- Nov 17, 2002
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The Iowa Supreme Court just handed down a decision upholding a lower court's decision that prohibiting same-sex marriages is unconstitutional:
No doubt shocks the hell out of a lot of Americans who bought the stereotype of Iowa as an ultra-conservative, Bible-belt state. This will likely put Iowa in the middle of a political and media circus for a few weeks, something we've been blissfully past since the primaries. I understand some in the legislature are already preparing to submit an amendment to the Iowa constitution.
Edit:
Here's more info from The Des Moines Register, including links to the ruling:
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Iowa Supreme Court Ruling On Gay Marriage Upheld
Same-sex couples across the state of Iowa can now get a marriage license. The Iowa Supreme Court handed down its decision on legalizing same-sex marriages Friday morning, upholding a lower court's decision that prohibiting same-sex marriages is unconstitutional.
The Department of Public Safety has brought in extra security, as people on both sides of the issue are on hand awaiting the decision.
The case began in December of 2005, with a lawsuit filed by six same-sex Iowa couples challenging the state's marriage laws. On August 30th of 2007, Judge Robert Hansen issued a ruling that Polk County couldn't deny a same-sex couple a marriage license, essentially making gay marriage legal.
The next morning, dozens of couples rushed into courthouses to apply for marriage licenses, but hours later, Judge Hansen issued a stay stopping gay and lesbian couples from getting married.
One couple was still able to tie the knot. Sean Fritz and Tim McQuillan were married at 10:30 a.m. on August 31st. They remain the only legally married same sex couple in Iowa.
Iowa now becomes the third state in the nation to allow the marriages. Massachusetts and Connecticut are the only others offering licenses to same-sex couples.
Massachusetts became the first in May of 2004. Connecticut followed in November of 2008.
At least eight other states are debating the idea at legislative levels.
Copyright © 2009, WHO-TV
No doubt shocks the hell out of a lot of Americans who bought the stereotype of Iowa as an ultra-conservative, Bible-belt state. This will likely put Iowa in the middle of a political and media circus for a few weeks, something we've been blissfully past since the primaries. I understand some in the legislature are already preparing to submit an amendment to the Iowa constitution.
Edit:
Here's more info from The Des Moines Register, including links to the ruling:
Iowa Supreme Court upholds Hanson's ruling; marriage no longer limited to one man, one woman
REGISTER STAFF REPORTS
The Iowa Supreme Court this morning unanimously upheld gays? right to marry.
?The Iowa statute limiting civil marriage to a union between a man and a woman violates the equal protection clause of the Iowa Constitution,? the justices said in a summary of their decision.
The court rules that gay marriage would be legal in three weeks, starting April 24.
The court affirmed a Polk County District Court decision that would allow six gay couples to marry.
The ruling is viewed as a victory for the gay rights movement in Iowa and elsewhere, and a setback for social conservatives who wanted to protect traditional families.
? Read the summary: Iowa Supreme Court's decision on same-sex marriage.
? Read the full opinion: Iowa Supreme Court's decision on same-sex marriage.
The decision makes Iowa the first Midwestern state, and the fourth nationwide, to allow same-sex marriages. Lawyers for Lambda Legal, a gay rights group that financed the court battle and represented the couples, had hoped to use a court victory to demonstrate acceptance of same-sex marriage in heartland America.
The Iowa Supreme Court?s Web site was deluged with more than 350,000 visitors this morning, in anticipation of the ruling, a Judicial Branch spokesman said this morning.
Steve Davis, a court spokesman, said administrators added extra computer servers to handle the expected increase in Web traffic. But ?this is unprecedented,? Davis said.
Richard Socarides, a former senior adviser to President Bill Clinton on gay civil rights, said today?s decision could set the stage for other states. Socarides was was a senior political assistant for Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin in the early 1990s.
?I think it?s significant because Iowa is considered a Midwest sate in the mainstream of American thought,? Socarides said. ?Unlike states on the coasts, there?s nothing more American than Iowa. As they say during the presidential caucuses, 'As Iowa goes, so goes the nation.??
It?s probable that county and state governments in Iowa, as in other states that have passed gay marriage laws, will be given two or three months to put the change in place. That means that such unions won?t begin today, said Justin Uebelhor, director of communications for One Iowa, the state?s largest lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered advocacy group.
?Typically, it?s not immediate, and that?s most likely what we?d be looking at in Iowa,? Uebelhor said.
Opponents have long argued that allowing gay marriage would erode the institution. Some Iowa lawmakers, mostly Republicans, attempted last year to launch a constitutional amendment to specifically prohibit same-sex marriage.
Such a change would require approval in consecutive legislative sessions and a public vote, which means a ban would could not be put in place until at least 2012 unless lawmakers take up the issue in the next few weeks.
?If you?ll remember when we proposed the Iowa marriage amendment, the Democrats? excuse for not taking it up was that it was in the hands of the Iowa Supreme Court,? Senate Republican leader Paul McKinley of Chariton said Friday. ?It was implied that should they find against traditional marriage, that the Legislature would handle that. I would certainly hope they?ll keep their promise.?
Until today, Iowa law said marriage could only be between one man and one woman.
The case, Varnum vs. Brien, involves six same-sex Iowa couples who sued Polk County Recorder Timothy Brien in 2005 after his office denied them marriage licenses. Polk County District Judge Robert Hanson sided with the couples last year but then suspended his decision pending a high court ruling.
In Dec. 10 arguments to the high court, Assistant Polk County Attorney Roger Kuhle said Hanson erred in his ruling, which declared the 1998 Iowa Defense of Marriage Act unconstitutional and threw out several expert witnesses that gay marriage opponents had hoped to use at the trial. Hanson ruled that the witnesses did not qualify as experts on issues relevant to the case.
Brien, the Polk County recorder, rejected the marriage license requests because he ?has no say in this law,? Kuhle said. ?He can no more give these plaintiffs a license than he could give a license to a man and three women,? he added.
Kuhle argued that same-sex marriage could loosen the definition of marriage to include polygamy. Future generations might discard the institution if they come to believe that opposite-sex parents are not necessary, he argued.
A ruling favorable to gay marriage also could hurt children, who are best raised by a mother and father, he said.
?One could easily argue, and we do, that fostering same-sex marriage will harm the institution of marriage as we know it,? Kuhle said. ?It?s not going to happen tomorrow. We?re not going to see any changes tomorrow, next week, next year, in our generation. But you?ve got to look to the future.?
Kuhle said state support for same-sex marriage would teach future generations that marriage is no longer about procreation despite thousands of years of history.
Nor does the case belong in the courts, Kuhle said. The debate should fall to the Legislature.
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This thread is being derailed by trolling
Senior Anandtech Moderator
Common Courtesy
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Off topic thread crapping posts deleted. Please keep your replies on topic. Further posts derailing this thead will be reason to lock accounts, not the thread.
I haven't replied in this thread, yet, but I probably will. The above notice applies, even if I happen to be the one who does it.
Harvey
Senior AnandTech Moderator