
CIVIL RIGHTS FOR GAYS?
March 8, 2009
California Supreme Court Chief Justice Ron George
looked none too comfortable Thursday morning as he heard oral
arguments for and against California's ban on same-sex marriage.
George had written the 4-3 decision last May that pronounced
California's law against same-sex marriages to be unconstitutional.
Since then, however, 52 percent of Californians approved Proposition
8, which amended the state constitution to limit marriage to a man
and a woman. It's George's job to uphold the California Constitution,
or
as George reminded a lawyer for the anti-Proposition 8 side who had
been leaning on the 4-3 ruling, "Today we have a different state
constitution, don't we?"
Justice Joyce Kennard was also in a similar situation. She voted with
George to legalize same-sex marriage -- despite the passage of
Proposition 22, which 61 percent of voters approved in 2000, a
statute against same-sex marriage. But as Kennard told attorneys
pushing to overturn Proposition 8, the court had to choose between
"the inalienable right to marry and the right of the people to
change the constitution as they see fit. And what I'm picking up
from the oral argument in this case is this court should willy-nilly
disregard the will of the people."
That's about it. San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera and
other Proposition 8 opponents came up with the highly legalistic
argument. To wit: Proposition 8 is invalid because, after the 2008
George decision, it represented a "revision" of the state
constitution -- and thus needed a two-thirds vote of the Legislature
or an act of a constitutional convention before it could be put on
the ballot.
Attorney General Jerry Brown took a different approach. Staff
attorney Christopher Krueger argued that same-sex marriage is an
"inalienable" right that should not be subject to majority vote.
That's choice -- considering that when Brown was governor in 1977,
he signed the state law that stipulated that marriage was not simply
between two persons, but a male and female.
If Brown runs for governor for 2010, he'll have to explain why he
is entitled to use tax funds to overturn the will of California
voters. It took Proposition 8 defender Ken Starr -- of Monica
Lewinsky blue dress fame -- to observe that "the right of the people
is inalienable to control their constitution."
Representing same-sex couples, attorney Shannon Minter told the
court that in delineating between married heterosexuals and civil
unions for same-sex couples, Proposition 8 "puts those couples in a
second-class status. It marks them as second-class citizens. It
deprives them of equal liberty, dignity and privacy." This argument,
which oozes with victimhood, is much used -- and, I'm sorry,
ridiculous.
Before Proposition 8, California same-sex newlyweds did not have
equal rights. State civil union laws had conferred the same rights
that California bestows on heterosexual married couples -- except
the term "married." But the 18,000 same-sex marriages that occurred
in California were not recognized by the federal agencies and most
states. They were equal unions in name only.
Thus to argue that the return to civil unions makes these
families "second class" is to ignore the fact that they were not
equal. Instead, like civil unions, California same-sex marriage was
a step in an as-yet unachieved bid for equality.
Of course, the
don't-make-us-second-class-citizens-by-changing-the-name argument
drew blood. After all, in the May ruling, George had written that
calling same-sex marriages something other than marriage constituted
"significantly unequal treatment."
Thursday, he looked hurt as he told Minter he found it
"remarkable" that Minter was focusing on "the nomenclature" instead
of "the court's recognition of very important rights" for gays.
On the plus side, George's and the other justices' questions
during oral arguments suggest that the court recognizes its
obligation to respect the popular vote to amend the constitution.
On the down side, I think it's remarkable that so many
politicians are willing to use the courts -- not persuasion, not the
ballot -- to thwart the will of Californians.
Justice Ming Chin, who had voted with George in May, asked anti-8
attorney Michael Maroko if the answer was to get rid of marriage
altogether. Get it: Have the states license civil unions for all,
and then leave it to churches to bestow the title of marriage. Chin
was not the only justice to suggest this split- the-baby compromise.
To which, Maroko responded, "If gay couples don't have the right
to marry, then straight couples shouldn't either." I believe the
argument that gay marriage doesn't destroy straight marriage. Now I
learn that if there is no same-sex marriage, activists want to
destroy heterosexual marriage.
Do the Proposition 8 opponents not understand that California
voters are likely to pass a measure legalizing same-sex marriage --
unless voters believe that gay rights threaten other rights? Like
the right to self-governance.
We believe that the Constitution of the United States speaks for itself. There is no need to rewrite, change or reinterpret it to suit the fancies of special interest groups or protected classes.