Google – AFP, Tangi Quemener (AFP), 23 February 2013
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Zoe Smith
and Sunni Ryan at an event during the North Carolina primary on
May 14, 2012 in
Raleigh, North Carolina (Getty Images/AFP/File, Sara D. Davis)
|
WASHINGTON
— The Barack Obama administration took another step toward institutionalizing
gay marriage, formally asking the US Supreme Court to strike down a 1996 law
defining marriage exclusively as a union between a man and a woman.
The request
was contained in a legal brief filed Friday with the US court, whose nine
justices will next month review whether or not to repeal the federal Defense of
Marriage Act (DOMA), which bans marriage between homosexuals.
The
document marks the first time a president has endorsed same-sex marriage rights
before the Supreme Court.
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Richard
Blanco reads a poem during the
presidential inauguration ceremony in
Washington, DC on January 21, 2013
(AFP/File, Jewel Samad)
|
DOMA
"denies to tens of thousands of same-sex couples who are legally married
under state law an array of important federal benefits that are available to
legally married opposite-sex couples," read the brief signed by US
Solicitor General Donald Verrilli.
The case
before the Supreme Court involves Edith Windsor, a lesbian who married in
Canada in 2007 but whose spouse and partner of 40 years died. She was required
to pay more than $360,000 in federal estate taxes because she was not
considered married under DOMA.
The White
House position, however, came under fire from Republicans in the House of
Representatives.
In a brief
filed Friday, they insisted they have a legal right to defend the law in the
Supreme Court in the absence of a defense from the executive branch.
Last month,
10 US senators urged the court to uphold the act and not to recognize same-sex
marriages from other states.
![]() |
Michelle
Obama at an event co-hosted by
the Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund on
September 5, 2012 in North Carolina
(AFP, Brendan Smialowski) |
"The
time to speak was in 1996, when Congress gave careful consideration to the need
for DOMA," they argued.
The Obama
administration's decision to challenge the law comes as little surprise. Obama
has signaled on various occasions recently that he is that he is in favor of
gay marriage.
During his
second inaugural address last month, the president drew parallels between the
struggle for gay rights and the Civil Rights movement of past decades.
"Our
journey is not complete until our gay brothers and sisters are treated like
anyone else under the law, for if we are truly created equal, then surely the
love we commit to one another must be equal as well," Obama said.
He also
drew a parallel between several watershed struggles in US history: the landmark
Seneca Falls convention in 1848; the 1960s civil rights battles; and the
Stonewall riots of June 1969, which are widely seen as having launched the gay
rights movement.
Obama's
also chose gay poet Richard Blanco to read a specially composed poem at his
second inauguration.
![]() |
Rinaldo
Americo impersonates Barack
Obama in the Gay Parade on Rio de
Janeiro's Copacabana Beach on October 9, 2011 (AFP/File, Vanderlei Almeida) |
In 2012, he
became the first sitting US president to speak out in favor of gay marriage.
This past
week, the Pentagon officially extended some military benefits to same-sex
partners, but said services like medical coverage would not be offered to gay
troops' spouses because of DOMA.
"One
of the legal limitations to providing all benefits at this time is the Defense
of Marriage Act, which is still the law of the land," Defense Secretary
Leon Panetta said.
About
17,000 same-sex couples in the armed forces were affected by the decision,
including 5,600 active duty service members.
The effect
of the DOMA law is to ban gay marriage at the federal level. After victories in
several local referendums however, it is now legal in nine out of 50 US states
and in Washington DC.
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