By Hope Hodge on 6.30.09 @ 6:08AM
In a battle between civil-rights bureaucrats and black churches,
D.C. residents seek a vote on same-sex marriage.
Last week, a Washington, D.C. election board rejected a ballot
initiative to overturn the city council's recent vote in favor of
same-sex marriage. A coalition of traditional marriage supporters
quickly sprang into action, appealing the board's decision in the
district Superior Court to keep their petition alive. If they
succeed -- a ruling could come as early as today -- the brunt of
their work is ahead of them: they must collect 30,000 signatures
(5 percent of the D.C. voting population) by a rapidly
approaching deadline. If they fail, the nation's capital will
begin to recognize same-sex marriage after July 6.
The D.C. election board cited a decades-old human rights law to
declare unequivocally that a popular vote on marriage is
tantamount to a breach of civil rights, a conclusion that many
lawmakers and courts have hinted at, but few have spelled out.
According to the board, the 1977 Human Rights Act requires that
"the initiative and referendum process would never be used to
interfere with basic civil and human rights."
Supporters of same-sex marriage -- and even some nominal
opponents -- are not shy about invoking civil-rights language.
Speaking of the federal Defense of Marriage Act, President Obama
recently declared, "It's discriminatory, it interferes with
states' rights, and it's time we overturned it." New York Gov.
David Paterson has branded his bill redefining marriage as a
civil-rights struggle as well.
A number of D.C. residents, particularly within the black
community, believe that this framing of the issue obscures some
crucial social questions. Bishop Harry Jackson, senior pastor of
Hope Christian Church, filed the referendum petition and has
objected strongly to the characterization of marriage as a civil
rights issue. "Marriage is not a civil right in my view, because
historically society has sought to put boundaries around it," he
told TAS.
For example, he said, near relatives have always been prohibited
from engaging in marriage unions, because of the detrimental
effect such unions might have on society. Likewise, relationships
involving more than two partners, such as polygamy or polyamory,
have never been granted recognition by the government even though
advocates of such lifestyles have pursued it.
"I think that the sociological problems of this are what make it
not a civil right," Jackson said. "If you change the definition
of marriage, you have to change the definition of family. If you
change the definition of family, you have to change the
definition of parenting and its ramifications." This raises
critical questions, he said, because of the paucity of data
points and time-tested study proving the legitimacy of gay
marriage as an appropriate parenting alternative, for one thing,
and societal norm, for another.
Moreover, a number of petition signers find that the term "civil
rights," like "marriage," loses value when it loses a certain
vital degree of specificity. Dale Wafer, a signer of the D.C.
marriage petition and pastor of the Harvest Church, said that as
an African American, he found the term "highly offensive" when
applied to a group of people who enjoy social and political
influence and may even lay claim to a broad cross-section of the
benefits to which a marriage would entitle them, a situation far
different from that of African Americans who endured
disenfranchisement and physical threats and abuse during the
civil rights movement of the 1960s. Wafer indicated other issues
that should take precedence in this debate, including morality
and long-term social outcomes.
Even some thoughtful supporters of same-sex marriage believe
there is more to the issue than civil rights. Jonathan Rauch
wrote in the New Republic three years ago, "Advocates
who say that gay marriage is just a matter of civil rights are
wrong. It certainly is a civil rights issue, just as it is a
moral issue; but it is not only a civil rights or moral issue. It
is also a family policy issue -- the most important family policy
issue now facing the country."
Unlike Rauch, however, most supporters of traditional marriage do
not believe same-sex marriage will be good for children. Jackson
maintains that his coalition will pursue "what is best for kids,
not merely admissible." The debate is far from over, so why
exclude the voters?
Alliance Defense Fund attorney Brian Raum told TAS that
Washington, D.C. demonstrates the disconnect between voters and
government officials on the marriage question. With California's
Proposition 8 and over a dozen similar ballot initiatives, the
people have repeatedly affirmed the idea that marriage is between
a man and a woman (though polls in a few states have recorded
pluralities in favor of same-sex marriage). Based on this
history, Raum said it is important to let the initiative process
go forward.
"The referendum and initiative process in D.C. and other places
is designed to keep the legislature in check," Raum said. "When
the courts or the legislature do something outside the will of
the people, the referendum process enables them to step in."
topics:
Marriage Laws, Gay Marriage