NOM BLOG

Monthly Archives: September 2011

Puerto Ricans Honor Sen. Diaz for Defending Marriage

From the official press release:

Senator Reverend Diaz stated: “I am deeply humbled to be recognized at the 2011 Clamor a Dios for my efforts to defend marriage. This recognition will invigorate my efforts to keep the marriage issue alive and ultimately let it be decided by New York’s voters.”

Clamor a Dios is an annual event that has been held for decades by Reverend Jorge Raschke, one of Puerto Rico’s most ardent supporters of traditional marriage.

This event draws VIP’s and dignitaries from Puerto Rico’s government along with thousands of Christians from all over the island.

Australian Op-Ed: "Marriage is About Rights of the Children"

Nicholas Tonti-Filippini writes in the Sydney Morning Herald:

In an extraordinary show of unity, more than 50 national leaders of Christian churches have endorsed a document on marriage as a legal institution that promotes and protects the identity of children and their internationally recognised right to know, to have access to and to be nurtured by both their mother and father.

... A child's relationship to both mother and father is inherent to marriage. Children conceived by other means may find themselves with people in parental roles who are in a same-sex relationship, but such relationships are not the origin of the child. It is likely for children to be loved and nurtured in such a household, but however good that nurturing, it will not provide the biological link and security of identity and relationship that marriage naturally demands and confirms.

If marriage were redefined, the law would teach that marriage is fundamentally about adults' emotional unions, about romance only, not complementary bodily union or generating and nurturing children.

What is at stake is an ideal that seeks to ensure that a child has both a mother and a father. That the ideal sometimes breaks down or that there are exceptions to it does not make marriage any less ideal. The bodily union of mutual love that is integral to marriage helps to create stable and harmonious conditions suitable for children, and the children can look back to an origin in the love of their parents.

Freedom to Speak the Truth or The 'Gospel' of Tolerance?

Jennifer Hartline writes in Catholic Online:

Stacy Trasancos is one gutsy Catholic. Last week she wrote a little blog post about how she's getting tired of wondering "what in tarnation we're going to encounter" every time she and her kids leave the house. Two men ogling each other at the pool? Two women engaged in public displays of affection in the park? These are scenes she'd rather her young children not be exposed to every time they go out in public, but it's become impossible to avoid in her community.

For having the nerve to express her objection to immorality, she's become the object of wrath and nasty threats from homosexual activists. Those who understand how Stacy feels (count me in) also know that her real crime is that she has rejected the Gospel of Tolerance.

The Gospel of Tolerance really only has one rule: thou shalt tolerate any action, belief, lifestyle, agenda, and person except the person who believes a certain lifestyle, action or agenda is wrong and has the gall to say so out loud. The Gospel of Tolerance requires that you have no objection to that which it says must be tolerated. In fact, it requires that you not even question that which it says must be tolerated.

... The Gospel of Tolerance is a ruse; it's just a marketing ploy. The real goal here is submission. It's not enough to "get along" or tolerate quietly. You must approve. You don't dare disapprove publicly. Those who don't tow the line will be punished.

Thank You for Supporting Prop 8!

Thank You for Supporting Prop 8!

Dear Marriage Supporter,

WOW, what a great day! That's the best way to summarize my reaction to yesterday's California Supreme Court hearing on Prop 8. Dr. Jennifer Roback Morse, president of the Ruth Institute—a project of the NOM Education Fund, was on site for the hearing and gave us this report:

Roback Morse

I don't think the hearing could have gone better for supporters of Prop 8. None of the justices appeared to buy into Ted Olsen's argument that an initiative's proponents cannot intervene to defend said initiative, effectively arguing that it must go undefended if the governor or state's attorney general refuses to do so. If they did accept Olsen's thesis then the law would confer on the governor and attorney general a right to nullify an initiative, a right never contemplated by the California Constitution.

As Andy Pugno, General Counsel of the Proposition 8 Legal Defense Fund, said, the hearing "was nothing less than fantastic!"

