NOM BLOG

Maggie to CBS: DOMA decision a "shocking extra-constitutional power grab"

Here are Maggie's comments to CBS News:

"The good news is this now clears the way for the House to intervene and to get lawyers in the court room who actually want to defend the law, and not please their powerful political special interests," Gallagher said.

Maggie Gallagher, chairman of the National Organization of Marriage, called the decision a "truly shocking extra-constitutional power grab" and a "defection of duty" by the President. But she also said the administration had not been forcefully defending the law in court for some time.

Why The Fifth Amendment?

Bill Duncan of the Marriage Law Foundation writes:

When Eric Holder wrote to Speaker Boehner to inform him of President Obama's decision that DOMA was unconstitutional, he said it was unconstitutional under the "equal protection" provisions of the Fifth Amendment.

Huh?  Why the Fifth Amendment, which does not mention equal protection at all--but does contain a "due process" clause?

There is a reason.

When the Supreme Court decided racial segregation in schools violates our Constitution in Brown v. Board of Education, the 14th Amendment applied to the states, but not to federal territory. That would leave D.C. schools segregated, since the District is federal territory.  So the Court did a backflip in a companion case called Bolling v. Sharpe that held the 14th amendment's equal protection guarantees were now incorporated into the Fifth Amendment's due process guarantees.

On race, we can understand why a Court would do a backflip. But this underscores how much President Obama has just attempted to re-classify sexual orientation as the constitutional equivalent of race--without any backing by Congress or by the Court.

Video: Maggie talks DOMA on FOX News

Maggie was also quoted in their follow-up story with the Associated Press:

Maggie Gallagher, chairwoman of the National Organization for Marriage, said that if somebody from the House steps in to defend the law, it could actually be "good news" for Defense of Marriage Act supporters.

"This fight is not over yet. It's really just begun," she told Fox News.

NOM's Response to Obama's DOMA Decision

NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR MARRIAGE CONDEMNS PRESIDENT OBAMA’S EXTRAORDINARY EFFORT TO SABOTAGE DOMA DEFENSE

NOM Calls on House of Representatives to Intervene to Defend Law

WASHINGTON – The National Organization for Marriage responded to President Obama calling upon the Department of Justice to stop defending the Defense of Marriage Act:

“We have not yet begun to fight for marriage,” said Brian Brown, president of NOM.

“The Democrats are responding to their election loss with a series of extraordinary, extra-constitutional end runs around democracy, whether it’s fleeing the state in Wisconsin and Indiana to prevent a vote, or unilaterally declaring homosexuals a protected class under our Constitution, as President Obama just did,” said Brown. “We call on the House to intervene to protect DOMA, and to tell the Obama administration they have to respect the limits on their power. This fight is not over, it has only begun!”

DOMA defines marriage for federal purposes as one man and one woman, and clarifies that states do not have to recognize gay marriage performed in other states.  It was passed in 1996 by bi-partisan majorities and signed into law by President Clinton.  The practical effect of Pres. Obama’s failure to defend DOMA would be to leave a federal trial court’s decision unreviewable by higher courts.

“On the one hand this is a truly shocking extra-constitutional power grab in declaring gay people are a protected class, and it’s also a defection of duty on the part of the President Obama,” said Maggie Gallagher, Chairman of NOM, “On the other hand, the Obama administration was throwing this case in court anyway.  The good news is this now clears the way for the House to intervene and to get lawyers in the court room who actually want to defend the law, and not please their powerful political special interests.”

President Obama on DOMA

We’re seeing a pattern to how Democrats respond to election losses: do an end-run around democracy. You can’t block a union bill? Flee the chambers. You can’t repeal DOMA? Declare orientation a protected class all on your own. This tactic may backfire, however: it opens up the pathway for the House to intervene to defend the law.

This also shows how much they don’t believe they have the Supreme Court votes to win yet.

[Cross-posted at National Review Online]

First reactions to Obama's decision to stop defending DOMA

NOM's response to this decision is now posted here.

Here is a quick survey of some top conservative pundits with their reaction to today's news about DOMA.

William C. Duncan writes, "Obama Tells DOJ to Take a Dive in DOMA Cases":

There is something about the marriage issue that provokes an “any means necessary” approach from its proponents (among whom I believe we can count the president, notwithstanding campaign rhetoric to the contrary).

Dan Foster adds:

● The DOJ (and the president) are attempting to unilaterally amend the Constitution to add a sexual-orientation discrimination clause.

● Over the last decade, most of the courts that have weighed in on the issue have found marriage laws to be consistent with the federal Constitution or the relevant state constitution, but the DOJ does not even mention these decisions.

● If the “equal protection component” of the 5th Amendment means that Congress can’t define marriage as the union of a man and a woman, how could the states do so under the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment?

● Can the letter’s assertion that gay and lesbian activists lack political power really be take seriously, given this very decision, the repeal of DADT, etc.?

Andrew McCarthy:

One of the most insidious practices of the insidious Obama Justice Department the sabotaging of litigation — i.e., DOJ purports to defend some statute or government policy so that it can appear to be moderate, but uses its resulting control over how the case gets litigated to forfeit some of the best legal arguments supporting the statute/policy. This way, DOJ can steer the case toward the radical outcome the Obama base desires rather than the outcome DOJ is ostensibly pursuing.

Shannen Coffin:

While the DOJ was nominally defending the statute [up to today], it was, as a result of political interference, already taking a dive. It was the sort of thing that a Republican administration would have been excoriated for. Today’s announcement at least has the advantage of admitting what was already the case.

Our own Maggie Gallagher has a few initial thoughts here.

