
Lawmakers and
LGBTQ advocates cheered the landmark bipartisan vote.
“Love is love,
and Americans should have the right to marry the person they love,” President
Joe Biden said in a statement. “Today’s bipartisan vote brings the United
States one step closer to protecting that right in law.”
“The Respect
for Marriage Act will ensure that LGBTQI+ couples and interracial couples are
respected and protected equally under federal law, and provide more certainty
to these families since the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs.”
“I want to
thank the Members of Congress whose leadership has sent a strong message that
Republicans and Democrats can work together to secure the fundamental right of
Americans to marry the person they love. I urge Congress to quickly send this
bill to my desk where I will promptly sign it into law.”
First Lady Dr.
Jill Biden retweeted the president’s tweet, writing simply, “Love is love.”
“No one in a
same-sex marriage or an interracial marriage should have to worry if their
marriage will be invalidated,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY)
wrote on Twitter. “No one should be discriminated against because of who they
love.”
Senator
Raphael Warnock (D-GA), who will face Republican challenger Herschel Walker in
a runoff election next month, praised the vote on Twitter. “Today, the Respect
for Marriage Act made significant progress in the Senate,” Warnock wrote. “This
is an important step in the right direction when it comes to securing marriage
equality for all.”
“Thankful for
the leaders who have worked to negotiate and advance the
#RespectforMarriageAct, and hope to see it pass very soon,” tweeted
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. “By now our marriages shouldn’t even
be in question—but this bill is timely, needed, and the right thing to do.”
In a tweet
following his vote for the Respect for Marriage Act, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT)
took a shot at the Supreme Court.
“Maybe just
maybe, the Supreme Court should realize they have no business telling anyone
who they can and can’t love and marry,” he wrote. “I was proud to cast my vote
today to finally make marriage equality – including same-sex and interracial
marriages – the long overdue law of the land.”
In a
statement, the Human Rights Campaign’s incoming president Kelley
Robinson noted why the Respect for Marriage Act is so necessary right now.
“The
devastating United States Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade was
a clear reminder that we are just one Supreme Court decision away from losing
too many of our hard fought for rights. In the concurring opinion, Justice
Thomas made the outrageous suggestion that Lawrence v. Texas and Obergefell
v. Hodges should be next to be challenged. It is clear there is an
urgent, dire need to ensure, once and for all, that the days of debate around
marriage equality are over. The will of the people is on our side,” Robinson
said.
SOURCE: LGBTQ NATION
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