White House Silent on Mass. Gay Marriage Ruling

DENISE LAVOIE   07/ 9/10 08:22 PM ET   AP

Mass Gay
Gay marriage supporter Steven Webster of Madison, Wis., listens as he and other supporters gather during a debate at the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church on Friday, July 9, 2010 in Minneapolis. Delegates to the Presbyterian church's convention in Minneapolis voted Thursday for a more liberal policy on gay clergy but decided not to redefine marriage in their church constitution to include same-sex couples. (AP)

BOSTON — A key part of a law denying married gay couples federal benefits has been thrown out the window in Massachusetts, the first state to legalize gay marriage. The ball now lies in the White House's court, which must carefully calculate the next move by an administration that has faced accusations it has not vigorously defended the law of the land.

President Barack Obama has said repeatedly that he would like to see the federal Defense of Marriage Act, known as DOMA, repealed. But the Justice Department has defended the constitutionality of the law, which it is required to do.

The administration was silent Friday on whether it would appeal rulings by U.S. District Judge Joseph Tauro. Spokespeople for the White House and the Justice Department said officials are still reviewing the rulings.

DOMA defines marriage as between a man and a woman, prevents the federal government from recognizing gay marriages and allows states to deny recognition of same-sex unions performed elsewhere. Since the law passed in 1996, many states have instituted their own bans on gay marriage, and a handful have allowed the practice.

Tauro ruled Thursday in two separate cases that DOMA is unconstitutional because it interferes with the right of a state to define marriage and denies married gay couples an array of federal benefits given to heterosexual married couples, including health insurance and the benefits of filing joint tax returns.

The rulings apply only to Massachusetts, where same-sex marriage has been legal since 2004. But gay marriage supporters are hoping the rulings could prompt other states to file their own challenges to DOMA and could also give momentum to a bill pending in Congress that would repeal the law.

Many opponents and proponents expect the Obama administration to appeal the rulings to the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston, and that the question of whether the law is unconstitutional will eventually be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Many Obama voters, particularly among gays, will push for the administration not to appeal Tauro's rulings, said former Assistant Attorney General Robert Raben. But the administration could set a dangerous precedent if it does not continue to defend the law, he said.

"You want the Department of Justice to stop because you won a case; I understand that," said Raben, who worked at the department during the administration of President Bill Clinton, who signed DOMA into law.

"But you could have a conservative Department of Justice that won't enforce hate crimes, that won't enforce employment nondiscrimination acts, that won't enforce the Ryan White Act, that won't enforce all kinds of new protections for gays and lesbians because the attorney general doesn't agree with them. That's not a regime you want to live in."

DOMA was enacted when it appeared Hawaii would soon legalize same-sex marriage and opponents worried that other states would be forced to recognize such marriages. Since 2004, five states – Connecticut, Iowa, New Hampshire and Vermont, in addition to Massachusetts – and the District of Columbia have legalized gay marriage.

Some gay marriage opponents say that despite the Justice Department's legal obligations, it has purposely mounted a weak defense of the law.

"It's not surprising that this judge got it wrong, because a sham defense was put up by the Obama Justice Department," said Maggie Gallagher, chairman of the National Organization for Marriage.

But state Attorney General Martha Coakley, who filed one of the legal challenges to DOMA, said the Justice Department "made their best arguments."

"We didn't think that this was anything other than a legitimate adversarial proceeding," Coakley said.

During court hearings, a Justice Department lawyer argued before Tauro that the federal government has the right to set eligibility requirements for federal benefits, including requiring that those benefits go only to couples in marriages between a man and a woman. Another lawyer said the federal law does not interfere with the rights of individual states to "experiment in the area of marriage."

Under federal rules, there is an automatic 14-day stay of judgments in civil cases, so same-sex couples in Massachusetts won't be able to file for benefits immediately, said Gary Buseck, legal director of Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders. If the Justice Department appeals Tauro's rulings, the court would likely grant a stay while the appeal is pending, he said.

Buseck said he knows of only one other pending legal challenge to DOMA, in Oklahoma, where two gay couples are challenging both DOMA and the state's constitutional amendment barring same-sex marriage.

