NOM BLOG

Monthly Archives: May 2011

MN Op-Ed: Traditional Marriage is Not Bigotry

Jeff Davis, the president of Minnesota Majority, writes in the Star Tribune:

... there's nothing bigoted about preserving marriage as the union of one man and one woman. Marriage is a unique institution that brings men and women together. Only the sexual union of men and women can produce children.

Whatever one thinks about homosexual relationships, none of them can produce children. It is in the state's interest to channel the unique sexual energy of men and women into marriage so that any children produced by those sexual relationships have the best opportunity to be raised by a married mother and father.

... Bishop Bob Battle, a veteran of the civil-rights movement, recently testified at a hearing on the Minnesota marriage amendment bill that "gay marriage advocates have attempted to hijack the civil-rights movement and make same-sex marriage into a civil right. I know what civil rights are, and this is not one of them."

The [Star Tribune's] editorial blithely claims that homosexual marriage will have no impact on anyone in Minnesota outside of the same-sex couples involved. Yet legal experts on both sides of the divide agree that the issue has profound impacts on society.

...  To the extent that civil rights are at all involved in the marriage debate, it is because the right to vote is our most important civil right, as the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. once famously observed.

It's time to have a vigorous debate about same-sex marriage. It's time to let the people vote.

ACTION: Tell Your Legislators to Support the MN Marriage Amendment Today!

MN Columnist: Big Changes Like Redefining Marriage Should be Decided by the People, Not the Courts

Phil Araoz is a Rochester physician who writes a monthly column for the Minnesota Post-Bulletin. He writes in a "both sides" exchange about why he thinks the people of Minnesota deserve to have their say:

Until now, the societal subsidy that is “marriage” existed mainly to promote stability for creating and raising children. You can see why that’s important when looking at areas with low rates of marriage. You find high rates of single motherhood and poverty, especially child poverty. The idea that marriage’s societal good is procreation is also behind most of the existing restrictions on marriage (Prohibitions on close relatives marrying, for example).

The alternative view is that marriage is mainly for love, specifically sexual love. Sounds sweet. But why should society (you and I) subsidize sexual love for its own sake? What societal good does it support? Remember that most of marriage’s practical benefits (hospital visitation, inheritance) can be obtained through other legal means, so this isn’t about those things. It’s about changing what marriage gives to society. Should it continue to be mainly stability for children? Or it should it be mainly happiness for adults?

Mind you, society has been moving toward happiness for adults for a long time. Look what it’s gotten us: A high divorce rate, dropping birth rate, more and more families whose members all move in different directions. Of course, none of those things have been caused by same-sex marriage, but the world view behind them is the same.

Araoz's conclusion:

In the end, the system best for society will emerge. But in the meantime, understand that severing the link between marriage and procreation is a big shift, one that people understand instinctively. Changes like this should at minimum be decided by voters.

Incidentally, the other side of this "both sides" exchange, Leah Nelson, offers this argument for her view that Minnesotans should not be able to vote on marriage:

"Do we really want to be on the list of small-minded states 30 years down the road?"

Wait, so the majority of American states are "small-minded"?!

ACTION: Tell Your Legislators to Support the MN Marriage Amendment Today!

URGENT MARRIAGE ALERT: Tell your legislators to support MN Marriage Amendment today!

Reports indicate that the Minnesota Marriage Amendment may be voted on in both the house and senate as early as tomorrow!

If you haven't yet emailed your state senator and representative, please do it right now.

Our opponents are doing everything they can to discredit the amendment effort and to divide the Republican majority. Tell your legislators that you care about marriage and it's time they let the people vote!

Let Minnesotans Vote for Marriage!

The next few days will likely decide whether Minnesota voters finally get to be heard—or whether politicians cave to a small but vocal minority that desperately wants to limit the voice of the people.

We need your help today! Please send an email to your state senator and state representative, urging them to vote yes on the Minnesota Marriage Amendment.

Here's what you can do:

Please – if you haven't yet sent your message, do it right now. And if you have, forward this on to three more friends who can help protect marriage in Minnesota today.

AP on NOM's $1.5M Commitment to Marriage in NY

The Associated Press reports on our expanded efforts in New York:

Opponents of gay marriage in New York got national funding Tuesday as lobbyists, clergy, Gov. Andrew Cuomo and legislators head for a six-week legalization showdown with global implications.

The $1.5 million pledged by the Washington-based National Organization for Marriage comes with the organization's expertise after recent success against same-sex marriage bills in Maryland, Rhode Island and in a New York congressional primary...

