It's time to notify your Massachusetts senator and representative . . .
Yes, it's time to snail-mail and/or telephone and/or email and/or FAX your Massachusetts state representative and senator. Help your Massachusetts neighbors and relatives. Don't allow discrimination to appear in the Massachusetts constitution against them! The Massachusetts constitution was the first constitution in the entire world. John Adams, its author, would think it unconscionable to place discrimination in his constitution against residents of Massachusetts. Be aware the discriminatory anti-gay amendment is up again for grabs in the Massachusetts house and senate in 2005.
Take a moment, please, to read and analyze the process to amendment the Massachusetts constitution, then the
Boston Globe article on the status of the anti-gay amendment as of Tuesday, January 18, 2005.
A brief overview:
1. It takes two years, back-to-back, of the combined Massachusetts house and senate (a constitutional convention) to pass the
exact same bill without any changes to it, first year to second year, and then that wording (as passed in two consecutive years) is placed as a voter's question on the following (3rd) year ballot for an up or down public vote. Thus, it takes three years with the same language of the various votes to amend the Massachusetts constitution. John Adams meant it to be pensively thought-provoking and difficult to amend his Massachusetts constitution. So where are things so far as to "gay marriage" in Massachusetts?
2. So far the
Goodridge v. Massachusetts Department of Public Health, 440 Mass. 309, 798 NE.2d 941 (2003) decision, which held it was unconstitutional under the Massachusetts constitution to withhold the laws of marriage from same-sex couples, has gone along smoothly without any hitches.
In other words, the sky over Massachusetts has not fallen. In law, your Massachusetts same-sex neighbors and relatives have been able to marry and protect each other and their children. And, any Massachusetts religious institution may continue to
refuse to marry same-sex couples because that right is protected by the federal constitution's first amendment Freedom of Religion and Separation of Church and State, as well as similar protections in the Massachusetts constitution regarding religious institutions.
3. In the spring of last year (2004),
Senate President Robert E. Travaglini, D, Boston (who replaced ex-Senator Tom Birmingham, D, Chelsea) convened a constitutional convention of the joint legislature. The first step was reached to amendment the Massachusetts convention. The proposed amendment which grants marriage to opposite-sex couples only and civil unions to same-sex couples passed by a mere 4 votes in March of 2004.
4. However, since then things have changed somewhat in the Massachusetts legislature. Massachusetts is in a new legislative year, 2005. State legislative members have come and gone -- voted out, voted in, retired, resigned. For example, House Speaker
Thomas Finneran, D, Mattapan is gone. He "retired." He was anti-gay (anything), frankly. Finneran has been replaced as House Speaker by former majority leader
Salvatore F. DiMasi, D, East Boston, who appears to
not want to place discriminatory language against gays in the Massachusetts constitution. Yes, it appears the new House Speaker DiMasi is opposed to overturning the
Goodridge decision by amending the Massachusetts constitution.
5. So what happens next? Will the new President of the Senate DiMasi convene a Massachusetts constitutional convention in 2005? If so, are there enough votes to forestall the second step to a discriminatory amendment to the Massachusetts constitution? Is
Senate Minority Leader, Brian P. Lees, R, East Longmeadow, who co-sponsored the anti-gay amendment in the 2004 convention, going to change his mind in 2005 and vote against the amendment? Will
Senate Majority Leader Frederick E. Berry, D, Peabody, who voted against various proposed amendments in 2004 but for the final proposed amendment, change his mind as against
any amendment at this convention?
The Boston Globe in a front page (albeit, below the fold)
article on Tuesday, January 18, 2005, describes "what may happen next" and with variables thereof tossed in as well.
Your DU voice should be heard! This Massachusetts vote is going to be close. Don't allow discrimination in our state constitution. Notify your state representative and your state senator. Tell him/her that you do not want any amendment to our state constitution. Tell him/her that you do not want discrimination in our state constitution. You can find your Massachusetts state senator and representative and his/her snail-mail address, email address, fax number and regular telephone number, if available, at this highlighted
LINK, left-hand column, enter your 9-digit zip code or follow instructions "Don't Know Your 9-digit Zip Code?"
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