

A sometime GOP candidate for the U.S. Senate in Iowa seeks to impeach the district court judge who last month struck down Iowa's ban on same-sex marriage, the Associated Press reported.
Hog farmer Bill Salier and the group he cofounded, Everyday America, this week launched online petitions asking the Iowa legislature to impeach Polk County judge Robert Hanson, who Salier says violated the state constitution in his August 30 ruling.
Dozens of gay and lesbian couples lined up in Des Moines for marriage licenses, but only one couple was able to wed before Hanson stayed his own ruling pending review by higher courts.
"He's using his own political agenda to advance what he wants to see out of his own social norms and his own personal viewpoints," Salier told Radio Iowa's O. Kay Henderson. "That's legislating from the bench and overriding the authority of the elected individuals that the people of the state of Iowa put in charge."
Impeaching a judge takes an act of the legislature, which is controlled by Democrats. Gov. Chet Culver, who has criticized Hanson's ruling but signed several pro-gay measures into law, is a Democrat as well. State senate majority leader Mike Gronstal reportedly laughed upon learning of Salier's petition.
Response from EverydayAmerica.com's readers, who appear to slant libertarian, has been tepid. "A government that is designed for the sole purpose of protecting the people from force and fraud (for that's what liberty is), shouldn't care if I am married or single or who I am married to," wrote one. "Think of it as free-market sociology."
The petition had attracted 124 signatures as of Wednesday afternoon. Salier's fallback position is to work to unseat Hanson when he comes up for reelection in 2010.
A few years back, Radio Iowa reported, Iowa voters failed to oust a Sioux City judge who had approved divorce papers for a same-sex couple joined in civil union in another state.
Salier, who ran in Iowa's 2002 Republican primary for U.S. Senate, is chairman of Rep. Tom Tancredo's Iowa presidential campaign. (Barbara Wilcox, The Advocate)
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