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Back to: Blog » News » Home
News :: Blog

Obama defends DOMA
by Ethan Jacobs
associate editor
Friday Jun 12, 2009


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UPDATE 3:15 p.m.

Has President Obama become Tom Reilly 2.0? John Aravosis on AmericaBlog reports that the Obama Justice Department has filed a brief asking a federal court to dismiss a challenge to the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). This suit was filed by a couple in California; it’s not the suit that GLAD filed on behalf of Bay State same-sex couples and widowers.

While Obama has publicly opposed DOMA and called for its repeal, the Justice Department brief not only defends the constitutionality of the law, it also calls it "a cautiously limited response to society’s still-evolving understanding of the institution of marriage." The brief even makes the link between same-sex marriage and marriages between incestuous couples and between adults and children, arguing that since courts have found that states have the authority to deny recognition of the latter two types of unions, they are within their rights to deny the recognition of same-sex marriages. Um, thanks.

In a follow-up blog post Aravosis takes Obama to task for marshalling the most homophobic arguments in favor of DOMA:

And putting that little bit of religious right messaging aside, even if they "had" to file the brief against us, why didn’t they just file a brief that argued the technicalities about why the case should have been thrown out (e.g., the plaintiffs had no standing)? No, what Obama did was throw the legal kitchen sink at us in a brief that could have been written by Antonin Scalia. They argued that DOMA is constitutional. Worse yet, they argue that it was a reasonable, rational, good law that actually saves the government money. They argued that DOMA wasn’t motivated by hate. That DOMA doesn’t discriminate against gays one bit because, apparently, gays can get married if they want... well, if they want to marry straight people of the opposite gender. They invoked Loving v. VA, the miscegenation case, and argued how it doesn’t apply to gay marriage, undercutting the entire basis of our civil rights movement - saying that our civil rights are not akin, are not as worth, not as real, as the civil rights of blacks and other minorities. They went out of their way to try to diminish the legal impact of our two big Supreme Court victories, Roemer and Lawrence - that will have implications on every future civil rights battle we fight.


The brief seems reminiscent of former Massachusetts Attorney General Tom Reilly, who promoted himself as a friend of the LGBT community and then fought tooth and nail in the courts against efforts by LGBT people to win marriage equality. Aravosis argues that Obama would have been well within his rights to decline to defend DOMA if he really wanted to show his commitment to LGBT rights.

Already HRC and the Task Force have issued statements slamming the Obama administration for the brief. Here’s an excerpt from HRC’s statement, which calls on Obama to honor his commitment to repeal DOMA:

HRC also has grave concerns about the arguments that the Administration put forth in this case, arguments that simply do not reflect the experiences that LGBT people face or the contributions that they make. The Administration’s brief claims that DOMA is a valid exercise of Congress’s power, is consistent with Equal Protection or Due Process principles, and does not impinge upon rights that are recognized as fundamental. The brief further claims that DOMA is a "neutral" federal position on same-sex marriages, and permits the states to determine on their own whether to recognize same-sex marriages. The most alarming argument, grounded neither in fact nor in law, reads as follows:

[DOMA amounts to] a cautious policy of federal neutrality towards a new form of marriage. DOMA maintains federal policies that have long sought to promote the traditional and uniformly-recognized form of marriage, recognizes the right of each State to expand the traditional definition if it so chooses, but declines to obligate federal taxpayers in other States to subsidize a form of marriage that their own states do not recognize.

"Same-sex couples and their families are not seeking subsidies," said HRC President Joe Solmonese. "We pay taxes equally, contribute to our communities equally, support each other equally, pay equally into Social Security, and participate equally in our democracy. Equal protection is not a handout. It is our right as citizens," he said.


And here’s a statement from the Task Force’s executive director, Rea Carey:

"DOMA is and has always been an immoral attack on same-sex couples, our families and our fundamental humanity. This law has only served to discriminate against Americans and belittle our nation’s heralded values embracing freedom, fairness and justice. The Task Force Action Fund demands President Obama and Congress immediately repeal this hateful law, which has left a moral scar on our nation and its worthy pursuit of equal justice for all.

"Unfortunately, the malicious and outrageous arguments and language used in the Department of Justice’s marriage brief is only serving to inflame and malign the humanity of same-sex couples and our families. This is unacceptable.

"This ugly chapter in our nation’s history must come to an end now with the repeal of DOMA."



Ethan Jacobs can be reached at ejacobs@baywindows.com



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