By W. James Antle, III on 11.18.04 @ 12:06AM
One year after the Massachusetts imposition democratic process emerges the winner.
It was a year ago that the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
discovered that the traditional understanding of marriage -- as in
"I now pronounce you man and wife" -- violated the state
constitution and was a moral atrocity on the order of Jim Crow. The
designations husband and wife were duly replaced on state marriage
licenses with Party A and Party B back in May. This anniversary is
sure to occasion smug op-ed pieces celebrating the fact that the
sky
hasn't fallen yet, but it's doubtful that the social
engineering Chief Justice Margaret Marshall will receive too many
bouquets and bottles of champagne in the mail.
Liberals who would otherwise admire her handiwork just aren't in
a very celebratory mood. The Goodridge v. Department of
Health decision that brought same-sex nuptials to the Bay
State produced a national backlash. Supporters of gay marriage went
0 for 11 on state referenda on the issue; defense-of-marriage
amendments helped bring out voters who sank Democratic candidates
all over the country, arguably including presidential nominee John
Kerry of Massachusetts.
Many of the election postmortems vigorously contest this last
point. The newly minted conventional wisdom is that social
conservatives weren't that big a factor -- why, George W. Bush
didn't do that much better with evangelicals and those exit-poll
respondents could have thought that "moral values" meant anything.
This (recent) historical revisionism isn't entirely without merit.
The contention that gay marriage was the biggest issue in the
presidential campaign and Gavin Newsom was this year's George
McGovern was always a bit overblown. But so are the reappraisals of
this meme. Most voters know darned well what pollsters mean when
they talk about "family values" or "moral values," and it was
people who adhere to such traditional values -- including the
belief that marriage is between a man and a woman -- who provided
the raw numbers the Republicans needed to counter highly mobilized
Democratic constituents who according to most existing turnout
models should have otherwise been able to throw this president out
of office.
And yet in Massachusetts, where same-sex weddings are already
going on, the marriage debate wasn't the dominant election story.
Legislators who voted against a state constitutional amendment to
reverse Goodridge were not punished. The fate of that
amendment, which needs to pass another round before it can be
placed on the ballot in 2006, is uncertain now that Thomas Finneran
has left the legislature and been replaced by a less socially
conservative house speaker. Congressional candidate and traditional
marriage advocate Ron
Crews, far from scoring an upset, was in fact trounced.
But this hasn't stopped the wailing about the electoral
successes of marital traditionalists elsewhere in the country. One
e-mail that found its way into my inbox likened the results to
Kristallnacht, claiming that "every anti-gay amendment that passed
may as well have been accompanied by the sounds of angry mobs and
shattering glass." Unhinged, but catchier than declaring the death
of enlightenment.
One eloquent proponent of same-sex matrimony tried to put votes
reaffirming traditional marriage into perspective. Jonathan Rauch,
writing in the National Journal, argued that in fact "60
percent of voters supported gay marriage or civil unions
(predominantly the latter)." Very much predominantly the latter.
But in pointing out that at least some of people voting against gay
marriage supported some form of civil unions, Rauch misses an
important reason for the apparent disconnect.
THE FACT IS, FOR MOST people marriage is not an expression of
hatred against homosexuals. The existing definition of marriage as
a union between one man and one woman was not formulated to
persecute or discriminate against gays and lesbians. Most people
who oppose a redefinition of marriage are not engaged in a
conspiracy to deny gays inheritance and hospital visitation rights.
There are millions of people who oppose same-sex marriage yet bear
no ill will toward their fellow Americans who are homosexuals.
Instead many of these people voted for the idea that ideally
children should have both fathers and mothers, that there is
something unique about the arrangement syndicated columnist Maggie
Gallagher has described as "men and women coming together to make
the future happen" worth upholding as a shared social norm. A high
percentage of these same people would oppose policies that
deliberately make gay and lesbian couples' lives harder, and indeed
favor offering them some benefits associated with so-called civil
unions as long as it isn't simply marriage without the name.
Instead of demonizing these people and enlisting the courts to
bully them, maybe gay activists would do well to appeal to their
sense of fairness and try to change their minds.
An even larger number of Americans with disparate views on the
subject of homosexuality object to the idea that shared social
norms can be revamped unilaterally by unelected, unaccountable
judges. They have voted for the idea that what we as a society
decide to recognize in law as marriage should instead be decided by
the people.
Congressman Barney Frank (D-MA) implicitly recognized the good
will of those who oppose him in the same-sex marriage debate in
comments quoted by Boston Globe columnist Jeff Jacoby:
"Showing a bit of respect for cultural values with which you
disagree is not a bad thing. Don't call people bigots and fools
just because you disagree with them."
One year after Goodridge this much is clear: If gay
marriage is ever going to be accepted by the majority in this
country, proponents are actually going to have to get their hands
dirty in democratic debate. It will certainly not happen simply
because Anthony Lewis' wife wants to shove it down our throats.
topics:
Constitution, Law, Unions