This Los Angeles Times story about California Chief
Justice Ronald George pretty much dispels the notion that the gay
marriage ruling had much to do with applying the state's
constitution and written law. We hear about George's gay friends,
his comparison of the same-sex marriage debate to the civil-rights
movement of the 1960s, his conviction that "there are times when
doing the right thing means not playing it safe." All of this would
be perfectly legitimate, even admirable, if George were a
legislator. But he's not a legislatior. He's a judge.
For all the legal arguments judges in Massachusetts, Hawaii,
Vermont, California and elsewhere have raised on behalf of
judicially imposed same-sex marriage, their decisions ultimately
hinge on policy questions: the fundamental purpose of marriage,
questions of legal recognition for same-sex couples, the link
between marriage and childbearing, and whether we're ultimately
talking about the definition of marriage or the exclusion of some
group of people from the institution of marriage. There are
certainly arguments to be made for the pro-gay-marriage positions
on each of these policy questions. But these questions are best
left to legislators, not judges.
UPDATE: Stephen Chapman, who supports same-sex marriage as a
matter of policy, has a similar take on the California
decision. And while I'm linking to stuff, here's a TCS
Daily piece I wrote a while back warning
against overly broad defense-of-marriage amendments that impinge on
freedom of contract.
topics:
Constitution, Law