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Does anyone know that if the appeal is struck down by the 9th Circut and the opposition (Prop 8 proponents) then try to go to the SC and it just does not take (cert)..... will Judge Walker's (and a 9th Circut strike-down) ruling then stand?
I know that one of the motivations behind the case brought was to just get the constitutionality issue to the federal SC, but, the SC can refuse to hear cases. Obviously, this one might just be one it wants to take on, but if not (or until it does) and the 9th Circut upholds Walker's decision, then same-sex marriages could simple happen and continue in CA, correct? And the opinion be used as precident setting for other states, yes? Trying to put together some analysis I heard parts of today and not certain if my line of thinking is correct. Thinking about how critical it is for these marriages to get going again in terms of strenghth of numbers, etc. and the case for there being some same-sex couples married in CA and others not being allowed to under an unconstitutional amendment (which Prop 8 is in CA). |
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#3 |
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If you go to the website joemygod, you can read Jerry Brown's answer to the request for a stay. It is only 4 pages and just reiterates his previous stance that he doesn't want the decision to be stayed, and he doesn't think the yes on hate people have any standing.
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#4 |
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Prop 8: Gay-Marriage Opponents May Be Unable to Appeal
Time.com By MICHAEL A. LINDENBERGER Michael A. Lindenberger – Fri Aug 13, 7:40 pm ET If same-sex weddings resume in California next Thursday, the happy couples may have more names to add to their thank-you lists than that of U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker, the San Francisco jurist who last week struck down the 2008 voter-approved constitutional amendment that made gay marriage illegal. They may have to address new cards to Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and California attorney general Jerry Brown. That's because Brown and Schwarzenegger's choosing not to appeal Walker's Aug. 4 ruling - and their contention that the state is ready to begin issuing same-sex wedding licenses immediately - may turn out to be almost as decisive a factor as the historic court ruling last week. That possibility emerged Thursday in an 11-page ruling Walker issued to deny a request by Proposition 8's proponents for him to delay implementing his own ruling allowing gay marriage until they can appeal the case to the Ninth Circuit and perhaps all the way to the Supreme Court. (See why Prop 8 was upended.) But in a twist that caught some experts off guard, Walker not only denied the motion but did so in a way that raises serious questions whether Prop 8 proponents have any right to appeal the case at all. He ruled that they not only failed to show that the resumption of gay marriage would do them personal, irreparable harm, but that they likely lacked the legal standing to request to appeal. Instead, he suggested, their only remedy may be a political one - as unlikely as that may be. "In light of those concerns, proponents may have little choice but to attempt to convince either the Governor or the Attorney General to file an appeal to ensure appellate jurisdiction," he wrote. (See how an unlikely pair of allies are making a Supreme Court case for gay marriage.) Walker's reasoning is this: the actual defendants in the lawsuit brought by two same-sex couples last year weren't the folks who brought Prop 8 to the ballot two years ago. Instead, the suit named Schwarzenegger and Brown. When those two officials declined to mount a defense - an unusual and controversial decision by Brown, whose job normally includes the defense of all state law - Walker allowed the group behind ProtectMarriage.com to step in and defend the case at trial. But, he said in Thursday's order, just because they were allowed to intervene to defend Prop 8 at trial doesn't mean that they would have independent standing to bring an appeal in the event that the named parties in the case chose not to do so. "When proponents moved to intervene in this action, the court did not address their standing independent of the existing parties," he wrote. "This court has jurisdiction over plaintiffs' claims against the state defendants pursuant to 28 USC S 1331. If, however, no state defendant appeals, proponents will need to show standing in the court of appeals." (Comment on this story.) That could mean trouble for the proponents. Walker gave the proponents until 5 p.m. on Aug. 18 to take their motion for a stay to the Ninth Circuit, where three judges who serve on a monthly motions panel will likely hear it. If they uphold Walker's ruling denying the stay, the only recourse for the proponents will be to ask the Supreme Court to intervene. To do so means asking the justice assigned to the Ninth Circuit to hear the motion. Ironically, in this case, that would be Justice Anthony Kennedy, the court's frequent majority maker who Supreme Court oddsmakers have long said holds the decisive vote if the question of gay marriage is ever decided there. But if the appellate judges agree with Walker that the proponents lack standing to appeal, the case may never reach the appellate courts at all, at least not on its merits. That would mean a win for gay marriage in California, as it rejoins the five other states (and D.C.) where gay marriage is legal. But it would also mean that the case would have much less national importance. The first federal decision - Walker's - ruling in favor of gay marriage would remain the only one, and would have no direct impact on marriage laws in any other state. And to add another twist, at least one constitutional-law scholar in California is suggesting that by trumpeting the issue of standing, Walker has opened a hornet's nest he may have been better off leaving undisturbed. "If the proponents don't have standing to appeal, then it's entirely plausible that the courts will rule that they did not properly have standing to go to trial," Vikram Amar, a law professor at the University of California at Davis, told TIME Thursday evening. "This is an issue he glossed over when he allowed them to intervene in the trial." Amar says that if the Ninth Circuit agrees with Walker that the proponents don't have standing to appeal, the judges may well decide they shouldn't have been allowed to intervene in the case at all. If they do, he says, they could decide to vacate the trial entirely, sending it back to Walker to start over. The governor and attorney general would be unlikely to intervene - but on the other hand, come November, voters will choose new candidates for both of those offices. In that event, what happens next is anybody's guess. "We're in uncharted waters here," Amar told TIME. |
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#5 |
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We had the privilege of hearing this brilliant young man speak yesterday at the Big Commit Rally. He is the boy from Arkansas who refused to say the pledge of allegiance until ALL people can get married.
