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Your view is basically correct. The voters can pass resolutions all day and all night, but if they are unconstitutional under the Federal Constitution, then they will be invalidated. There are plenty of cases where an act ratified by the voters has been struck down as unconstitutional.
I'm wondering how the defendants can show that they are harmed by gay marriage. In order to have standing to sue, you have to personally show that you are harmed by a law. Now the plaintiffs have presented testimony showing they are personally harmed. The defendants' saying that gay marriage hurts straight marriage have basically no argument.
There are different classes of people that have Constitutional protections under various tests. Under the right to privacy, marriage, procreation, abortion and contraception are all protected. In Loving v. Virginia, an interracial couple sued and the law against interracial marriage in Virginia was overturned. I believe that gay marriage is exactly analagous to interracial marriage.
There are new protected classes that come about due to the changing attitudes of society. When I graduated from law school 25 years ago (YIKES!) there was no mention of gay rights. Now, people are saying that gay people should be protected with respect to marriage. And those of us who never thought of them as a protected class are saying, "DUH!".
Protected classes are a fixed characteristic, such as:race, gender, ethnicity, religion, national origin, familial status, disability, military veterans.
I believe that homosexuality will be considered fixed if the courts accept scientific research.
The problems with outlawing gay marriage are this: 1)the law in CA said that gay marriages performed by the state during a certain time frame were still valid, and that others were not. This is an ex post facto law, a law that goes back and rules whether past events were legal or not. That is unconstitutional.
2)There is the full faith and credit clause. This states that each state respects the laws of the other states. Example: You get married in one state, move to another state, and your marriage is recognized as valid. Because of people moving from legal gay marriage jurisdictions to illegal ones, I knew this problem would come up. A family court judge in Dallas has ruled that she can grant a gay couple a divorce, who were married in a state where it was legal, and moved to Texas, where gay marriage is illegal. I see no problem with jurisdiction there. Eventually, gay marriage will have to be legal in all 50 states because of the full faith and credit clause.
Quoting from Wikipedia: The Full Faith and Credit Clause has been noted for its application involving orders of protection, for which the clause was expounded upon by the Violence Against Women Act; child support, for which the enforcement of the clause was spelled out in the Federal Full Faith and Credit for Child Support Orders Act (28 U.S.C. § 1738B); and its possible application to same-sex marriage, civil union, and domestic partnership laws and cases, as well as the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and the proposed Federal Marriage Amendment.
Between 1996 and 2004, 39 states passed their own laws and constitutional amendments, sometimes called "mini DOMAs," which define marriage as consisting solely of opposite-sex couples. As well, most of these "mini DOMAs" explicitly prohibit the state from honoring same-sex marriages performed in other states and countries. Conversely, several states have legalized same-sex marriage, either legislatively or by state supreme court judgment.
In August 2007, a federal appeals court held that, "Oklahoma's adoption amendment is unconstitutional in its refusal to recognize final adoption orders of other states that permit adoption by same-sex couples."<16>
3)Equal protection clause under the 14th Amendment(applies to state actions). The Court did not apply strict scrutiny, by that name, until the 1967 case of Loving v. Virginia. Strict scrutiny test: Strict scrutiny (if the law categorizes on the basis of race or national origin or infringes a fundamental right): the law is unconstitutional unless it is "narrowly tailored" to serve a "compelling" government interest. In addition, there cannot be a "less restrictive" alternative available to achieve that compelling interest.
I don't think there is a compelling government interest in stopping gay marriage. The opponents of gay marriage have been unable to cite any damage to straight marriage caused by gay marriage. I think the compelling interest would be in the opposite direction, to encourage stable families.
4)Due process clause under the 14th Amendment(Applies to state actions). More on the Penumbra of the right to privacy which I mentioned above:
Borrowing from Wikipedia: Privacy, which is not explicitly mentioned in the Constitution, was at issue in Griswold v. Connecticut (1965), wherein the Court held that criminal prohibition of contraceptive devices for married couples violated federal, judicially enforceable privacy rights. The right to contraceptives was found in what the Court called the "penumbras", or shadowy edges, of certain amendments that arguably refer to certain privacy rights. The penumbra-based rationale of Griswold has since been discarded; the Supreme Court now uses the Due Process Clause as a basis for various unenumerated privacy rights. Although it has never been the majority view, some have argued that the Ninth Amendment (addressing unenumerated rights) could be used as a source of fundamental judicially enforceable rights, including a general right to privacy, as discussed by Justice Goldberg concurring in Griswold.<37>
5)Privileges and Immunities Clause: The Privileges and Immunities Clause (U.S. Constitution, Article IV, Section 2, Clause 1, also known as the Comity Clause) prevents a state from treating citizens of other states in a discriminatory manner, with regard to basic civil rights. The clause also embraces a right to travel, so that a citizen of one state can go and enjoy privileges and immunities in any other state. This is pretty similar to Full Faith and Credit.
Disclaimer: I do not have a law license, and I made C's in law school. However, I grew up in a law office and was a legal secretary, and later a court reporter (stenographer) for quite a few years, so I have seen a few thousand trials even though only a few were in Federal Court.
Summary: Gay rights are going to eventually be accepted in all fifty states because of these clauses.
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