The U.S. Supreme
Court this month will begin considering several cases involving same-sex
marriage, including one testing the constitutionality of California's
Proposition 8, which says "only marriage between a man and a woman is
valid or recognized in California." Above, Frank Capley-Alfano and Joe
Capley-Alfano celebrate outside of San Francisco City Hall in February
after a federal appeals court blocked the law. (Photo by Justin
Sullivan/Getty Images)
The U.S. Supreme
Court this month will begin considering several cases involving same-sex
marriage, including one testing the constitutionality of California's
Proposition 8, which says "only marriage between a man and a woman is
valid or recognized in California." Above, Frank Capley-Alfano and Joe
Capley-Alfano celebrate outside of San Francisco City Hall in February
after a federal appeals court blocked the law. (Photo by Justin
Sullivan/Getty Images)
Washington Gov.
Chris Gregoire celebrates after signing marriage equality legislation
into law earlier this year. Voters there approved same-sex marriage on
Election Day. (Photo by Stephen Brashear/Getty Images)
In 2010, television
reporter Roby Chavez, right, shares a moment with gay rights activist
Frank Kameny during Chavez' and Chris Roe's wedding ceremony in the
nation's capital. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)
The U.S. Supreme Court this month
will begin considering several cases involving same-sex marriage,
including one testing the constitutionality of California's Proposition
8, which says "only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or
recognized in California." Above, Frank Capley-Alfano and Joe
Capley-Alfano celebrate outside of San Francisco City Hall in February
after a federal appeals court blocked the law.
(CNN) -- Edith "Edie" Windsor lost her spouse in 2009, her grief compounded by an estate tax bill much larger than other married couples would have to pay.
Because her decades-long
partner was also a woman, the federal government in legal terms did not
recognize the same-sex marriage, even though their home state of New
York did.
"I was devastated by the
loss of the great love of my life, and I was also very sick, then had to
deal with pulling together enough money to pay for the taxes," Windsor,
83, told CNN. "And it was deeply upsetting."
That fundamental
unfairness as Windsor and her supporters see it, is at the center of
legal fight now awaiting action at the U.S. Supreme Court.
The justices will meet
privately Friday for a closed-door conference to decide if they will
accept any of 10 pending appeals, essentially over whether a fundamental
constitutional right for gays and lesbians to marry exists.
If they agree to hear the issue, oral arguments would be likely be held in March with a ruling by late June.
The political, social,
and legal stakes of this long-simmering debate will once again put the
high court at the center of national attention, a contentious encore to
their summer ruling upholding the massive health care reform law
championed by President Barack Obama.
Earlier this month,
voters in Maryland, Washington, and Maine approved same-sex marriage,
adding to the six states and the District of Columbia that already have
done so. Minnesota voters also rejected an effort to ban such unions
through a constitutional amendment.
Is there a national consensus?
As more states legalize
same-sex marriage, one of the key questions the justices may be forced
to address is whether a national consensus now exists supporting the
idea of expanding an "equal protection" right of marriage to
homosexuals.
Three separate issues
confront the justices, who are likely to only accept only one for review
in coming months. These include federal benefits, state benefits and
state referendums.
The Defense of Marriage
Act, or DOMA, is a 1996 congressional law that says for federal
purposes, marriage is defined as only between one man and one woman.
That means federal tax, Social Security, pension, and bankruptcy
benefits, and family medical leave protections -- do not apply to gay
and lesbian couples, such as Windsor and her late partner Thea Spyer.
This appeal from Arizona
asks whether a state that prohibits same-sex marriage may also deny
same-sex couples marital benefits if one of the partners is a state
employee, when other state workers in opposite-sex marriages enjoy
government benefits.
On referendums, the
California high court had earlier concluded same-sex marriage was legal,
but the 2008 voter-approved Proposition 8 abolished it. If the high
court accepts this appeal, it would likely not decide whether same-sex
marriage is a constitutional right, but only whether a state can revoke
that right through referendum once it has already been recognized.
"The justices are almost
certainly going to take up the question of the constitutionality of the
Defense of Marriage Act," said Thomas Goldstein, publisher of
SCOTUSblog.com and a top Washington attorney. "The real question is
whether they'll step into California's Prop 8 and the ruling there that
California discriminated unconstitutionally when it granted a right to
same sex-marriage and then took it away. It's a tossup on whether
they'll hear that case."
Who will represent U.S. in any court case
Complicating matters is
just who will defend the DOMA law before the justices. Traditionally
that role would fall to the Justice Department's Solicitor General
office. But Obama, in an election-year stunner, said in May he supports
same-sex marriages. The president had already ordered Attorney General
Eric Holder not to defend the federal law in court.
That left House
Republicans, led by Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, to step in after the
Justice Department refused to participate. They have hired top
Washington attorney Paul Clement-- himself a former solicitor general--
to make the arguments to keep the law in place, at least until lawmakers
decide otherwise.
Clement said a
congressionally mandated, uniform standard to define marriage for
federal purposes is both proper and practical, since different states
have different laws defining the limits of marriage.
"DOMA does not bar or
invalidate any marriages but leaves states free to decide whether they
will recognize same-sex marriage," Clement told the court in a legal
brief. "Rather, DOMA merely reaffirmed and codified the traditional
definition of marriage: what Congress itself has always meant and what
courts and the executive branch have always understood it to mean -- in
using those words: A traditional male-female couple."
The law does not
prohibit states from allowing same-sex marriages, but it also does not
force states to recognize them from other states. Most of the current
plaintiffs are federal workers, who are not allowed to add their spouses
to health care plans, and other benefits.
Many other states,
including New Jersey, Illinois, Delaware, Rhode Island and Hawaii, have
legalized domestic partnerships and civil unions for such couples -- a
step designed in most cases to provide the same rights of marriage under
state law.
But other states have
passed laws or state constitutional amendments banning such marriages.
California's Prop 8 is the only such referendum that revoked the right
after lawmakers and the state courts previously allowed it.
In February, a federal appeals court in San Francisco ruled the measure unconstitutional.
Court could offer final word
By patiently letting
legislatures and the voters decide the social and practical implications
of same-sex marriage over the past decade, the high court is now poised
to perhaps offer the final word on the tricky constitutional questions.
The split 5-4
conservative-liberal bench has the option of ruling broadly or
narrowly-- perhaps taking a series of incremental cases over a period
years, building political momentum and public confidence in the process.
Edie Windsor is one of
more than a dozen plaintiffs involved in the current DOMA appeals before
the high court. She and Spyer, a psychologist, had been a devoted
couple in New York's Greenwich Village for more than 40 years, before
marrying in Canada in 2007.
New York did not allow
same-sex marriages to be performed in the state when Windsor and Spyer
wed, but did recognize the out-of-state license. New York's legislature
last year approved same-sex marriage.
Windsor, a retired
computer systems programmer, wants the $363,053 in added estate taxes
she was forced to pay the IRS. She said the federal government considers
her relationship with Spyer as little more than "girlfriends,"
something she called an "incredible indignation."
"I would like to receive
my money back. New York State accepted my marriage as a marriage," she
told CNN. "And I believe, and the Justice Department and the president
agree with me, that the DOMA law is unconstitutional. DOMA is cruel. It
discriminates against us for absolutely no value to the country. And
we'd like to see that defeated altogether. I'd like other people not to
go through what I went through."
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