The justices are expected to give their final decision within 90 days, and while no one can predict for certain what they will decide, we are very optimistic. Even the mainstream news is reporting that the Supreme Court "appeared ready to give sponsors of Proposition 8 the legal right to defend the state's voter-approved ban on same-sex marriage."

Video Placeholder

If you missed the hearing, you can watch it here.

Kudos to the Prop 8 legal team for all their great work! And thanks to each of you who have already given to support this effort. Truly, this victory could not have happened without you. With your support, NOM has made major financial contributions to the Prop 8 Legal Defense Fund - but there is a long way yet to go before this case reaches the U.S. Supreme Court.

Help us continue protecting marriage and the rights of California voters as this litigation is now poised to head back to the Ninth Circuit federal appeals court. Please continue to support this all important effort by sharing this email with your friends, and please consider making a donation today of $10, $50 or $500 to ensure that NOM can continue to defend marriage as one man and one woman.

Thank you.

Brian Brown

Brian S Brown

Brian S. Brown
President
National Organization for Marriage

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Video: Top GOP Candidates On Marriage & Religious Liberty at Palmetto Freedom Forum

Here are some highlights from top GOP presidential candidates' responses at the Palmetto Freedom Forum which took place in South Carolina this Monday, co-moderated by NOM Founding Chairman Dr. Robert George.

Michele Bachmann:

Mitt Romney:

Newt Gingrich:

Hermain Cain:

We'll have more video highlights soon -- so stay tuned!

Maggie Gallagher on A New Kind of Presidential Debate

NOM Chairman Maggie Gallagher writes in the Public Discourse that Monday's Presidential Forum broke new ground:

The goal of the American Principles Project Palmetto Freedom Forum on Monday in Columbia, S.C., was a different kind of debate that would break new ground.

Boy, did it succeed.

Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina, Congressman Steve King of Iowa, and the founder of the American Principles Project, Princeton Professor Robert George, asked the questions. (Full disclosure: Professor George is also the founding chairman of the National Organization for Marriage, which I co-founded).

Five major GOP candidates stood nakedly on the stage, taking deep questions about constitutional principles—without a podium or a reporter in sight—for 20 minutes. [Continue reading]

NC Black Ministers to Dems: "You are Disrespecting the Foot Soldiers of the Civil Rights Movement."

The minority leader of the North Carolina House called the marriage amendment "hate speech."  The Democrat caucus also announced that somehow codifying current law into the constitution would be bad for business (we're hoping the Democrats in NC have a better business plan than gay marriage!).

Meanwhile a group of black ministers called out those who equate support for gay marriage with the civil rights movement:

Supporters of the amendment counter that states that already have prohibitions of same-sex marriage in their constitutions aren't seeing businesses leave for other states because of that issue.

Several black ministers who spoke at a later news conference said it's contrary to the Christian faith and the Bible for same-sex couples to marry. They called on the Legislature to let the public vote on adding the prohibition to the constitution to protect the institution of marriage. The Rev .Johnny Hunter of Cliffdale Community Church in Fayetteville said gay rights activists have offended black people by equating the efforts to support gay marriage with civil rights activities in the 1960s to remove racism from the law books.

"Blacks know what real discrimination is all about," said Hunter, referring to slavery and Jim Crow-era laws that preventing blacks from voting. "They're disrespecting ... the foot soldiers of the civil rights movement." --Associated Press

NC Minority Leader Hackney: "Marriage Amendment a Form of Hate Speech"

In an official statement by North Carolina Democrat Minority Leader Joe Hackney:

"This proposed constitutional amendment runs against the tide of history, and has become a form of hate speech."

New Poll Shows Turner UP by 4 Points in NY-9 Special Election!

Polls vary because predicting turnout in special elections is tough -- but Turner is close and Weprin is in trouble!