"It's become quite clear in recent days in New York that Gov. Cuomo and same-sex marriage advocates are targeting a select number of Democrat state senators, as well as some Republicans, in their desperate attempt to coerce legislators to support their agenda," said Brian Brown, president of the National Organization for Marriage.

Brown said "those courageous" legislators will have a stronger supporter.

The group takes credit for derailing a gay marriage bill in Maryland, which was sent back to committee in March, and blocking a bill in Rhode Island this year.

"We expect the same to happen in New York," Brown said...

The National Organization for Marriage pledged to spend $500,000 for advertising and lobbying in Albany. It also plans to spend $1 million to fund and oppose candidates in the 2012 legislative elections.

NOM Launches $500,000 Ad Campaign in New York (Includes Video); Pledges $1 Million in 2012 Elections

Here is video of the ad that will begin airing soon:

Nation’s Leading Pro-Marriage Group says it will Spend $1 million to Primary any Republican who Votes to Redefine Marriage and Defend Democrats who Vote to Protect Marriage

WASHINGTON - The National Organization of Marriage today announced that it is spending $500,000 on a new ad and lobbying campaign to oppose same-sex marriage in New York and will spend $1 million to support Democratic State Legislators who cast their votes to defend the traditional definition of marriage and oppose any Republican Legislators who vote to redefine marriage.

“It’s become quite clear in recent days in New York that Governor Cuomo and same-sex marriage advocates are targeting a select number of Democrat state Senators, as well as some Republicans in their desperate attempt to coerce legislators to support their agenda,” said Brian Brown, President of NOM.  “We want to be sure those courageous Democrats and Republicans who cast their vote of conscience in favor of traditional marriage will have a strong supporter if the radical gay activists come after them in their next election.”

"In Maryland and Rhode Island we just won great victories for marriage.  Our opponents tried to claim that same-sex marriage was inevitable in both of those states.  They were wrong,” said Brian Brown, NOM’s president.  “Once our message got out and legislators heard from their constituents, same-sex marriage was stopped dead in its tracks.  We expect the same to happen in New York."

NOM pledged to vigorously oppose in their primaries any Republicans who support gay marriage.  NOM previously played a leading role in defeating former Representative Dede Scozzafava in her Congressional primary bid. NOM has a long history of defeating Republicans who support same-sex marriage. They led the campaign to defeat Bill Binnie in New Hampshire and Tom Campbell in California US Senate primaries last year, and defeated legislators in Minnesota and New Hampshire who supported same-sex marriage there.  Last year NOM helped elect nearly 150 state legislators around the country. NOM also was the largest donor in the successful effort to oust the Supreme Court justices who imposed same-sex marriage on Iowa.

Brown stated, "Tim Gill and other pro-gay marriage millionaires are funneling money into New York to sell a false bill of goods.  They failed in the last election to flip the legislature, and now they're trying to convince legislators that they somehow have something to fear if they do the right thing and vote to protect marriage. NOM has defeated every pro-gay marriage Republican we’ve ever targeted, and we’re quite confident we will do so in New York, should that become necessary.”

Rep Kriesel's Staffer Threatens Tax Exemptions for Churches who Advocate for Marriage

In Minnesota a Catholic priest contacted his Representative - John Kriesel [R-Cottage Grove] - urging him to withdraw his opposition to allowing the people to vote on marriage. Here's the snide response the priest received from a Kriesel staffer:

Mr. Echert, 

I would like to respectfully remind you that the Internal Revenue Service frowns upon churches and religious organizations devoting time to influencing legislation. Your admission of the commencement of a politically involved "campaign" will probably violate several state and federal tax provisions.

The priest writes in his parish bulletin that "Representative Kriesel stands by this response and stated that he does not care if this exchange is made public..."

Churches and other charitable groups may spend up to 10 percent of their budget on lobbying, and speaking up for moral issues generally they can do in an unlimited way. What would have happened if churches were disallowed from speaking out against slavery, abortion or civil rights?

Moreover Catholic priests, like everyone else, are U.S. citizens and have every right to contact their legislators. Rep. Kriesel should be ashamed of himself for threatening a constituent for contacting him.

ACTION: Join our efforts to encourage Rep. Kriesel and all MN representatives to Support the Marriage Amendment! The vote could be any day!