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#6 |
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Will The Right Sacrifice California to Save Marriage Amendments Elsewhere?
Submitted by Kyle on August 12, 2010 - 2:07pm Earlier today I posted audio of David Barton talking with Tim Wildmon and Marvin Sanders of the American Family Association about his relationship with Glenn Beck, but now I want to highlight a more important piece of that discussion that occurred later in the interview when they were discussing the Prop 8 ruling. All three were convinced that the case was eventually going to end up before the Supreme Court and that when it does, Justice Anthony Kennedy was going to be the deciding vote in favor of allowing gay marriage. As such, Barton revealed that there is some talk on the Right of not appealing or fighting the Prop 8 ruling and letting California have gay marriage in order to keep the case away from the Supreme Court and thereby saving the marriage amendments in all the other states: Barton: Right now the damage is limited to California only, but if California appeals this to the US Supreme Court, the US Supreme Court with Kennedy will go for California, which means all 31 states will go down in flames, although right now this decision is limited only to California. So there's an effort underway to say "California, please don't appeal this. I mean, if you appeal this, its bad for you guys but live with it, but don't cause the rest of us to have to go down your path." Wildom: So you think the better situation here would be California not to appeal ... Barton: Well, I'm telling you that that's what is being argued by a lot of folks now because the other Supreme Court attorney who watched this from afar said "on no, you left too many arguments on the table, you stayed technical." And now, knowing what Kennedy has already done in two similar cases to this and knowing that he's the deciding vote, the odds are 999 out of 1000 that they'll uphold the California decision. If they do, there's not a marriage amendment in the country that can stand. And so the problem is that instead of California losing its amendment, now 31 states lose their amendment. And that won't happen if California doesn't appeal this decision. It's just California that loses its amendment. |
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#7 |
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Prop 8 Backers: Gay Marriages Would 'Harm The State's Interest In Promoting Responsible Procreation'
LISA LEFF | 08/16/10 03:02 PM | AP SAN FRANCISCO — California voters had sound reasons and were not motivated by anti-gay bias when they outlawed same-sex unions in 2008, sponsors of the ban said Monday while urging a federal appeals court to stop gay weddings from resuming. In addition, the state's interest in promoting responsible procreation through heterosexual marriages would be harmed if gay marriages were permitted while the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reviews a previous ruling that overturned Proposition 8, lawyers contended in legal filings. "The record leaves no doubt, none at all, that California, 44 other states, and the vast majority of countries throughout the world continue to draw the line at marriage because it continues to serve a vital societal interest that is equally ubiquitous – to channel potentially procreative sexual relationships into enduring, stable unions for the sake of responsibly producing and raising the next generation," the lawyers wrote. The arguments represented a final attempt by gay marriage opponents to persuade the 9th Circuit to step in and prevent the Aug. 4 ruling by Chief U.S. District Court Judge Vaughn Walker from taking effect at 5 p.m. Wednesday. Walker has said county clerks must stop enforcing the ban at that time, a move that would clear the way for gay couples to obtain marriage licenses unless the appeals court decides otherwise. Attorneys for the two same-sex couples who successfully sued to strike down Proposition 8 have been joined by state Attorney General Jerry Brown in urging the 9th Circuit to allow gay marriages to resume without delay. They argued that same-sex couples should not be denied their constitutional rights while the appeal is pursued, and that government agencies would suffer no harm by being required to sanction same-sex marriages. The Proposition 8 legal team said Walker had erred in concluding there was no evidence that allowing same-sex unions would undermine heterosexual marriages by causing more children to be born into households not headed by a married mother and father. "Reluctance to fundamentally redefine marriage stems not from blind allegiance to tradition but rather from an eminently reasonable concern that decisively severing marriage from its procreative purposes would harm the institution's ability to serve these still important societal interests," they wrote. They also disputed the notion that Proposition 8 was based on religiously rooted moral disapproval of gay Californians. If that were true, laws against prostitution, assisted suicide and other prohibitions founded on strong moral components would also be invalid, they said. They also questioned whether the two couples who filed the lawsuit can claim that having to wait for the appeal to be considered would hurt them when neither has concrete plans to get married this week. The two couples have both said they want to be able to schedule their weddings so their families and friends can join them. |
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#8 | |
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I got our boy in school today. While waiting for the guidance counselor to go through class selection, etc. we listened to the morning announcements. It began with the Pledge of Allegiance. We were sitting in the main office and everyone present stood up, hand over heart, eyes on flag and repeated it along with speaker. The boy glanced at me with a startled look and kinda shook his head muttering "uh-huh". I remained seated beside him. I'm not sure how he will feel tomorrow am when he is in his first period class but I do know that hearing this young man ( Will) really seemed to have impacted him. We didn't get a chance to discuss it and I will be discussing it with his other mom tonight, so we are both on the same page "if" Alex decides to follows Will's lead. Part of me hopes he does. Part of me totally understands if he doesn't. Being a new kid in a new school with special needs after being in a non-mainstream school for several years and dyke parents.. he is already in front of the eight ball. Glad to see so much great participation in this thread! thank you to everyone who has been participating ( either vocally or not! )
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#10 |
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"A Hindu priest performed the first wedding ceremony in Nepal for a foreign gay couple, a rights group said Wednesday, as activists and tourist agencies increasingly promote the Himalayan nation as a gay-friendly destination." Story here.
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