Supreme
Court strikes down DOMA, reverses Prop 8
On the 10th
anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling that struck down sodomy laws in Lawrence v Texas, June 26, 2013 turned
out to be another seminal landmark in the history of LGBT rights. By a 5-4 decision the Court struck down
Section 3 of DOMA—the Defense of Marriage Act—on the grounds that it violated
the equal protection clause in the U.S. Constitution.
In the case, Windsor v the United States, DOMA was
viewed by the majority of the Court, whose opinion was written by Justice
Anthony Kennedy, as unconstitutional “as a deprivation of the equal liberty of
persons that is protected by the Fifth Amendment.” Justice Scalia was among three justices
authoring dissents.
“By creating two contradictory
marriage regimes within the same State, DOMA forces same-sex couples to live as
married for the purpose of state law but unmarried for the purpose of federal
law, thus diminishing the stability and predictability of basic personal
relations the State has found it proper to acknowledge and protect,” wrote
Justice Anthony Kennedy. “By this dynamic DOMA undermines both the public and
private significance of state sanctioned same-sex marriages; for it tells those
couples, and all the world, that their otherwise valid marriages are unworthy
of federal recognition. This places same-sex couples in an unstable position of
being in a second-tier marriage.”
The result is that same-sex
couples who were married in states where such nuptials are legal, including
Maryland, will be able to enjoy over a thousand Federal rights, benefits and
entitlements that are accorded heterosexual couples. They include such Federal
benefits as the right to file joint tax returns, federal pension survivors’, Social
Security survivors’ benefits and many more.
Government agencies will be
required to revamp their regulations to include legally married same-sex
couples.
With the Court’s decision to
allow a lower court’s ruling to stand, which struck down Proposition 8 in
California based on the equal protection clause, there are now 13 states plus
D.C. where same-sex couples can marry. This represents jurisdictions covering
over 93 million Americans.
DOMA was signed into law in 1996
by President Bill Clinton in which the Federal government was barred from
recognizing same-sex marriages even if they were legal in certain states. At the time, no such marriages were legal.
The second landmark decision
that struck down Proposition 8 was based on standing that upheld the U.S.
District Court of California’s ruling, authored by Vaughn Walker. “We have never before upheld the standing of
a private party to defend the constitutionality of a state statute when state
officials have chosen not to,” read the majority opinion in Hollingsworth v. Perry authored by Chief
Justice John Roberts. “We decline to do so for the first time here.”
By taking this approach, the
Supreme Court nullified Proposition 8 in California but provided no opinion on
the rights of states to ban same-sex couples from being legally married. Observers characterize the Court’s decision
as “punting.” During the oral arguments
in March, Justice Kennedy cautioned that the Court was entering “unchartered
waters,” which signaled a more likely narrow ruling as opposed to a sweeping
broader one, unlike the DOMA ruling.Hundreds of equality supporters as well as a lesser number of opponents gathered around the Supreme Court building in sweltering heat and humidity cheering the news amidst a sea of rainbow colored flags and signs. People came from all over the U.S. with some spending the night before to witness history.
“Today the married lives of
same-sex couples in Maryland were made whole,” Carrie Evans, executive director
of Equality Maryland, told me. “We can now access the
more than 1,000 protections the federal government provides to married couples.
And with the ruling in the Perry
case, marriage equality returns to California bringing us to 13 states and the
District of Columbia that have marriage equality. We will continue our quest in
the remaining 37 states until all loving and committed couples in the U.S. have
access to marriage equality.”
HRC president Chad Griffin
issued a statement that said in part, “Today’s historic decisions put two giant
cracks in the dark wall of discrimination that separates committed gay and
lesbian couples from full equality.”Governor Martin O’Malley, who pushed marriage equality in Maryland, weighed in calling the rulings “a powerful step forward for those who live in states like Maryland.”
The White House issued the following statement: “I applaud the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down the Defense of Marriage Act. This was discrimination enshrined in law. It treated loving, committed gay and lesbian couples as a separate and lesser class of people. The Supreme Court has righted that wrong, and our country is better off for it. We are a people who declared that we are all created equal – and the love we commit to one another must be equal as well.
“This ruling is a victory for
couples who have long fought for equal treatment under the law; for children
whose parents’ marriages will now be recognized, rightly, as legitimate; for
families that, at long last, will get the respect and protection they deserve;
and for friends and supporters who have wanted nothing more than to see their
loved ones treated fairly and have worked hard to persuade their nation to
change for the better.”
“This is a historical day for
all gay and lesbians couples,” said Annapolis resident Kim Hinken. “My wife,
Adri and I are overjoyed at the repeal of DOMA. Finally, the country recognizes
our vows to each other as they do any couple. The legal protections that this
ruling allows us will assure that we are seen as a legally married couple in the U.S.”
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