How A 1994 Casino Tax Law Gave Iowa SSM

Bill Brown has practiced law for 30 years, and currently serves as the Chair of the Board of Directors of the Iowa Association of Business and Industry, Iowa's largest business trade association. In the Iowa Des Moines Register, he explains the unlikely origins of legalizing SSM in Iowa:

For many, it is difficult to understand how we got to the point that a court would require the state to recognize same-sex marriage. Recognition of same-sex marriage would have been unthinkable to Iowans who approved the Iowa Constitution in the 1850s. To understand how we got here, looking back into recent Iowa Supreme Court precedent is instructive.

In 1994, the Iowa Legislature passed a gambling tax system that imposed a higher tax rate on racetracks than on riverboat casinos... Naturally, the racetracks were nonplussed about paying a higher tax rate than their brethren who operated riverboats, and they went to court to declare the legislation invalid. The case found its way to the Iowa Supreme Court in 2002, and the court held the tax system to violate constitutional equal protection provisions...

The state then appealed the case to the U.S. Supreme Court, which held unanimously in its 2003 decision that Iowa's gambling tax system did not violate federal equal-protection provisions... Despite the [Supreme] court's prior statements that Iowa courts were to apply the same analysis in considering both the federal and state equal-protection claims, on remand the Iowa Supreme Court held that the tax provisions violated Iowa's equal-protection provisions.

Here's how proponents of SSM took advantage of this bad precedent set by the Iowa Supreme Court:

For proponents of same-sex marriage looking for a new legal venue in which to assert their claims, this was manna from heaven. If the Iowa courts would find a taxing statute such as this in violation of equal protection, surely they would be even more sympathetic to the gay rights lobby. This presented an ideal opportunity to spread their influence in middle America.

Gay rights proponents led by Lambda Legal then recruited Iowa plaintiffs to seek to invalidate Iowa's defense of marriage law, ultimately resulting in the 2009 decision invalidating Iowa's statutory restriction against same-sex marriage.

Next, Brown explains why this background has bearing on the Iowa retention vote - which essentially fired three of the judges who legalized SSM in Iowa:

Those who assert that the judicial retention vote which removed three Iowa Supreme Court justices from the bench was all about one case need to consider this background. Effectively the Iowa Supreme Court invited Lambda Legal to challenge Iowa's marriage laws with its gambling tax decisions earlier in the decade.

While the Iowa same-sex marriage case clearly provided the broad based emotional appeal to remove the three justices last year, the outrage expressed by the electorate is not limited to one case. Iowans simply don't like unelected and largely unaccountable judges overriding policy decisions made by their democratically elected citizen Legislature.

And that's, as they say, the rest of the story.

FRC: House May Investigate DADT Implementation's Neglect of DOMA Law

We wrote up this story earlier this morning. Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council adds:

If anything, these changes [to have Navy chaplains officiate at same-sex ceremonies on federal property] may be what it takes to get Congress re-engaged. It's up to the House and Senate to ensure that the DADT repeal complies with the law. If it doesn't, then this should be all the justification they need to put the brakes on certification. Voters should hold them accountable to do so.

Today at 12:30PM: Listen to Maggie Gallagher Debunk "SSM as Economic Incentive" on WallBuilders

You can tune in online at www.WallBuilderslive.com at 12:30PM EST to hear NOM Chairman Maggie Gallagher discuss with David Barton and Rick Green the unfounded claim that same-sex marriage is an economic stimulus:

States are proposing that gay marriage could help stimulate the economy. Cummins Inc., an engine company, testified that they would not expand jobs in Indiana if the state passes a marriage amendment. They are playing a political game. Guest Maggie Gallagher, explains just how embarrassing and ridiculous the proposal of gay marriage as an economic incentive is. She details what gay marriage would actually do to the economy.

AG Eric Holder Refuses to Enforce Federal Immigration Rules on Marriage, Invites NJ to Redefine "Spouse"

In what's being called an "extraordinary" intervention, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder vacated a Board of Immigration Appeals decision last week and asked the Board to reconsider a case concerning a foreign-born man facing deportation who acquired a New Jersey civil union with another man, who is an American citizen:

[AG Holder] inquires if, DOMA Section 3 not withstanding, there is any New Jersey state law that would grant the men the right to be considered spouses. He goes on to ask whether, absent of DOMA, the couple fulfills all other criteria that would grant the foreign-born partner the term spouse under the Immigration and Nationality Act... --Care2

After DADT Repeal, Navy Says Chaplains Can Perform Same-Sex Marriages in Naval Chapels

CNSNews reports that the Navy now says federal property will be used for same-sex ceremonies if state laws permit:

Anticipating the elimination of the military ban on homosexuality, the Office of the Chief of Navy Chaplains has decided that same-sex couples in the Navy will be able to get married in Navy chapels, and that Navy chaplains will be allowed to perform the ceremonies -- if homosexual marriage is legal in the state where the unions are to be performed.

