States' Blights:
Why the Rights of Gay Couples Can't Be Left to
the States
March 2, 2004
As the past week’s Democratic debates in Los Angeles and New
York showed once again, there are generally very few substantive
policy disagreements between John Kerry and John Edwards. On the
issue of same-sex marriage in particular, there is very little
difference in their approach: play it safe. That may be
politically expedient and even politically necessary, but
unfortunately, it also dangerous to the cause of personal
liberty.
Unlike
abortion rights, which enjoy consensus support nationwide,
same-sex marriage is still opposed by a
majority of Americans, even in
California and
Massachusetts. In response to
President Bush’s aggressive posture in support of a
constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage,
Edwards and
Kerry share a similar line. Each says he favors civil
unions, but is personally opposed to gay marriage. Both men are
also opposed to a prohibition in the U.S. Constitution. (Kerry,
who voted against the 1996
Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), would support a state
constitutional ban in his home state of Massachusetts, provided
civil union status is incorporated). Ultimately, each says it is
a matter to be left to the states.
This may be smart politics in 2004, but unfortunately it’s
bad public policy. The states, of course, have traditionally
regulated marriage, marital eligibility, age of consent,
adoption and other family issues. But the states’ record of
recognizing and protecting individual rights and personal
privacy, however, is not a happy one. From slavery and Jim Crow
segregation to voting rights and the most private of sexual
choices, state constitutions and legislatures have trampled on
the core rights of racial, ethnic and other minorities. Supreme
Court rulings in cases such as Dred Scott (1857) and Plessy v.
Ferguson (1896) are a stain on the American ideals of human
freedom and equality that took a bloody civil war and a hundred
year civil rights struggle to overcome.
Democrats such as John Kerry and John Edwards who seek to
protect the equal rights of gay and lesbian Americans should
recognize the contours of this debate and its legal trajectory.
We’ve been here before in the battle over abortion and
reproductive rights. Deferring to states’ rights is not only a
potentially fatal obstacle to the marital and legal status of
gay citizens; it threatens the hard-won reproductive rights of
women as well. Either a given right is fundamental,
constitutionally protected and transportable across state lines,
or it is not.
Skip Ahead
- States' Blights:
Introduction
- Here Comes the Judge
- Public Acts, Compelling State
Interest, and the Santorum "Man on Dog" Test
- What is to be Done? A
Measured Approach for 2004
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