http://www.press-citizen.com/article/20120510/OPINION03/305100027/Marriage-right-under-U-S-Constitution?odyssey=nav|head
On Wednesday, Barack Obama became the first sitting U.S. president to say he supported same-sex marriage.
In an interview with ABC News, Obama was clear that he wasn’t just talking about civil unions. (He already said he supported such unions as a means of granting gay and lesbian couples many of the rights and privileges extended automatically to heterosexual married couples.)
But Obama, unfortunately, was equally clear that he was speaking from his own personal conviction and that he still believes the broader policy/political question is best left for the individual states to answer.
We’re glad the president, after completing his personal “evolution” on this question, has come to the conclusion that gay and lesbian citizens deserve the right to marry rather than be forced to settle for some second-class, civil union status. But we disagree with Obama’s conclusion that the question of such a basic civil right is best left to the states to decide individually.
After all, none of the main arguments against marriage equality can pass constitutional muster.
• Argument No. 1:
“Same-sex marriage” is an oxymoron because “marriage” is by definition a relationship between one man and one woman. Besides belittling the main issues at the heart of case, such a semantic trick also ignores the history of sexual and gender discrimination faced by same-sex couples and their children.
• Argument No. 2:
It’s in the government’s interest to ensure that children are raised in the healthiest environment possible, i.e. a dual-gender, two-parent household. Even if state or federal governments could prove that a dual-gender, two-parent household is the most ideal environment for raising a child, such a fact doesn’t make a case against denying same-sex parents the right to marry.
• Argument No. 3:
If the government were to recognize same-sex marriage, it would undermine “procreation” as being the central component of what defines marriage. Such a statement seems far more culturally than constitutionally based. And, as such, it’s time to recognize that we as a society have come to the conclusion that the basis of marriage is not procreation, but the relationship between the couple seeking to be married. It is that relationship that some couples want to develop and grow by having children — either through biological means, adoption or artificial insemination. But there are many couples — dual-gender and same-sex — who, for a number of reasons, decide to marry despite the fact that they will never procreate.
We’re glad that, three years ago, the Iowa Supreme Court saw through the weakness of such arguments and ruled that the state’s Defense of Marriage Act violated the equal protection and due process features of the Iowa Constitution. That ruling extended our state’s long tradition of recognizing the rights and freedoms of its citizens. (And we opined Wednesday that the three former justices ousted as a result of that decision fully deserved their recent John F. Kennedy Profiles in Courage Awards.)
But that state supreme court ruling could be overturned, of course, if two consecutive General Assemblies and a majority of Iowans voted to amend the state constitution.
Like state bans on interracial marriages in the past, this is an issue that eventually needs to be settled on the federal level.
We’re glad the nation’s first multi-racial president has completed his personal “evolution” on this issue. And we’re proud that Iowa has proven ahead of the curve when it comes to recognizing civil rights for its gay and lesbian citizens.
But we’ll be even prouder when marriage equality is recognized as a basic civil right throughout the nation.