August 24, 2004
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A Strategic Approach to Marriage
By Matthew A.
Coles
Director, ACLU Lesbian & Gay Rights Project
A lot of people don’t understand why the ACLU and other groups
working on equality for LGBT people haven’t just gone into court everywhere to
get same-sex couples the ability to marry. But there are good reasons
not to do that.
To get the courts
to strike down a law, you have to convince them that the law violates one of the
specific rights in either the U.S. or the state Constitution. There
are two possible legal arguments we can use in marriage cases: the right to
“equal protection,” and the “right to marry.”
Equal
protection: Under equal protection, courts
most often strike down laws only if the court is
“suspicious” of the government’s reasons for
discriminating. Typically, the courts are “suspicious” of
discrimination based on race, sex and national origin. Odd as it may seem,
the U.S. Supreme Court hasn’t decided whether discrimination against gay people
is suspicious, and neither have most state Supreme Courts. To make
matters worse, most of the lower court cases have said discrimination against
gay people is not suspicious.
Under the rules, courts
should rule that discrimination against gay people is
suspicious. And even without that, we ought to be able to get courts
to strike down the exclusion from marriage as “irrational.” In courts
that deal a lot with constitutional equality cases, or courts that have
generally been willing to listen to gay people, we should win. But
the concepts are loose enough that there is room enough for a hostile or
confused court to say that discrimination against gay people is not suspicious
and the laws are not irrational. We’re unlikely to win in courts like
those until the Supreme Court either says anti-gay discrimination is suspicious
or strikes the marriage exclusion down itself.
The right to
marry: Neither the U.S. Constitution nor any state constitution
explicitly mentions a constitutional right to marry. Most courts have
said that the right to marry is understood to be part of the due process clause
that is found in the U.S. Constitution and most state
Constitutions. To decide what rights are implicitly protected by due
process, courts typically look to see whether society has historically treated
the right as something the government could not take away. The
problem here is that our opponents will say that traditionally, we never had a
right to marry. We have a good argument that a history of excluding some people
from a right is not relevant. As with equality, we should do well in courts that
hear a lot of due process cases, or courts that are truly open to claims from
gay people. But again, the rules are loose enough that there is
plenty of room for hostile or uncertain courts to rule against
us.
Bottom line:
If we bring marriage cases in courts that
typically haven’t been very protective of constitutional rights or that aren’t
familiar with sexual orientation issues, we are likely to lose a lot of the
cases.
2. Even though same-sex couples can’t marry now,
we set ourselves back even further if we take cases and lose
them.
It will take longer to get the right to marry in states
where we lose: As society gets more used to same-sex couples being
married, it will be easier to win cases in states that look iffy
now. In a few years, the cases just won’t seem like such a big
jump. If we go ahead and lose cases in those states now, the courts
will have to overrule themselves later to go our way. That means it is likely to
take longer to get a good decision than it would have taken if we hadn’t brought
a case early on and lost it.
It may slow us down in better
states: It will be easier for us to convince courts that we should
win these cases if the first five to 10 courts to decide cases rule in our
favor. That would be a big boost to our argument that the
Constitution protects same-sex couples. State courts pay attention to what
courts in other states do. If we run up a series of losses at the
start, it will be harder to convince other courts.
It will hurt gay
people on other issues: In cases about other issues, such as
teachers, adoption, or custody, we use the argument that the constitution
protects LGBT people from discrimination. Frequently, that argument helps to get
courts to decide our way on nonconstitutional grounds. If we
bring a marriage case in which a court says that the constitution does not
protect us, those arguments will be much harder to make successfully in cases
about other things.
Bottom line:
If we bring marriage cases
and lose, it will take us longer to get good marriage decisions, and it may hurt
us with other issues we bring to court.
3. The Supreme
Court is unlikely to straighten this out soon.
The odds at the
U.S. Supreme Court are just not that good right now. Four justices
have said in writing that they do not think the Constitution requires states to
marry same-sex couples. That means that to win we would have to get
all of the five who haven’t said anything publicly yet to side with
us.
That isn’t really so surprising. Contrary to
popular belief, the U.S. Supreme Court is much more likely to strike down a
state law once most other states have already changed their similar laws. For
example, few states still had laws requiring segregation or outlawing
interracial marriage by the time the Court struck those laws
down. Most states had already struck down or repealed their own laws
against same-sex intimacy when the Supreme Court invalidated Texas’s law last
year.
We can change the law in many states without the
Supreme Court. State courts don’t have to follow the Supreme Court;
they can rule that their state constitutions don’t allow same-sex couples to be
excluded from marriage. Both the Massachusetts decision and the
Vermont decision are based on state constitutions.
But losing a case in
the U.S. Supreme Court would have some serious downsides. Many state
courts pay attention to what the U.S. Supreme Court says about
constitutionality. It will be much harder for us to get state courts
to strike down laws excluding same-sex couples from marriage if the U.S. Supreme
court has said they are constitutional.
Moreover, even after we have
convinced most states to change their laws and stop excluding same-sex couples
from marriage, to get marriage for same-sex couples everywhere we’ll eventually
need to have the federal courts insist that the remaining states can’t refuse to
recognize same-sex marriages Some states will never do that on
their own. But it will take us a lot longer to get a good
Supreme Court decision if the Court has to overrule itself. Let’s not
forget: it took 17 years to undo
Bowers v. Hardwick. And that
was fast for the Supreme Court.
Bottom line:
The best way to win the marriage for same-sex couples is to win in as many
states as we can before we head to the Supreme Court.
Right now,
poorly thought-out lawsuits stand to do far more harm than good to the LGBT
community. We must be smart about when, where, and how we file
lawsuits demanding marriage equality. Rash, badly-conceived lawsuits
could mean that the couples in our community who desperately need the
protections marriage would grant them end up having to wait for many more years.
Those families deserve nothing less than a considered, careful approach.
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