched in February 2004 when San Francisco
Mayor Gavin Newsom began furnishing marriage licenses to gay and
lesbian couples, reached the high court in 2006. In re Marriage Cases, S147999.
Newsom's act ignited an international firestorm of outrage and praise
that elevated the gay rights movement to the top of the American agenda.
Divisive Topic
It remains a divisive topic. Newsom said Tuesday that as the fallout
from the marriage license tumult was peaking four years ago, current Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama refused to be photographed with him at a fundraiser in San Francisco. Obama's campaign manager, an openly gay man, denied the claim.
Cultural conservatives' counsel and lawyers for the state will face off
with the San Francisco city attorney and lawyers for same-sex couples
who sued to validate the licenses they received.
High court briefing concluded in August 2007, after the court asked the
contending attorneys for more information on the distinction between
marriage and domestic partnership. The justices announced that they
will devote an unusual three hours to hearing the lawyers present their
case.
Three Issues
Three issues are key for the court: whether the state's exclusion of
same-sex marriage violates the equal protection rights of lesbians and
gay men; whether that exclusion violates the right to personal autonomy
protected by the California
constitution's privacy clause; and whether the exclusion violates the
fundamental right to marry protected by the state constitution's
liberty clause.
The most important differences between domestic partnerships and
marriage are cultural, according to attorney Kate Kendall of the
National Center for Lesbian Rights.
"Mothers and fathers do not ever say they want to dance at their
daughter's domestic-partnership registration ceremony," Kendall said
last year. "Marriage is imbued with a very inspiring, intense and
significant cultural acceptance that for many couples, long after the
day happens, the fact of that ceremony is burned into their memory."
Mathew D. Staver, the lead attorney for Liberty Counsel, a Florida
traditional-family lobby, countered, "Those who are seeking same-sex
marriage are not doing so for the benefits but for the state's seal of
approval that comes with marriage. The state does not have to put a
stamp of approval on any relationship."
The Supreme Court
granted same-sex marriage proponents' petition for review after a
divided panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal voted 2-1 that only
the Legislature can define marriage.
The appellate court reversed San Francisco Superior Court Judge Richard Kramer, who upheld Newsom's right to issue the licenses.
From the Daily Journal. (Registration Required)
Hatip: Candace.
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