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Illinois Looking Toward Marriage Equality

Posted: 01/13/12 04:22 AM ET

A group of Illinois legislators and civil rights organizations has started holding meetings to strategize on moving from civil unions to full marriage equality for LGBT couples. Illinois state representatives Greg Harris, Deb Mell, Ann Williams, Kelly Cassidy, and Sara Feigenholtz, and state senator Heather Steans, as well as groups like Equality Illinois, Log Cabin Republicans, the ACLU, Lambda Legal, The Civil Rights Agenda, and the Human Rights Campaign, are looking at how to move forward legislatively on marriage rights for same-sex couples.

Representative Greg Harris told the Windy City Times that the legislation wouldn't be introduced until 2013 at the earliest, and he gave some insight into how difficult it could be: "I do not delude myself into thinking this will be an easy process. But we need to take the first step. We have to be ready to stand up and defend the gains that we've made and to look toward the next steps."

The road ahead for marriage equality in the state does indeed look difficult, but not impossible.

Among the strongest opposition is the highly influential and politically powerful Catholic Church. In September the Catholic Conference of Illinois announced the formation of a "Defense of Marriage" department, whose sole purpose is to fight any future attempts to legalize same-sex marriage in the state. The stated goal of the department is to protect the "stature of the nuclear family -- which provides love, stability and confidence to children, as well as organization to society." The "Defense of Marriage" department has already started throwing out incendiary (and scientifically unfounded) claims about the "dangers" of marriage equality: "The effects [of same-sex marriage] are evident in the performance of children in school, in truancy and crime rates, and in an ailing culture that too often values feeling good over self-giving, and individuality over the common good."

The Catholic Church's hostility toward equal rights for LGBT people in the state has indeed been ratcheting up. We've seen the drawn-out legal battle between Catholic Charities and the state of Illinois over the organization's state-funded adoption and foster care contracts, and their refusal to grant those services to same-sex couples in civil unions, which ended in a loss for the church. This has led to a growing tension between the church hierarchy and advancing civil rights. Cardinal Francis George of Chicago recently compared the city's gay pride parade to the Ku Klux Klan, sparking outrage, protests, and an eventual half-apology from the cardinal. Even Pope Benedict himself has continued the attacks on marriage equality, saying this week that gay marriage was a threat to the traditional family that undermined "the future of humanity itself."

With well-organized and well-funded opposition like this, pushing for legislation allowing same-sex couples to marry will be difficult. But there are concrete examples that can be used to educate the public and legislature about the basic unfairness of the separate and unequal status that civil unions create for gay couples in the state.

The previously mentioned fight between Catholic Charities and the state over the $30 million in taxpayer dollars that Catholic Charities received from the state of Illinois for foster care and adoption services was based on excluding same-sex couples in civil unions.

There was also the case of the Springfield, Ill. Joint Labor/Management Insurance Committee deciding not to cover health benefits for the civil-union partners of city employees. The committee used the different relationship status of same-sex couples and married heterosexual couples to carve out the exemption to civil-union spouses. They cited the benefits for same-sex couples being too costly, which is an argument that would never be accepted when applied to a more universally understood institution like full marriage. Public outrage eventually made them change their decision and cover all couples equally.

Perhaps the most illuminating example is the confusing decision from the Illinois Department of Revenue saying that couples in civil unions "may not file joint Illinois returns" and that the new civil unions law "did not change the Illinois income tax laws." After much pushing from legislators and the community, the department recently reversed their decision, allowing same-sex couples in civil unions to file jointly in the state. Yet this confusion within the state government itself over the law shows just how easy it is for civil unions to fall short.

These are all glaring examples of why separate is never equal and why moving toward marriage equality is vitally necessary, if difficult. Civil unions create a lower class of recognition that, while providing much-needed rights and protections, reinforces the idea that LGBT relationships are less than their heterosexual counterparts. Creating this new, separate, and different level of rights and recognition among committed couples only creates further inequity, confusion, and discord, even internally among states that seek to expand rights.

Civil unions were a first step, but never an end goal. It will be a hard fight forward against powerful and organized opposition in many forms, but it is a fight worth having.

 

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A group of Illinois legislators and civil rights organizations has started holding meetings to strategize on moving from civil unions to full marriage equality for LGBT couples. Illinois state repres...
A group of Illinois legislators and civil rights organizations has started holding meetings to strategize on moving from civil unions to full marriage equality for LGBT couples. Illinois state repres...
 