Susan Barton and Gay Phillips, one of the couples in the case, were joined in a civil union in Vermont and have marriage licenses from California and Canada. Same-sex marriage was legal in California for several months until a ban was approved by voters in 2008.

Barton said she was encouraged by the Massachusetts ruling.

"We want to have the same benefits, rights and responsibilities of every other married couple that are citizens of the United States," Barton said.

___

Associated Press writers Jesse J. Holland in Washington and Sean Murphy in Oklahoma City contributed to this report.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST POLITICS
Subscribe to the HuffPost Hill newsletter!
BOSTON — A key part of a law denying married gay couples federal benefits has been thrown out the window in Massachusetts, the first state to legalize gay marriage. The ball now lies in the Whit...
BOSTON — A key part of a law denying married gay couples federal benefits has been thrown out the window in Massachusetts, the first state to legalize gay marriage. The ball now lies in the Whit...
Filed by Hunter Stuart  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 108
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Stephanie Cormier
07:07 PM on 07/24/2010
of course they are silent... you know the other day i was looking under my couch cusions for quarters and i found someones spine... is anyone missing a spine?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
carter2004
07:29 PM on 07/15/2010
Correction, pro-Obama article writer: the DOJ does *not* have to defend laws that it believes are unconstitutional. Every president has reserved this privilege. Why not Obama and his DOJ? Because he's terrified of being painted as pro-gay.

Look, I know how much you people love to navel-gaze and talk about all the shades of gray, but it really is this simple. Does Obama think DOMA is unconstitutional, or not? Dodging the question at this point is just cowardly.
photo
Lefty08
but I bat the right
10:00 AM on 07/25/2010
Totally agree with you. Couldn't have said it better. Fanned.
09:42 PM on 07/14/2010
Despite my wish to just legalize equal marriage nation wide and get on with it, I think the best thing is for this ruling to be appealed, for at least two reasons:

The first reason I offer is based on the legal system itself. The United States (and others) has an advesarial legal system. It it very important in such a system that both parties provide the best defense of side. It is in this way that when a verdict is rendered, it is truly the correct verdict. We know we are on the winning side, and we are starting to prove it, again and again.

The second reason is optics. If there's no appeal, the republicans will just use it against us. They've proven again and again that they can weaponize just about anything. I know that includes half-truths and outright lies which should be easy to refute, and it is exhausing to continuously dance that tune, but if a good defense of DOMA isn't put up that we overwhelmingly defeat, it will just be more fodder for them.

Caveat: I write this from Canada, where the Federal government, after several superior court decisions in favour of equal marriage, did not put up a defense, but that was after three decisions in provinces representing over two thirds of Canada's population (Québec, Ontario, and BC). The U.S. equivalent would include most of the costal states and several interior ones before reaching the same threshold that says 'it's over'.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
talkstocoyotes
04:24 PM on 07/24/2010
Thanks for the caveat -- it makes it clear that this isn't going to impact you.
10:05 PM on 07/27/2010
It impacts me, because it impacts my friends. DOMA is an injustice, and it needs to be unquestionably defeated, leaving no doubt about its illegality.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AntigoneRisen
03:01 AM on 07/13/2010
They have to appeal. That doesn't mean that they have to like it.
08:40 PM on 07/14/2010
Why?

They don't uphold all laws. Colorado has medical marijuana, which is against Federal law, but the Obama Administration isn't trying to keep Colorado from that. So clearly, the Administration is choosing the laws it chooses to enforce.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AntigoneRisen
11:29 PM on 07/14/2010
Why? Because that is the function of the department, to defend federal law against court challenges. Yes, the federal government has enforced federal law about marijuana in medical use several times - and taken heat for it.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AntigoneRisen
11:30 PM on 07/14/2010
Secondly, until it is heard by the Supreme Court, the ruling isn't binding across the board.
08:53 PM on 07/11/2010
I don't think the real question is whether they will appeal, that goes without saying, but how they will approach the appeal. I personally think the DOJ will use the hideous, bigoted brief they have used in the past equating gays to pedophiles. All one has to do is look at the track record of the Administration to know what the decision will be.
photo
zeroesandones
just a regular guy
09:36 PM on 07/12/2010
just a wild guess.. i think they use the same archaic defense so they can intentionally lose..
photo
zeroesandones
just a regular guy
06:33 PM on 07/11/2010
some answers people are looking for might be found here.. it has been updated..