NEW VIDEO: Mass Attending Chicago Catholics called Bigots for Opposing SSM

NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR MARRIAGE RELEASES NEW VIDEO: “Organized Chicago Protesters Denounce Catholics as Bigots During Mass: Coming to a Church Near You?” --Brian Brown

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The National Organization for Marriage (NOM) today released a new video documenting the organized protests in Chicago by the Gay Liberation Network in front of Holy Name Cathedral on Sunday, February 13 during their religious services.

After the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) intervened, the Chicago City Council announced that the police would refuse to enforce an injunction forbidding protests in front of religious services on this particular occasion.

“It’s outrageous that the city of Chicago stepped in and basically told police not to enforce a law for this one occasion. Gay Liberation Network is not above the law. If the city believed the ordinance was unconstitutional they should either repeal it for everyone, or go to court to get a determination. What happened instead was indefensible:   Stripping Catholics of their legal right to attend religious services peacefully ---just so the Gay Liberation Network could conduct a protest during mass before Valentine’s Day,” said Brian Brown, president of NOM. “We don’t know yet if this signals a new phase in the gay marriage movement: organized protests at churches nationwide.”

The Gay Liberation Network targeted Holy Name Cathedral because of Cardinal George’s outspoken opposition to same-sex marriage and civil unions.

“The theme of the protesters was ‘It’s Time to Stop Being Nice to Anti-Gay Bigots’,” points out Brown.  “The Gay Liberation Network has an aggressive new agenda that includes stripping Catholic schools and charities of ‘tax dollars’ unless the Church caves in to their ideology.”

To schedule an interview with Brian Brown, President of the National Organization for Marriage, or Maggie Gallagher, Chairman of the Board, please contact Mary Beth Hutchins, [email protected], at 703-683-5004 ext. 105 or Elizabeth Ray, [email protected], at 703-683-5004 ext. 130.

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BREAKING: Obama Administration drops defense of DOMA

NOM HAS RESPONDED TO THIS NEWS HERE.

Here is an excerpt from the Attorney General's letter:

The President has also concluded that Section 3 of DOMA, as applied to legally married same-sex couples, fails to meet that standard and is therefore unconstitutional. Given that conclusion, the President has instructed the Department not to defend the statute in such cases. [source]

UPDATE: First reactions to Obama's decision to stop defending DOMA

UPDATE 2: Maggie has a few initial thoughts here

Video: "How can we get around the Iowa Constitution?"

For evidence of how biased the Iowa judicial nominating process has become, check out this video - the nominating committee asks: how can we get around the Iowa Constitution?

h/t: Gary Marx at NRO.

Polygamous Muslims carefully watching B.C. case

The Canadian Press:

Aly Hindi, an outspoken imam at Salaheddin Islamic Centre in Scarborough, Ont., said there are more than 200 polygamous Muslim marriages in the Greater Toronto Area alone. The figure is impossible to verify as polygamy among Muslim and other immigrant groups in Canada is often shrouded in mystery.

Hindi believes banning polygamy is harmful to women.

"If the three adults -- the husband, the first wife and (the other) women -- have consent, I don't think the government should interfere in this," Hindi said in a telephone interview.

Sex and Sensibility

A John Tierney column that points out: we are mammals.

NRO: Iowa Judicial Vacancies Hang in the Balance

Gary Marx at NRO:

According to the Sioux City Journal, by the end of this week Iowa governor Terry Branstad will fill three vacancies on the Iowa Supreme Court. The vacancies are the result of November's election, when the people of Iowa made history by voting to oust all three of the Iowa Supreme Court justices who were up for retention. That vote was highly publicized and represented a broad-based public repudiation of the court’s freewheeling liberal judicial activism on everything from gay marriage to civil justice issues.

Maryland Catholics confront their lawmakers on same-sex marriage

Parishioners of St. Michael the Archangel in Overlea and St. Ursula in Parkville meet with Maryland State Senator Katherine Klausmeier (left) during Lobby Night in Annapolis Feb. 21. (CR Staff/Owen Sweeney III)

From the Catholic Review in Baltimore:

Karen Wingard had never lobbied her lawmakers before, but hearing that Maryland was on the verge of legalizing same-sex marriage provoked her.

“It’s the reason I’m here today,” said Wingard, a parishioner of the Catholic Community of St. Francis Xavier in Hunt Valley who joined more than 500 Catholics from across the state at the 27th annual Lobby Night Feb. 21 in Annapolis.

“Marriage is so foundational to society,” said Wingard, speaking moments before visiting her lawmakers and asking them to vote against same-sex marriage. [source - please scroll down]

New Study: Good Things Come To Those Who Wait to Have Sex Until Marriage

Brigham Young University has found a correlation between delaying sex and a longer-lasting marriage:

"… researchers surveyed more than 2,000 couples, ranging in age from 19 to 71 years, and found that communication, sexual quality, perceived stability and relationship satisfaction were better for those couples who had waited until after marriage to consummate their relationship.

The bottom line from the study seems to be that if you want to give marriage the best chance of survival, it’s best to make each other wait. The academics who pioneered the study did so because of a lack of empirical data on how the timing of sex between a couple impacts on the longevity of a marriage." [source]

Ethicist: "When granny gives birth to her grandson, there’s something wrong"

Margaret Somerville, a distinguished ethicist, writes for the Globe and Mail in Canada:

The bottom line, regarding surrogate motherhood, and all uses of reproductive technologies, should be that when adults’ claims to use these technologies clash with the rights or “best interests” of the resulting children, the latter must prevail. So far, our decisions have been mainly based on the opposite priority. If we examine past decisions using this new basis, in some cases we might change our minds about what is and is not ethical. [source]