California
Assemblymember Evan Low and State Senator Scott Wiener have teamed with
Equality California and other LGBTQ+ advocacy groups to help voters protect
marriage equality in the state via the ballot box.
The group on
Tuesday unveiled Assembly Constitutional Amendment 5. The amendment would
remove discriminatory language from the California Constitution placed
there in 2008 by the controversial Proposition 8, which declared “only
marriage between a man and a woman” was legal in the state. Low, Wiener, and
the amendment’s supporters hope to place the proposed amendment before voters
in the 2024 election.
“Repealing
Proposition 8 is the right thing to do to ensure that marriage equality is
protected now and for future generations,” Low said in a joint statement with
Wiener. “California leads the way in LGBTQ+ protections and cutting-edge pro-equality
legislation and our constitution should reflect those values.”
“Repealing
Prop 8 is an essential step in protecting the freedom to marry for millions of
LGBTQ Californians,” Wiener said. “This scar on our Constitution is
unconscionable, and it needs to be removed, especially with extremist Supreme
Court Justices threatening to overturn marriage equality. It’s time to send
this issue to California voters to right this wrong.”
Prop. 8, which
is officially known as the California Marriage Protection Act, was approved by
voters in 2008 with 52.24 percent of votes cast. The law was later ruled unconstitutional by a state court and
marriage equality was further protected on a federal level with the historic 2015 decision by the U.S. Supreme Court in Obergefell
v. Hodges. However, both Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito have expressed an
interest in overturning that decision, and advocates fear they may
have been emboldened with the rejection of Roe v. Wade.
“The
overwhelming majority of Californians — 71 percent, an all-time high which
includes people from across the political spectrum — support the freedom to
marry for same-sex couples,” Tony Hoang, executive director for Equality
California, said. “Equality California is committed to continue addressing the
pressing issues facing the LGBTQ+ community, including the alarming increase of
anti-LGBTQ+ attacks against the trans community while advancing this
constitutional amendment.”
The proponents
of ACA 5 cited recent developments at the Supreme Court as motivating their
actions, saying it is important to remove Prop. 8’s language from the state’s
Constitution once and for all.
“While LGBTQ+
Californians enjoy some of the strongest legal protections in the country,
vestiges of discrimination still linger in our Constitution and our culture,”
said Carlos Marquez III, executive director, ACLU California Action. “The
repeal of Prop 8 is one critical step toward ensuring lived equality for all.”
ACA 5 must now
pass both chambers of the California legislation with a two-thirds vote before
it would be put before voters next year. It does not require Gov. Gavin Newsom’s
signature to advance, although he could call for a special election. The
proposed amendment would require only a simple majority of votes to become law.
“Especially
when LGBTQ+ people are under attack in so many states across the country, it is
more essential than ever that California leads the way in affirming the equal
dignity of every person, regardless of their race, religion, ethnicity,
ability, gender, sexual orientation or gender identity,” Imani Rupert-Gordon,
executive director at the National Center for Lesbian Rights, said. “Repealing
Prop 8 is an important part of a much larger battle.”
SOURCE: THE ADVOCATE
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