Marriage
In California
Only
marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California.
By Eric Roth
Although Californians do not go to the polls for another four months,
Proposition 22 has already taken an early lead in the race to become
the hot button issue of Election 2000. At the center of the debate
is the deceptively simple wording of the proposition, sponsored by
Republican State Senator William Pete Knight. Does the
initiative simply reiterate an objective fact defending the institution
of marriage in the United States, or does it constitute an unnecessary,
divisive attack on homosexuals? Jewish organizations are already staking
out their positions in the debate, and more often than not these positions
are diametrically opposed.
A wide coalition of cultural conservatives, with financial backing
from the Catholic Church, placed Proposition 22 on the ballot to protect
California from same-sex marriages. California Family
Code 300 currently specifies that marriages licensed in California
are between a man and a woman. A Field poll released on
October 27 shows likely California voters favor the controversial
Initiative by a 50-41 margin with 9 percent undecided. This incipient
battle is already resonating in the years most important racefor
president.
Democrats Vice-President Al Gore and Senator Bill Bradley both oppose
the Knight Initiative. (United States Senators Feinstein
and Boxer, Congressman Henry Waxman, State Senator Tom Hayden, Assembly
members Wally Knox and Sheila Kuehl, the Los Angeles City Council,
the California Teachers Association, and the ACLU have come out against
the measure.) Six Republican Presidential candidates, the Family Research
Council, and the Capitol Resource Institute support Prop 22.
The increasing public debate about the legal definition of civil marriages
highlights long-standing theological and social differences within
the Jewish community. The Pacific Association of Reform Rabbis, the
largest rabbinical organization representing Western States, has denounced
Proposition 22 as an anti-gay measure attacking civil
rights. The Knight Initiative is hateful, hurtful, and divisive,
said Rabbi Denise Eger of West Hollywoods Congregation Kol Amiand
No on Knight board member. Our tradition teaches us that all
people were created in the image of Godgay and lesbian people,
too.
Some Reform and Reconstructionist rabbis preside at commitment
ceremonies for homosexual couples, and both religious movements
endorse gay and lesbian civil marriages. The Union of American Hebrew
Congregations, the Reform movements institutional arm, came
out in favor of gay and lesbian couples receiving the same benefits
as married couples in 1993. In 1996, Reform rabbi announced their
support of homosexual civil marriages.
Orthodox religious leaders have been equally fervent in their denunciations
ofefforts to establish a legal parity between heterosexual and homosexual
relationships. Agudath Israel of America, a national Orthodox Jewish
organization with members all across the United States, submitted
an amicus curiae brief against same-sex marriages in May 1997.
Agudath Israel submits that it is, or ought to be, an urgent
objective of publicpolicy not only to strengthen the institution of
marriage, but to do so in a manner that promotes a sense of responsibility
to children. The historical genius of marriage is not merely that
it constitutes the legal union of man and woman, butthat it furnishes
the foundation of family. Legalizing same-sex marriageswhich,
by biological definition, can never have anything to do with procreation
would obscure further still the vital link between marriage and children.
It would convey the message that childbearing, and childrearing, are
matters entirely distinct from marriage. The message is subtle, but
in Agudath Israels view, devastating.
The
legal brief, written by Robert Bruce, Jr. and David Zwiebel, also
argued conferring societys blessings upon same-sex unions
by according them the legal and social status of marriage
would convey an unmistakable imprimatur of acceptability and legitimacy
upon the practice of homosexuality... Agudath Israel is of the view
that government has no business conveying that message.
The Orthodox Unions Institute for Public Affairs, representing
over 1,000 Orthodox synagogues nationwide, considers homosexual acts
immoral behavior. The OU strongly supported federal legislation
known as the Defense of Marriage Act, signed by President Bill Clinton
on September 21, 1996, that allows States to avoid recognizing same-sex
marriages performed in other states. Proposition 22 stems partly from
that law.
No state currently allows same-sex marriages, but court challenges
have beenheard in Hawaii and Vermont. Proposition 22 sponsors, including
the Capital Resource Institute, fear that California could be forced
to recognize same-sex marriages because California Family Code 308
explicitly recognizes all out of state marriages. Governor Davis also
signed a Domestic Partnership law on Oct. 4 that provides a statewide
registry for same-sex couples and heterosexual couples at least 62
years old and guarantees hospital visitation rights. In addition,
public employees for the first time will have access to health insurance
for their same-sex partners.
One item both sides of the Prop 22 debate agree on: the initiative
will no doubt ave a long afterlife in the courts, no matter how the
election results tally.
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