 
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
EmmaDarian
All in all, I'm loving every rise and fall (RHCP)
11:06 AM on 02/04/2012
"In September the Catholic Conference of Illinois announced the formation of a "Defense of Marriage" department, whose sole purpose is to fight any future attempts to legalize same-sex marriage in the state. "

They say they're the public voice of the Catholic Church. Are they tax-exempt. I know the church is, but is this group?

And I wonder why their "Defense of Marriage" includes no effort to change the laws as they apply to divorce, something Jesus actually bothered to condemn over and over, except in two circumstances. How come they cherrypick?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NWBrunette
Blessed Girl
10:55 AM on 02/04/2012
Go Illinois. Equal rights for ALL!
01:16 PM on 01/17/2012
Since we (Illinois) just enacted same sex civil unions, I would have hoped that this issue would go away. I guss I was wrong. Since I am sick and tired of hearing about it (from both sides), I have an idea. Let's have a state referendum. On one side, we allow gay marriage. If more than 1/2 the people agree, it will be allowed. If on the other hand it is defeated, we eleminate civil unions and don't allow gay marriage, ever. I don't really care. I just don't want to hear about if any more.
01:19 PM on 01/18/2012
The majority should NEVER be allowed to vote on the rights of the minority...
01:44 PM on 01/18/2012
Using that logic the criminals would make the laws.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
EmmaDarian
All in all, I'm loving every rise and fall (RHCP)
11:19 AM on 02/04/2012
No, civil rights issues don't "go away" until there is full equality. Just like separate water fountains and different parts of the bus didn't make the civil rights fight for blacks go away, civil unions won't make the civil rights fight for marriage equality go away. If you want it all to go away, because other people's rights are clearly all about you, fight for marriage equality. Once full marriage equality is the law of the land, you don't have to hear it about it anymore.

And just like those other fights, eventually, the one thing that counts wins out--the Constitution.
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ZeraLee
A Citizen's View from Main Street
03:16 AM on 01/15/2012
If the Catholic Conference has organized a department for the sole purpose of political activity, then that department does not qualify for tax-exempt status.
01:20 PM on 01/18/2012
THANK YOU!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KAYLEE BURRIS
54 ,FLA ,LOVING LIFE ,TRANS, LALL
04:22 PM on 01/13/2012
wtg illinois
02:27 PM on 01/13/2012
It's time IL. Time to grow up.
Cheers, Joe Mustich, CT USA
Marrjiage Officiant * Justice of the Peace.
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BLMer
11:19 AM on 01/13/2012
It appears that traditional marriage is in most cases a failure. It seems the the Catholic Church is contraditing themselves.
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obtusegoose
aka David in Houston
10:54 AM on 01/13/2012
"The effects [of same-sex marriage] are evident in the performance of children in school, in truancy and crime rates, and in an ailing culture that too often values feeling good over self-giving, and individuality over the common good."

They must know they're on the wrong side of history when they feel their only option is to spread lies in order to win. Of course the fact that they are a religious organization speaks volumes about the hypocrisy of what they supposedly preach. The ends do not justify the means when you are intentionally harming other human beings.
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Mister Serene
Say your prayers, varmint!
11:55 AM on 01/13/2012
The heiracy of the Catholic Church still haven't learned their lesson from the Crusades and Inquisition. The only reason we don't have same sex marriage in Illinois is to appease our goofy Chicago prelate, Cardinal George, while the state takes funds away from Catholic social service agencies for unlawful discrimination.
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jacmed
71, female - whatever happened to common sense?
10:17 AM on 01/13/2012
I was born and raised in Chicago and, in view of the fact that four of our last eight Illinois governors ended up jail, I haven't been very proud of my state. But some of that pride returned when Illinois passed one of the most comprehensive civil union laws in the country. Now that so many Illinois legislators and groups are taking the next step and will be pushing for full marriage equality for the LGBT population, I'm holding my head up, smiling, and saying, "I'm proud of you, Illinois - go for it!."
chesscub
Mind of a computer, body of a walrus
09:49 AM on 01/13/2012
Illinois's own tax department shows the reason why "separate but equal" civil unions are inherently unequal.