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Texas May Strip Away Transgender Marriage Rights

JIM VERTUNO   04/25/11 11:13 AM ET  AP

AUSTIN, Texas — Two years after Texas became one of the last states to allow transgendered people to use proof of their sex change to get a marriage license, Republican lawmakers are trying to roll back the clock.

Advocates for the transgendered say a proposal to bar transgendered people from getting married smacks of discrimination and would put their legally granted marriages in danger of being nullified if challenged in court.

One of the Republican sponsors of the legislation said he's simply trying to clean up the 2009 law in a state that bans same-sex marriage under the constitution.

"The Texas Constitution," Sen. Tommy Williams said, "clearly defines marriage between one man and one woman."

The legislation by Williams, of Houston, and Rep. Lois Kolkhorst, of Brenham, would prohibit county and district clerks from using a court order recognizing a sex change as documentation to get married, effectively requiring the state to recognize a 1999 state appeals court decision that said in cases of marriage, gender is assigned at birth and sticks with a person throughout their life even if they have a sex change.

Most states allow transgendered people to get married using a court order that also allows them to change their driver's license, experts said. Some advocates for the transgendered say the Texas proposal would not only prevent future transgendered marriages but also open up the possibility that any current marriage could be nullified.

"It appears the goal is to try to enshrine a really horrifying ruling and making it law in the state of Texas," said John Nechman, a Houston attorney whose law firm does work for the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered community.

Gov. Rick Perry's spokesman Mark Miner said the governor never intended to allow transgendered people to get married. He said the three-word sex change provision was sneaked through on a larger piece of legislation Perry signed two years ago regarding marriage licensing rules for county and district clerks. Perry, a Republican, supports efforts to "clarify the unintended consequences" of that law, Miner said.

"The governor has always believed and advocated that marriage is between a man and a woman," Miner said.

Williams said he understands that some people's gender cannot easily be determined when they are born and they later have an operation that could change the originally assigned gender.

"It is an emotional issue," Williams said. "I can appreciate that."

But when asked about claims of discrimination, Williams insisted his goal is to simplify marriage licensing for clerks who are trying to balance the 2009 law with the 1999 Texas appeals court ruling.

"They shouldn't have to resolve these issues," Williams said. "We have confused them."

Williams' legislation has cleared a committee vote and now awaits approval by the full Senate, which is predominantly Republican. The version in the GOP-dominated House has not yet been given a hearing.

Some advocates for the transgendered say that even if the legislation is passed, transgendered people could still get marriage licenses using other state and federally-issued documents such as a drivers' license or passport. But without the weight of a court order officially recognizing their gender reassignment, they worry any legal challenge, such as a divorce or estate dispute, would nullify the marriage.

"We want to be recognized as people. We want to have the same rights as all of you," Lisa Scheps of the Transgender Education Network of Texas said at a March hearing on Williams' bill. No one testified in favor of the legislation.

Kolkhorst, who authored the 2009 law that allowed the sex change documentation to be used in getting marriage licenses, did not respond to messages left at her office seeking comment on why she now wants to take it out.

The 2009 law originally was filed without the sex change document provision, but House records show Kolkhorst put it in as part of a lengthy amendment in the last month of the session. The changed legislation passed the House and Senate and Perry signed it into law a month later.

"It would be terrible for Texas, now that it finally caught up with the rest of the country, to take a step back," said Shannon Minter, an attorney for the national Transgender Law and Policy Institute. He said most states allow marriages for people who have undergone sex reassignment surgery.

Nikki Araguz was at the Capitol last week to lobby against the legislation. Her husband, a volunteer firefighter, was killed in the line of duty in July and she is being sued by her dead husband's family over control of his $600,000 estate.

Araguz had a final sex change operation in October 2008, two months after they were married, and says her husband knew and supported her. His family argues the marriage should be voided because Araguz was born a man and same-sex marriage is not legal in Texas. A hearing is scheduled for May 13.