http://www.glad.org/uploads/docs/cases/DOMA-FAQ.pdf

we are married in iowa.. and my partner and i are seriously thinking of taking up residency in Mass if it gets the thumbs up... so we can get the federal benefits that we are due..
08:05 PM on 07/11/2010
Thank you so much for the link! Great reading! Fanned and Faved for that! Kenny
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
calindi
11:23 AM on 07/11/2010
You straight idiots keep getting married at Las Vegas Marriage Mills, and then keep telling us that marriage is some 'sacred institution'. Whatever.
F-you.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
bluntobject
Gandhi didn't like your attitude either!
01:19 PM on 07/11/2010
Yes, they do. If it wasn't so offensive, it would be comical.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SpaceboySD
"Free To Be You And Me" Is My Bible
08:34 PM on 07/14/2010
Awesome :)

Agreed and fanned.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
calindi
11:16 PM on 07/14/2010
Happy Pride!
10:57 AM on 07/11/2010
I have made a complaint to AP (Associated Press) and journalist DENISE LAVOIE about their use of hate groups given equally-weighted "opposing viewpoint" press space, and I hope some of you do the same.

I am sincerely glad Ms. Lavoie and AP they are covering modern civil rights struggles, but presenting it as an equally-weighted 2-sided "debate" is FALSE objectivity. At a minimum, they could simply report on the rulings, and give no "opinon"

In the first article on the MA ruling, LAVOIE quoted Andrea Lafferty, of the Traditional Values Coalition, an anti-gay hate group. Now, in this story, she quotes Maggie Gallagher of NOM, an anti-gay hate group. (No, NOM is not a "pro-marriage group", as they also interfere in civil union cases in civil union states, like NJ and HI, just to make SURE gays don't get equal rights by any name).

At the very least, they could clarify, like "said Maggie Gallagher, chairman of the National Organization for Marriage, an Catholic-backed anti-gay group.

The AP premise of asking hate-groups for opposing opinion would be like every story about Barack Obama including "Opponents of black people don't think he should be president", or every story about MLK Day including a comment from the Grand Wizard of the KKK!

PLEASE WRITE TO AP
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhilipB
04:11 PM on 07/11/2010
Fanned!
Well said. Great insight, and I will do that. Thank you for a great post.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
talkstocoyotes
04:29 PM on 07/24/2010
Don't know about the head beagles at AP, but Ms. Lavoie apparently doesn't know that the executive branch does not "have" to defend laws passed by Congress that are being challenged on consitutional grounds. Maybe she got that creative info from Tony Perkins or Maggie Gallagher.
10:10 AM on 07/11/2010
Maggie Gallagher grosses me out.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:45 AM on 07/11/2010
does anyone know what this mean, in practice sense. i live in IL, but have a MA marriage. i assume this means it now has to be recognized, but is this decission on hold pending appeal, or is Obama not appealing it? when i file taxes next year, do i ammend this years taxes, to refelct a joint filing?
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
calindi
11:25 AM on 07/11/2010
not yet, my dear. but someday.
photo
zeroesandones
just a regular guy
06:31 PM on 07/11/2010
you may get some of your answers here..
http://www.glad.org/uploads/docs/cases/DOMA-FAQ.pdf

but from what i have read.. if not overturned/appealed it would only effect those that live in Mass...now if you have residency and file taxes in Mass you would be able to do that..
other states that have same sex marriage would need to do the same.. and hopefully in due time it would go nation wide when ppl realize the sky will not fall...

we are married in iowa.. and my partner and i are seriously thinking of taking up residency in Mass if it gets the thumbs up... so we can get the federal benefits that we are due..
photo
MarkBoston
at least it's Lemon meringue !
04:21 PM on 07/12/2010
as a very proud citizen of the great commonwealth of Massachusetts I must tell you that if you already live in Iowa and were married there, there is no difference between your state and mine when it comes to the Feds. Neither state is recognized by the feds concerning our civil rights as equal citizens of our own country ... Gays are the last hold out and need by red neck politicians & false preachers, to rally the hate up to push their careers forward.
Gays are the new Ni**ers
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Hardyman1966
The antonym of liberal is INTOLERANT.
01:20 AM on 07/11/2010
I am so sick of this subject and the primitive attitudes that accompany it whose sole argument hinges and revolves around a belief in superstition and mythology.

