Even if
California voters pass the antigay marriage amendment in
November, marriage equality could still prevail.
California's one
last hope for killing Proposition 8 -- the ballot
initiative that would reverse the right of same-sex couples
to marry by amending the state constitution -- died
this week when the California supreme court, without
comment, refused to hear a legal challenge to the
measure put forth by the National Center for Lesbian Rights,
Lambda Legal, the ACLU and others before the November
election.
The groups
essentially argued that Prop. 8 would effect so major a
change to the California Constitution that it could
only be put to the voters by a two-thirds vote of the
state legislature or a constitutional convention, not
simply as the result of a signature drive.
But take heart.
Far from being over, the battle over Prop. 8’s
validity has not yet even been joined. All the court
did Tuesday was to say, in effect,
“We’re not going to hear these challenges
before the election.” If Prop. 8 passes on
November 4, all the challenges will be there waiting
on November 5, and one of those challenges in particular is
powerful indeed.
Let’s
review: In 2000, California voters approved Proposition 22,
which amended a section of the California Family Code
to read, “Only marriage between a man and a
woman is valid or recognized in California.”
Significantly, Prop. 22 resulted in a statute. It
didn’t change the state’s constitution.
Statutes must comply with the state and federal
constitutions, and if they don’t, the courts are
charged with striking them down, at least in theory.
That’s
exactly what the California supreme court did in its May 15
decision – it ruled that Prop. 22, the statute,
violated our state constitution in two major ways.
First, the court held that gays and lesbians, like
everyone else, enjoy a “fundamental right” to
marry under the constitution’s due process and
privacy clauses, and that Prop. 22 violated that
right. A “fundamental right” is one the
government can’t take away from anyone without
a compelling reason. Freedom of religion, free
expression, and voting are other fundamental rights.
California’s is the first state supreme court
to recognize the fundamental right of gays and
lesbians to marry, according to Lambda Legal.
Second, the court
held that by permitting heterosexuals to marry the
person of their choice, but denying gays and lesbians that
same right, Prop. 22 violated the California
constitution’s “equal protection”
clause. The equal protection clause forbids the government
from treating “similarly situated”
citizens differently without some reason. How
compelling that reason has to be depends on the right at
issue, and who’s being deprived of it. If the
right is “fundamental,” or the unequal
treatment is based on a “suspect
classification,” the court must apply
what’s known as “strict scrutiny” in
deciding whether the law is constitutional.
In its marriage
decision, the California supreme court held that Prop. 22
qualified for strict scrutiny on both grounds.
First, the court
ruled that the law impeded the fundamental right to
marry. Second, the court recognized that Prop. 22 harmed
gays and lesbians while leaving everyone else alone,
and then held that sexual orientation was a
“suspect classification,” deeming gays and
lesbians worthy of the same protections afforded to
other marginalized groups such as African-Americans
and women that have historically suffered
discrimination. The idea behind suspect classifications,
sometimes called “suspect classes” or
“protected classes,” is simple. If a statute
harms members of one of these protected groups more
than others, there’s a suspicion of
discriminatory intent, which binds the courts to scrutinize
that law strictly. Long story short, statutes almost never
survive the lens of “strict scrutiny,”
and Prop. 22 was no exception.
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Peter DelVecchio is a practicing attorney and a
reporter for IN Los Angeles Magazine and
Frontiers.