May 26, 2009
California Supreme Court upholds Proposition 8
Roger Brigham READ TIME: 2 MIN.
The decision LGBT Californians expected (and feared) was handed down by the justices of the state's Supreme Court this morning. In a 6-1 ruling, the court upheld the voter-approved ban on state recognition of same-sex marriage as outlined in Proposition 8. Justice Carlos Moreno is the only judge who dissented.
The court, as expected, also ruled that the 18,000 or so same-sex marriages that took place last year after the court's previous ruling that gays could not be denied the right to marry each other would remain valid.
Thousands of Prop 8 opponents gathered outside San Francisco City Hall in anticipation of the decision. They began to chant "Shame on you!" once they heard the court upheld Prop 8. Roughly 100 Prop 8 supporters also gathered.
Although the immediate impact of the decision is on the status of marriage for same-sex couples, the real question the court was clarifying was what kinds of changes to the Constitution make it an amendment, requiring only a simple majority vote of the electorate, and what make it a revision, requiring a two-thirds majority in both houses of the Legislature and a simple majority vote of the people. By ruling that Prop 8 was indeed an amendment as it was submitted, the justices found the will of the majority, at least in California, is sufficient to strike down the rights of a minority because doing so does not change the fundamental nature of the governmental process.
Activists maintain this interpretation strips away traditional, fundamental safeguards for any and all groups that fall into disfavor with their fellow citizens -- an unleashing of the tyranny of the majority over an underrepresented and historically oppressed minority.
When the justices heard arguments from all parties in the petitions to repeal Prop 8 less than three months ago, many supporters of marriage for gays and lesbians felt the justices' questions indicated a predisposition to uphold Prop 8's ban on nuptials for same-sex couples. In anticipation of today's decision, dozens of rallies were scheduled within the past few weeks for this evening.
In Los Angeles, Prop 8 opponents were set to rally at noon at the county marriage license office at 4716 E. Cesar Chavez Ave. in East Los Angeles, then rally again at 7 p.m. in West Hollywood Park at the intersection of San Vicente and Santa Monica Boulevards. In San Francisco, supporters will rally at 5 p.m. at City Hall for a march to Yerba Buena Gardens at Fourth and Mission Streets. A list of rallies in other locations across the state and the nation are available at www.marriageequality.org and www.dayofdecision.com.
Activists have also said they plan to bring another initiative before California voters next November that would overturn Prop 8.
Roger Brigham, a freelance writer and communications consultant, is the San Francisco Editor of EDGE. He lives in Oakland with his husband, Eduardo.