The survey finds Republican Bob Turner leading Democrat David Weprin by 4 points (Turner 44.6%/Weprin 40.4%/Hoeppner 3.2%/undecided 11.8%). Ballot intensity benefits Turner with 35.8% of the respondents definitely voting for Turner while only 28.3% of respondents definitely voting for Weprin.

Both candidates have comparable name recognition (Turner 89% name recognition/Weprin 88% name recognition).   However, Turner’s image is 37% favorable to 23.8% unfavorable, while Weprin’s image is 29.8% favorable to 34.5% unfavorable.-- Magellan

Mercury News: CA Supreme Court Appears Ready to Affirm the Right of Sponsors To Defend Prop 8

While it looked that way to us as well, you can't always tell from oral arguments.

San Jose Mercury News:

The California Supreme Court today appeared ready to give sponsors of Proposition 8 the legal right to defend the state's voter-approved ban on same-sex marriage, expressing major concerns about allowing the law to be negated without a fight because the attorney general and governor refuse to back it in court.

During an hour of arguments in San Francisco, most of the justices at one point or another hammered away at Theodore Olson, a lawyer for same-sex couples who argued that supporters of a ballot measure do not have the legal authority to replace state officials in defending or enforcing California laws.

... Based on the barrage of questions aimed at Olson, a former U.S. Solicitor General under President George W. Bush, the Supreme Court is inclined to say that Proposition 8 supporters do have that right, which would push the court fight forward. Whatever the Supreme Court decides, the case will return to the 9th Circuit, which has the final say on whether the appeal can proceed.

The California Supreme Court has 90 days to issue its ruling.

Fired Twice for Standing Up For Marriage

The Christian Post:

Just months after being fired from Cisco Systems in California over an anti-gay marriage book, Christian consultant Dr. Frank Turek was also given the boot from Bank of America.

"I get a lot of flak for just actually agreeing with what a majority of Americans agree on and that is that marriage is between one man and one woman," Turek said this past week on American Family Radio.

Turek was doing work on and off for Bank of America for about 15 years, mainly conducting leadership and team building programs, he said. Other clients have included Coca Cola, Home Depot and CIGNA, among others.

... "I got a phone call from one of the HR managers there who said we've just learned someone googled you and found out you wrote a book called Correct, Not Politically Correct: How Same-Sex Marriage Hurts Everyone and so we can't have you teach here anymore," Turek recounted on American Family Radio.

Gay Activists Pressure Corporations to Withdraw Funding for Pro-Marriage Charities

LifeSiteNews:

Major U.S. companies that had offered consumers the ability to donate a portion of their purchase to faith-based charities are now under pressure from gay activists to end their support for any charities that support traditional marriage.

The activists are taking aim at the Charitable Give Back Group (CGBG), formerly known as the Christian Values Network, an online shopping network that supports Christian family organizations such as the Family Research Council and Focus on the Family.

... While CGBG continues to receive support from major retailers such as Walmart and Target, some companies have backed away from the organization after petitions posted by gay activists on Change.org and Allout.org garnered thousands of signatures.

... The statement says that various other companies, including REI, Macy’s, Delta Airlines, BBC America, and Wells Fargo, have also severed their connections with CGBG due to other Change.org petitions.

But a majority of the companies have now renewed their ties:

John Higgins, president of CGBG, told World Net Daily that while 350 big name retailers initially pulled out due to pressure created by gay activists, 250 of them are now back on board.

“Once these retail partners heard the facts, many of them have realized that they had been had,” he said. “In many cases a junior executive made a knee-jerk reaction to dump CGBG, and once a senior manager heard the truth, the retailer has come back online with us.”

Prop 8 Hearing Live Blog

[Note: You can watch the California Supreme Court hearing live-stream here. Also visit Prop8Case.com for more updates.]

The court now stands in recess. We'll post an update as soon as a decision is announced. Please re-read this post for our thoughts about the outcome legal experts are predicting.

