While it may give marriage
equality supporters a degree satisfaction that the defiant Rowan County (KY)
clerk Kim Davis was sent to the hoosegow, this development, though inevitable, may backfire
to some extent. Davis, as we know,
refused to follow a ruling by a federal court that required her and her staff
of six deputy clerks (including her son) to issue marriage licenses to same-sex
couples based on her belief that such marriages don’t follow the word of
God. However, to demonstrate that she is
not anti-gay or anti-lesbian, her office refused to grant marriage licenses to
all couples—gay or straight.
Kim Davis says no to issuing marriage licenses |
“I have no animosity toward
anyone and harbor no ill will,” said Davis, an Apostolic Christian, in a
statement this week. “To me this has never been a gay or lesbian issue. It is
about marriage and God's word.”
Davis, who is on her fourth
marriage, had opportunities to change her mind.
But when she appeared on September 3 before U.S. District Judge David
Bunning, a George W. Bush appointee and son of former Senator and star pitcher
Jim Bunning, she refused to uphold the law she had sworn to do. The judge found her in contempt and off she
went. She will remain incarcerated until
she changes her mind or allows the other clerks to issue the licenses. Five have agreed; her son has not
“God's moral law conflicts with my job duties,”
Davis said.
“Her good faith belief is simply
not a viable defense,” responded Bunning, who also said it would set a bad
precedent.
Davis is an elected official who
cannot be fired for not following the law.
She can be impeached by the legislature but few believe that is
possible. Or, when she defies a court
order as in this case, she forfeits her freedom.
Cartoon by Bruce Garrett - Baltimore OUTloud |
The plaintiffs in the suit—a gay
couple—did not want her to go to jail if found in contempt; financial
punishment would satisfy them. They know
what this could turn into.
The longer Davis remains in the
slammer, the more she will be urged to hold firm and she will be transformed
into a martyr for opponents of equality.
Even if she’s released, which is likely, she could still be a poster
child for anti-gay marriage. That could
fuel more backlash and anti-gay sentiment and embolden opponents of anti-discrimination
measures to dig in their heels. Nothing good will come of that.
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