Source:
The Star-LedgerSix same-sex couples today will ask the New Jersey Supreme Court to allow gays to marry, their attorney said.
"Second-class status isn't marriage. That's why we're returning to court," said Hayley Gorenberg, deputy legal director for Lambda Legal, which is filing the motion asking the state's highest court to revisit the matter of gay marriage.
The Supreme Court ruled in 2006 in Lewis vs. Harris that committed same-sex couples deserve the same rights and obligations as married people. Later that year, state lawmakers legalized civil unions, which were to confer all the benefits of marriage on same-sex couples without using the term "marriage."
But gay and lesbian couples and advocacy group Garden State Equality have said the civil union law has not worked and they continued to seek a law giving them the right to marry.
Read more:
http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/03/six_same-sex_couples_ask_njs_t.html
We've got a pretty solid case to finally win marriage equality here in NJ. The NJ Supreme Court found that denying equal rights to same-sex couples was unconstitutional and then tasked the legislature with the job of figuring out what to call our committed relationships.
The legislature chose civil unions.
But even though we recently lost our legislative battle for marriage equality, our lobbying efforts paid off big time. We got both the Democrats
and Republicans to admit that civil unions
do not work, essentially admitting that they failed to address what the Supreme Court had tasked them to do.
As long as Christie doesn't get a chance to tinker with the Court, a decision will be forthcoming sooner, rather than later. After speaking with a (gasp!) Republican legislator, he shared that after Christie's swearing in, a few of the Justices told him that they have been following our fight very closely, and were eager to hear our case.