Oral arguments WRAP UP:

It seems clear to us that the hearing before the California Supreme Court could not have gone better for the proponents of Proposition 8. There was no justice who appeared to be supportive of the position of Ted Olsen that an initiative proponent cannot intervene to defend their initiative and that an initiative must go undefended if the governor and attorney general refuse to do so. At a bare minimum, the court is likely to issue a ruling noting that state law gives initiative proponents liberal standing to intervene. More likely, the court could find that initiative proponents have a particularized interest in their initiative such that they may stand in the shoes of the state when state officials, as here, refuse to defend an initiative enacted by the people themselves. Otherwise, the law would confer on the governor and attorney general a right to nullify an initiative, a right never contemplated by the California Constitution.

Remember, the issues in this particular hearing arise in response to a question from the Ninth circuit as to the right of an initiative proponent to appeal Vaughn Walker’s ruling that Prop 8 is unconstitutional. There can be little doubt that at least Presiding Justice Stephen Reinhart WANTS the proponents to have standing, because that is the only way the Ninth Circuit can issue a ruling on the merits.

It seems crystal clear that Justice Reinhart is going to get his wish. The proponents will be granted standing to appeal, and the Ninth Circuit will then deal with the merits of the case – is Proposition 8 unconstitutional under the 14th Amendment of the US Constitution?

2:01PM -- Cooper wrap up: For the first time we hear from Justice Baxter, the most conservative member of the Court. He asks if there is a difference from the state’s interests and the interests of the people who have enacted an initiative. Cooper nails the point that the proponents have the authority to represent the state in court.

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1:57PM -- Do initiative proponents have a particularized interest? Justice Liu is challenging Ted Olsen’s position that initiative proponents have a “particularized” interest in the initiative separate from a general state interest. Liu says this position stretches common sense.

1:49PM -- Justice Kennard is growing impatient and tired of Ted Olsen evading the basic point that if his position is adopted, there will be nobody to defend a state initiative passed by the people. “Mr. Olsen, perhaps I will ask you a simpler question. Who is left to defend the initiative if the state officials do not?”

1:47PM -- Olsen is alone. Doesn’t the judiciary have to demand that they have the best arguments before them to make a decision. Would you really have us here today only you arguing this case? Justice Kennard makes it clear that Ted Olsen is arguing that when the people have exercised their great power of the initiative, they are powerless to defend their decision. This nullifies the power of the people to decide initiatives. There has not been a single comment or question that suggests that any justice is at all sympathetic to the position being advocated by Ted Olsen. Even the most liberal justice, Gordon Liu, seems highly skeptical if not outright opposed to Olsen’s position.

1:43PM -- Justice Werderger asks if we couldn't simply tell the Ninth Circuit that California allows liberal intervention rules and it is up to the Ninth Circuit to determine if they have standing under federal law.

1:40PM -- The Chief Justice is asking what happens to the state’s interests if the state officials refuse to defend an initiative. She is making the point that the question goes far beyond Prop 8 and goes to the heart of the initiative process. Olsen claims the interests remain, but the implication is then that it can’t be defended. Justice Chen points out that Olsen’s position is that the initiative process is an empty vessel. How can an initiative be enforced if it cannot even be defended in court?

1:36PM -- Justice Kennard tells Olsen that if the court agrees with him, they would be creating a right for the attorney general and governor to nullify an initiative. No such power exists in the state constitution.

1:33PM -- Justice Liu taking on Olsen, pointing out that the initiative process has historically served as a check against the legislature and makes it crystal clear, “the initiative proponents clearly would have standing to appeal in state court.” That is essentially what the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has asked of the California Supreme Court. Ted Olsen basically is taking the position that the decision of the Attorney General not to defend an initiative is dispositive. Justice Liu, “Mr. Olsen I don’t know how you can even say that.”

1:29PM -- Ted Olsen up now. Justice Chen goes to the heart of the matter: does the Attorney General get to pick and choose which laws he will defend? And Werderger hammers it: Can the Attorney General and governor veto an initiative when the people have reserved the right of initiative to themselves. Ted Olsen is floundering.

