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Questions and Answers Michael Farris, J.D. We are all aware of the unbelievable actions of judges in Massachusetts and the lawless actions of the Mayor of San Francisco which are forcing this nation to accept same-sex marriage. The President has recently endorsed the concept of a constitutional amendment to preserve traditional marriage. The President did not endorse a specific constitutional text as there are various ideas floating on Capitol Hill at this time. There are two competing texts that conservatives have endorsed. Some conservatives have endorsed the Marriage Protection Amendment (MPA). Other conservatives have endorsed the Institution of Marriage Amendment (IMA). The texts of each version are quoted below. Briefly, the MPA is designed to stop same-sex marriage and to allow state legislatures to create civil unions. The IMA is designed to stop same sex marriage and civil unions (since civil unions give same-sex couples 100% of the legal rights and benefits of marriage). The MPA protects only the word "marriage." The IMA protects the legal rights and status of marriage. There is much confusion on this issue. This summary is intended to help bring accurate and simple answers to the complex swirl of questions on a constitutional amendment. But the answer is already clear. Last summer the Supreme Court issued its historic (and terrible) ruling in Lawrence v. Texas which gave a blank check to the homosexual rights movement. Any law which the Supreme Court deems to be "anti-gay" is now presumptively unconstitutional. DOMA will not survive. You can read my testimony before the United States Senate Constitution Subcommittee on the constitutionality of DOMA if you would like more information. The key reason that federalism is preserved in this case is that to have a valid amendment, Congress proposes it, but 38 states must ratify the amendment. It will be the states that make the ultimate decision whether or not to ban same sex marriage via an amendment to the United States Constitution. Remember, this is the Constitution of the United States, not the Constitution of the Federal Government. It is also important to note that every proposed version of a same-sex marriage amendment does not include any provision that gives Congress any authority to legislate in this arena. Many amendments contain such language and these grants of power to Congress have often been exploited. Again, no grant of power to Congress to regulate marriage (or do anything else) is contained in either the MPA or the IMA. It is also very important to remember that one state alone can force the entire nation to accept same-sex marriage. How is it consistent with the principles of federalism for Massachusetts (or any other state) to be allowed to decide the issue of same-sex marriage for the entire nation? One needs to understand that there are two completely different procedures for amending the Constitution. One process is for specific amendments to be proposed. The other is for a Constitutional Convention. There is NO PROPOSAL for a CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION. Constitutional Conventions can only be called by state legislatures. Congress has no power at all to call for a Constitutional Convention. There is no proposal in any state legislature to call for a Constitutional Convention for this purpose. Some people believe that Constitutional Conventions are dangerous because they could deal with other issues other than the one for which they were called. Other people disagree with this and contend that a Constitutional Convention can only deal with the subject matter for which the convention was called. However, it is very important to recognize that this is a completely different method from what is being advocated and has absolutely nothing to do with the current proposed amendments. The method that is being used is the one that has been used to give us all twenty-seven of the existing constitutional amendments. We have never had a Constitutional Convention since 1787 (when the Constitution was originally drafted), so obviously amending the Constitution does not require a convention. This is the process dictated by the Constitution: The principal sponsors of this amendment have made it absolutely clear that they believe that this amendment, while it bans same sex-marriages, will allow each state to decide its own policy on civil unions or other forms of same-sex unions which give couples all the legal rights of marriage. Here is the actual wording of the key portion of the Vermont law: "Parties to a civil union will have all of the same benefits, protections and responsibilities under law, whether they derive from statute, administrative or court rule, policy, common law or any other source of civil law, as are granted to spouses in a marriage." In California the law says: "Registered domestic partners shall have the same rights, protections, and benefits, and shall be subject to the same responsibilities, obligations, and duties under law, whether they derive from statutes, administrative regulations, court rules, government policies, common law, or any other provisions or sources of law, as are granted to and imposed upon spouses." Civil unions are not just about hospital visits and insurance benefits. These are marriage relationships that require a license from the government to enter and a divorce-like decree to end. They have 100% of the rights and benefits of marriage. They make the partners legally spouses. Same-sex couples have all the legal rights of marriage; they simply cannot use the word "marriage" to officially describe their relationship. Civil unions are nothing more than a cheap attempt at a political compromise. It is a political trick that deserves to be ridiculed by both sides of this issue. Those who support same-sex marriage can legitimately ask, "If you give us all the rights and make us legal spouses, why not give us the word marriage also?" Those who oppose same-sex marriage can ask, "If we are saying they are not married, why do we make them spouses and give them all the rights of marriage?" Everyone should be outraged at civil unions. Since the authors only desire to protect the word "marriage" and not the legal rights and status of marriage, we should not be surprised that their wording leaves gaping holes that activist judges will readily fill. This is called the Institution of Marriage Amendment (IMA). The MPA protects only the word "marriage." The IMA protects the institution of marriage. It preserves for marriage and marriage alone the legal rights and status of a spouse. The IMA is clear. The language of the MPA is very confusing. The IMA stops the courts and the legislature of any state from imposing its will on the rest of the nation. It is the only proposal that will work to truly protect marriage. By its express terms, the IMA stops the creative attempts of the pro-homosexual activists and the courts from bestowing the rights and status of marriage on unmarried persons—period. The IMA has been endorsed by the Home School Legal Defense Association, Concerned Women for America and other state-based organizations. |
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