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Iowa judge’s ruling makes state latest gay-marriage battleground

NewsABPnews  |  August 30, 2007

DES MOINES, Iowa (ABP) — Iowa’s first legal same-sex marriage took place Aug. 31, the day after a Des Moines judge said a state law banning gay marriage violates same-sex couples’ equal rights.


But the legality of the union between college students Sean Fritz and Tim McQuillan may last only a few days as government attorneys appeal the ruling that makes Iowa the latest battleground in the struggle over gay marriage.


“This is it. We’re married. I love you,” Fritz told McQuillan after the ceremony, performed by a Unitarian minister, according to the Associated Press.


Polk County Judge Robert Hanson said the Iowa Defense of Marriage Act, passed by state legislators in 1998, violates the Iowa Constitution’s equal-protection and due-process provisions because it unfairly singles out gays to limit their right to marriage.


“Couples, such as plaintiffs, who are otherwise qualified to marry one another may not be denied licenses to marry or certificates of marriage or in any other way prevented from entering into a civil marriage … by reason of the fact that both persons comprising such a couple are of the same sex,” he wrote.


Hanson ordered officials in Polk County, where Des Moines is located, to begin issuing marriage licenses to qualified same-sex couples. His decision was the result of a lawsuit filed in 2005 by six gay Iowa couples.


Attorneys for the couples argued that Iowa has a strong history of aggressively protecting minorities’ civil rights. The state marriage ban, they said, ran counter to decades of Iowa jurisprudence in favor of minority rights. Hanson agreed.


But Polk County Attorney John Sarcone has promised to appeal the ruling, according to the Des Moines Register, and has asked the judge to halt its enforcement pending the appeal’s outcome. Hanson will not hold a hearing on the request until after Labor Day, the paper reported.


The ruling has already raised a clamor among conservative activists and legislators in Iowa to amend the state’s charter to ban gay marriage, thus trumping the judge’s ruling. Most states, like Iowa, have statutes defining marriage in heterosexual-only terms. But, in response to similar rulings, dozens of other states have passed constitutional amendments in recent years outlawing gay marriage.


Conservative leaders vowed to consider that strategy to prevent gay marriage in the Hawkeye state.


Register. “I guarantee you there will be a vote on this issue come January.”


Massachusetts is the only state in the union to offer full marriage rights to homosexuals and heterosexuals on an equal basis. Vermont, Connecticut and New Jersey each offer civil unions to gay couples that are identical to marriage in almost every way, without using the name. Several other states and the District of Columbia offer more limited protections to gay couples through domestic-partnership registries.


-30-

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