If you read your history, there is/was nothing sacred about this institution. Your wife was tangible property and in exchange for taking her, daddy would pay you off with a dowry (that means money), some land and possibly a chicken.

Funny thing is, I wouldn't give a rat's A$$ about marriage if people didn't go so far out of their way to tell me I can't do it. Once it's legal, I'll go back to paying attention to whatever it was I was paying attention to, content knowing the option is there should I ever choose to exercise it.

It's been my experience that most people, on a good day, can barely handle managing their own life, much less actually having the time to spare to decide what's right for everybody else.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
timx2
walk a mile...
10:41 AM on 07/11/2010
Ain't it the truth!!

I keep saying, let us get back to the business of our lives and they can go about theirs!!
photo
Lefty08
but I bat the right
10:04 AM on 07/25/2010
Hardyman...you're a smart man....fanned.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Jdaddy1951
01:05 AM on 07/11/2010
"It's not surprising that this judge got it wrong, because a sham defense was put up by the Obama Justice Department," said Maggie Gallagher, chairman of the National Organization for Marriage.

Response: But, Maggie, your organization is a sham --- you're the Wicked Old Witch (who dresses and acts like Lucy Van Pelt of "Peanuts") who claims YOUR rights are being violated every time a gay person gains some. You're a professional whiner, the ultimate Mean Girl who isn't happy unless you're making someone miserable. Grow up and go away before someone drops a house on you!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:41 AM on 07/11/2010
i should un-fan you just so i can re-fan you. love the Oz refrences
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Jdaddy1951
09:07 AM on 07/11/2010
What's that old Carly Simon song? "Do It to me one more time ..."
photo
StevenKeirstead
Photographer and Biologist who happens to be gay.
08:54 AM on 07/11/2010
Indeed, Maggie Gallager is a sham-artist.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Jdaddy1951
09:30 AM on 07/11/2010
The author of this article should have found a different spokesman for the opponents of gay marriage, not Maggie Gallagher, who admitted in one of her own columns to being somewhat ethically challenged as a journalist.

On Jan. 25, 2005, Gallagher wrote, "I should have disclosed a government contract when I later wrote about the Bush marriage initiative. I would have, if I had remembered it. My apologies to my readers." Gallagher's comment came after The Washington Post revealed Gallagher failed to mention she had a $21,500 contract with the Department of Health and Human Services to help promote President George W. Bush's proposal to push for a $300 million initiative encouraging marriage as a way of strengthening families. Her work under the contract, which ran from January through October 2002, included drafting a magazine article for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services official overseeing the initiative, writing brochures for the program and conducting a briefing for department officials.

Nothing wrong with the government promoting marriage and families, as long as doing so is not also a mask for tearing down same-sex marriages and families headed by gay parents. That's promoting bigotry on a grand and official scale and using a well-known and deceitful homophobe like Maggie Gallagher ("If I had remembered," indeed!) was a means of spending public money to promote a hateful agenda.

Will someone throw a bucket of water on this old witch so we can watch her melt, please?
photo
Rosaleen
This is supposed to be clever and witty
11:26 PM on 07/10/2010
In my lifetime would love to see gay marriage legal nation wide. No private institutions (the church, scouts, etc.) should be forced to accept it but in the 21st DADT and not allowing gays to get married is discrimination. There are plenty of religious clergies who will perform a gay marriage ceremony but however they choose to get married is their business and their freedom. That and how they live their lives is none of our concern. If they're happy then so am I.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
calindi
11:31 PM on 07/10/2010
I agree.
With the small caveat, the private institutions that discriminate should not get any federal money, either direct or indirect.
GlennInVenice
Progressives suffer taxation without representatio
11:27 PM on 07/18/2010
No private institutions are forced to marry heterosexuals today. Why would it be any different for gays? There are churches that require you to take their classes, promise to raise any children "in the faith", or reject divorcees. They already get to pick and choose who they will marry; which is fine by me. That they get involved in telling the government who gets the right to civil marriage is when they have left their realm and begun interfering with my rights by law.
scipio2009
Alan Wolfe's "The Future of Liberalism"
08:25 PM on 07/10/2010
First of all, I hope folks realize that, as far as I know, there are currently 35-37 states that have bans ob same sex marriage written into their constitutions.