"This is crazy. I feel like this is a personal attack on me," Araguz told The Associated Press. "If this bill is passed, it essentially means women like myself who have had reconstructive surgery will not be allowed to marry their heterosexual partner."

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10:26 AM on 05/10/2011
"Every American has the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." Well its our love life and being able to marry the ones we love make us happy. I think that the government should just stay out of our love lives. Oh and to the comment above "The Texas Constitution," Sen. Tommy Williams said, "clearly defines marriage between one man and one woman."
The texas constitution is wrong!! A marriage is a sacred bond between 2 people, rather they be man, woman, or both, that love each other. So as I said the government needs to just butt out of love lives and let us be with the ones we want to be with. The only ones creating the hate in this world is you.
11:43 AM on 04/26/2011
This from the country that states "Liberty and justice for all" seems it's more "Half Liberty & Emplty Justice"
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donidarko
I think we are doomed.
09:34 AM on 04/26/2011
Texas...worst state of the Union.
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tjconkster
Occupy the Voting Booth 2014
08:35 AM on 04/26/2011
Because they are different....you must be afraid....How RepubliCorp/Republican Tea Party perpetuate the myth...

Transgender Woman Beaten in McDonald's as Employee Videotapes Attack
http://www.alternet.org/newsandviews/article/570758/transgender_woman_beaten_in_mcdonald%27s_as_employee_videotapes_attack/#paragraph4
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CLSayles
A spoon full of sugar for all...
07:45 AM on 04/26/2011
Wow!! I'm waiting for the law to bring back hip-revolvers and horses downtown. They are slowly turning back the hands...
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Maxcat19
Galatians 6:7-9
07:17 AM on 04/26/2011
Republicans, They want Government to stay out of our pockets, but move a few inches over and it's perfectly alright.
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lulubelle1956
07:17 AM on 04/26/2011
Let's strip away the oil industries' rights to tax breaks, deductions and credits first.
Boopsie2008
Hold the Vision-Trust the Process: Obama/Biden
07:04 AM on 04/26/2011
Texas legislators seem bound and determined to find somebody to hate.
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Candide33
I heart Bernie Sanders
05:49 AM on 04/26/2011
Do repubs ever actually work? Seems like all they ever do is sit around and gossip about what other people are doing. They can't mind their own business to save their lives!
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lulubelle1956
07:17 AM on 04/26/2011
They do more than gossip. . .see various marriages/extra-marital affairs of all GOP/TP candidates.
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Kimiko Austin-Rijs
American/European
03:59 AM on 04/26/2011
I don't understand how repealing the rights of others is to any worthy edification. Why on earth do people get up in arms about who someone else is? I mean it is not like it is "them". Why do they want to bother people that are not bothering anyone else?
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ZeraLee
A Citizen's View from Main Street
03:51 AM on 04/26/2011
So if you're born a man, then surgically change to a woman, you can legally marry another woman because it would still be one "man" and one woman.
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07:10 AM on 04/26/2011
Heh - the GOP probably hasn't thought that far ahead.
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Marlene Bomer
I'm a transsexual lesbian... so?
07:36 AM on 04/26/2011
Ohio and Texas do have *legal* lesbian marriages between male-to-female transsexuals and cisgender women!
03:08 AM on 04/26/2011
'we want the government out of our lives, but we want to use it to tell YOU GUYS that you can't do that'
I don't understand that mentality...
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55BelAir
02:09 AM on 04/26/2011
Sure, why focus on jobs and the like...
01:40 AM on 04/26/2011
Texas is actually full of alot of good people. Unfortunately, they are slightly outnumbered by Republican wingnuts.
03:09 AM on 04/26/2011
It is their terrible education system.
11:12 PM on 04/26/2011
Actually.. No. My students (I live in a suburb of Dallas) are almost 100% for the right for gays to marry, etc. It's the old rural people who have never encountered someone different than them.
01:34 AM on 04/26/2011
As a man in Texas who is a transman, I really appreciate all the support here from most. It helps to know there are some good hearted and tolerant people out there amongst all the hatred and ignorance.