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1:26PM -- Justice Werderger is wondering if the Court could simply issue a ruling that state courts have liberal intervention rights and leave it at that. That would probably suffice in this case, but Cooper is making the point that it is not easy to get intervention in state court. Now the Chief Justice is pointing out that most of the state intervention cases are in circumstances where government officials stand shoulder to shoulder with the proponents. This is a different case, say suggests. Cooper responds that it would be an abuse of discretion if intervention were not allowed which is what the cases have found. He handled that well.

1:18PM -- Justice Kennard pointing out that the result of this hearing will apply to all state initiatives, not just Prop 8. This is important because if initiative proponents cannot defend an initiative, it gives veto power to the governor and attorney general.

1:12PM -- Goodwin Liu's first comment as a justice is to commend Chuck Cooper’s briefing and makes the observation that if this case (Perry v Schwarzenegger) were being litigated in state court there would be no doubt that the proponents have the right to defend the initiative. Cooper agrees that this is true and that, by extension, should be able to do so in federal court. Now Liu trying to determine is the right to stand in the state’s shoes extends beyond standing.

1:10PM -- Justice Kathyryn Werderger seems to be skeptical that initiative proponents have the right to represent the state when the officials responsible (governor and AG) don’t do so. She keeps picking at differences between the cases cited by Cooper and this case.

1:07PM -- Justice Joyce Kennard is asking Chuck Cooper whether standing requires a particularized interest in the outcome. This would be a legal interest distinct from the general public (a state interest).  Cooper says they are entitled to standing under both a general state interest and a particularized interest. The proponents have a direct interest because of their standing as a proponent. They also have the right to stand in place of the state  when the state does not defend an initiative.

Read our preview of what is at stake today in this hearing right here.

NOM's Live Coverage of Prop 8 Hearing to Begin at 1PM ET -- What To Expect

Welcome to NOM’s live coverage of today’s hearing in the California Supreme Court on the question of whether the proponents of Prop 8 have standing to appeal Judge Vaughn Walker's ruling that claimed Prop 8 was unconstitutional.

[Note: You can watch the California Supreme Court hearing live-stream here. Also visit Prop8Case.com for more updates.]

Many legal experts believe that the proponents of Proposition 8 will win this particular legal round.

The issue of standing in federal court may hinge on whether the state gives initiative proponents --i.e. those who organized Prop 8-- the legal right to defend such initiatives from legal attack. This is what is at stake in today’s case. In essence, the California Supreme Court is being asked to issue an advisory opinion which the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals will then take under advisement.

The reason that most people think the proponents of Prop 8 will prevail on this question is two-fold. First, these very initiative proponents have already been granted the right to defend this very initiative before this very court – the California Supreme Court. Second, if initiative proponents do not have the right to defend their initiative once passed by the people, then we would be giving the Governor and Attorney General veto power over the people. They could simply negate an initiative by refusing to defend it in court. Yet no state constitution gives such power to those elected officials.

There is also little doubt that Justice Stephen Reinhart wants the California Supreme Court to find that the proponents of Prop 8 have standing to bring the appeal to his court. If there is no standing, there is no legal controversy and Reinhart will be denied the opportunity to rule on the merits of Prop 8. He needs standing to rule that Prop 8 is unconstitutional, which he no doubt intends to do.

So stay tuned with us!

UPDATE: The Prop 8 Live Blog is online here.

Will Sen. Grisanti Turncoat Again?

Speculation that he may try to run as a Democrat in Buffalo:

Speculation is intensifying over the political future of State Sen. Mark Grisanti, R-Buffalo, who earned an improbable victory in an overwhelmingly Democratic district last year and who has never ruled out the possibility of returning to the Democrats he left in 2010.

... In order for Grisanti to run as a Democrat next year, election law says he must make his decision some time within the next two months. -- BuffaloNews.com