Secondly, even thought candidate Obama called for a repeal of DOMA during the election, Obama has never been a supporter of same sex marriage.

Even if things get all the way to the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court says DOMA is unconstitutional, near 37 states have already written bans on same-sex marriage into their charters. Will the next fight then be that, after getting the Supreme Court to say that state governments have the absolute authority to convey marriage rights, it is illegal for a state to put conditions on state marriage rights? lol
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
bluntobject
Gandhi didn't like your attitude either!
10:50 PM on 07/10/2010
What a ridiculous comment. :) LOL!....no wait...here is another ...LOLOLOLOL!!

IF, no let me say WHEN....

"WHEN" the SCOTUS strikes down Prop 8, and they will (I am not referring to the DOMA ruling, although that helps ) -- then ALLLLLLLLL those "35-37" States, (whats the matter, never figured out how to use GWB's Internets to figure out the exact number?), that have enacted such hateful legislation will be subject to challenge at the Federal level. Yes, States have the right under the 10th amendment to enact their own laws, but those same States do not have the right to supercede Federal Law.
scipio2009
Alan Wolfe's "The Future of Liberalism"
07:47 PM on 07/11/2010
Strauss vs. Horton says hello. lol
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
calindi
11:34 PM on 07/10/2010
Equal Protection Clause
Equal Protection Clause
Equal Protection Clause
Equal Protection Clause
Equal Protection Clause
Read the gd Equal Protection Clause.
photo
MarkBoston
at least it's Lemon meringue !
04:34 PM on 07/12/2010
So much for our constitution eh ? it seems to have turned into toilet paper now. A constitution's sole reason for existence is to PROTECT the rights of the people from a tyranny of mob rule and an oppressive majority . When constitutions of either nation or state are amended to exclude any one group of natural born citizens.. it becomes Fascist government .
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
bluntobject
Gandhi didn't like your attitude either!
07:56 PM on 07/10/2010
If Obama's Administration comes out on the opposite side of what's right, I will get out and work as hard as I can volunteering for whatever candidate goes up against him in '12. No matter what the next a-Hole that gets the job looks like; republakin or Democrats -- doesn't matter. Obama has proven already that he does not believe in the same rights for everyone, and considering the color of his skin, it's a shame that he didn't learn any lessons from the civil rights movement. He will lose every rich, gay/progressive donor out there if he comes out in force against this.
scipio2009
Alan Wolfe's "The Future of Liberalism"
08:26 PM on 07/10/2010
lol
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
bluntobject
Gandhi didn't like your attitude either!
10:41 PM on 07/10/2010
lol...yeah, there are millions like me. So laugh on.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jbarelli
I don't belong to an organized political party.
08:47 PM on 07/10/2010
Exactly what would be "right" in this case?

I'm of the impression that the Attorney General has an obligation to defend properly passed laws, even when the administration disagrees with the law. Congress passes laws, the President signs them and the courts interpret them. At least that's the way it's supposed to work.

Also, as bad as this law is, it might be worse to allow this ruling than to appeal The grounds that the court used in invalidating DOMA may be worse than the law in the long run. If the federal government has no authority to regulate marriage, then a whole bunch of other problems arise. For example, that decision could effectively overturn the decision in Loving v. Virginia.

DOMA is a bad law, and should be repealed. But we should be careful in how it is done. Immediate results are nice, but process is important.
photo
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
calindi
11:45 PM on 07/10/2010
Process is important, particularly when dealing with the law and courts.
I agree.
Wrong motion, filing, you're case is dead.
Even worse is the law of unintended consequences.
Gay rights cases have been based on privacy rights for the most part. We now have 4 justices on the Supreme Court who do not believe in privacy rights. Griswold v. Connecticut...
The strategy is set to change, thanks to David Boies and Ted Olsen, the legal arguments are now based on the Equal Protection Clause, which requires strict scrutiny for the government to show that harm will come to the nation to treat one group of americans differently than another group.
Let's see how well the argument plays out. There is a case pending in the 9th Circuit that will tell the tale. At least until it gets to the Supremes.