The advisory came in the form of an April 13 memo issued to all chaplains, in which the Chief of Navy Chaplains, Admiral Michael Tidd, said the Chaplain Corps was revising its Tier I training manuals, which had previously indicated that same-sex marriages are not authorized on federal property.

In the wake of the news, elected officials and top policy experts are suggesting that this move could be a violate of DOMA, according to CNSNews:

Rep. Todd Akin (R-Mo.), a member of the House Armed Services Committee, is concerned that [...] the Navy may be violating federal law – the Defense of Marriage Act.

“Offering up federal facilities and federal employees for same-sex marriage violates DOMA, which is still the law of the land and is bound to the duties of our military, including chaplains,” Steve Taylor, communications director for Akin, told CNSNews.com. “The administration and various states may be operating as if DOMA doesn't exist, but the Navy and Marine Corps and all the Armed Services are sworn to obey the law, which this new instruction violates,” he added.

Tom McCLusky, senior vice president of government relations at the Family Research Council, agreed that the Navy is totally ignoring DOMA, part of which defines marriage for federal government purposes as being between one man and one woman. “You’re talking about government facilities and government employees, so it would seem to be a direct violation of DOMA,” McClusky told CNSNews.com. “I’m not seeing a lot of wiggle room there.”

...  Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.), said the change in training was a “good example of the type of uncertainty and confusion created in the rush to change the previous policy.”

This is yet another reason why DOMA ought to be fairly and fully defended.

Breaking News: MN Senate Could Vote on Marriage Amendment Today

According to local KSTP news, things are continuing to move forward in the Minnesota legislature:

The bill passed its final committee on Friday, just 10 days after it was introduced.

A similar bill is also making its way through the House and is just one stop away from a vote.

So stay tuned!

NY Sen. Tom Duane: SSM Failure in '09 Due to "A Homophobic Cesspool Senate"

Today at a SSM rally held in Albany NY, State Sen. Tom Duane --the state's only openly gay state senator-- lost no time in demonizing those who disagree with him about redefining marriage:

Looking back on the Senate's rejection of a gay marriage bill in 2009, Duane said it was a combination of "a homophobic cesspool Senate" that is "filled with people lacking courage." He said while there are good people looking to fight for justice, there needs to be a harder push, particularly among Republicans who voted in a bloc against the bill the last time around. -- NY Daily News

Governor Cuomo, meanwhile, was "conspicuously absent" from the event (according to the NYT and numerous other sources). NY Lieutenant Gov. Robert Duffy showed up instead, and tried to claim that people will "flee" New York unless their legislature redefines marriage:

Duffy said people are fleeing the Empire State because of high taxes and over-regulation, adding, “we also have a state that people will flee if they are denied a basic civil right. It really is a statement about New York.” -- Capital Confidential

A reader responded to Duffy's claim in the comments section:

"People will “flee”? Did people flee Maine when they repealed? Have they fled California with Prop 8? Will they flee Iowa when they repeal? No they won’t. They will flee because of high taxes. Let's stop addressing an issue that deals with a small amount of people, and work on the issues that effect all of us."

Chuck Donovan on Winning DOMA on the Merits of Marriage

A Heritage Foundation scholar, Chuck Donovan, writes about HRC's campaign of intimidation and the benefits of marriage for children and society which DOMA protects:

"If Olympic medals were handed out for hubris, the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), a gay activist group, would be the clear favorite for the gold. Its ruthless effort to deprive the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) a top-notch defense in federal court has collapsed at the starting block. But this effort highlights the fact that the fight for traditional marriage is a fight for a popular institution that the nation urgently needs to preserve."

Tonight: Dr. Morse Interviews Bill Duncan on the Fate of Marriage

From Dr. Jennifer Roback Morse at the Ruth Institute:

Join Dr. J today, May 9, from 6-7 p.m. Pacific Standard Time, as she interviews Mr. William Duncan, JD, President of the Marriage Law Foundation, and member of the Ruth Institute Academic Advisory Board. Listen as Dr. J and Mr. Duncan explore:

• The fate of Prop 8 in the Courts and what it means for the whole country

• Challenges to the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and what they mean

• Some good news out of the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals

• Recent state laws that redefine parenthood

And much more! As always, you can listen live in Southern California at AM 1000 KCEO, or listen live on the Internet at www.catholicradioofsandiego.com.