From News Nation:
“House
approves same-sex marriage bill, retort to high court”
The U.S. House
overwhelmingly approved legislation Tuesday to protect same-sex and interracial
marriages amid concerns that the Supreme Court ruling overturning Roe v. Wade
abortion access could jeopardize other rights criticized by many conservative
Americans. With a robust but lopsided debate, Democrats argued intensely in
favor of enshrining marriage equality in federal law, while Republicans steered
clear of openly rejecting gay marriage. Instead leading Republicans portrayed
the bill as unnecessary amid other issues facing the nation.
Tuesday’s
election-year roll call was partly political strategy, forcing all House
members, Republicans and Democrats, to go on the record with their views. It
also reflected the legislative branch pushing back against an aggressive court
that has sparked fears it may revisit apparently settled U.S. laws. “For me,
this is personal,” said Rep. Mondaire Jones, D-N.Y., who said he was among the
openly gay members of the House. “Imagine telling the next generation of
Americans, my generation, we no longer have the right to marry,” he said.
“Congress can’t allow that to happen.” Wary of political fallout, GOP leaders
did not direct their lawmakers to hold the party line against the bill, aides
said. Dozens of Republicans joined Democrats in voting for passage.
While the
Respect for Marriage Act is expected to pass the House, with a Democratic
majority, it is almost certain to stall in the evenly split Senate, where most
Republicans would likely join a filibuster to block it. It’s one of several
bills, including those enshrining abortion access, that Democrats are proposing
to confront the court’s conservative majority. Another bill, guaranteeing
access to contraceptive services, is set for a vote later this week.
Polling shows
a majority of Americans favor preserving rights to marry whom one wishes,
regardless of the person’s sex, gender, race or ethnicity, a long-building
shift in modern mores toward inclusion. A Gallup poll in June showed broad and
increasing support for same-sex marriage, with 70% of U.S. adults saying they
think such unions should be recognized by law as valid. The poll showed
majority support among both Democrats (83%) and Republicans (55%). Approval of
interracial marriage in the U.S. hit a six-decade high at 94% in September,
according to Gallup. “The extremist right-wing majority on the Supreme Court
has put our country down a perilous path,” said Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon, D-Pa.,
in a floor speech setting Tuesday’s process in motion. “It’s time for our
colleagues across the aisle to stand up and be counted. Will they vote to
protect these fundamental freedoms? Or will they vote to let states take those
freedoms away?”
But
Republicans insisted Tuesday that the court was only focused on abortion access
in June when it struck down the nearly 50-year-old Roe v. Wade ruling, and they
argued that same-sex marriage and other rights were not threatened. In fact, of
all the Republicans who rose to speak during the morning debate, almost none
directly broached the subject of same-sex or interracial marriage. “We are here
for a political charade, we are here for political messaging,” said Rep. Jim
Jordan of Ohio, the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee. As several
Democrats spoke of inequalities they said that they or their loved ones had
faced in same-sex marriages, the Republicans talked about rising gas prices,
inflation and crime, including recent threats to justices in connection with
the abortion ruling.
Even as it
passed the House with Republican votes, the outcome in the Senate is uncertain.
“I’m probably not inclined to support it,” said Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo. “The
predicate of this is just wrong. I don’t think the Supreme Court is going to
overturn any of that stuff. For Republicans in Congress the Trump-era
confirmation of conservative justices to the Supreme Court fulfilled a
long-term GOP goal of revisiting many social, environmental and regulatory
issues the party has been unable to tackle on its own by passing bills that
could be signed into law. But in a notable silence, Senate Republican leader
Mitch McConnell declined to express his view on the bill, leaving an open
question over how strongly his party would fight it, if it even comes up for a
vote in the upper chamber. “I don’t see anything behind this right now other
than, you know, election year politics,” said the GOP whip, Sen. John Thune of
South Dakota.
The Respect
for Marriage Act would repeal a law from the Clinton era that defines marriage
as a heterogeneous relationship between a man and a woman. It would also
provide legal protections for interracial marriages by prohibiting any state
from denying out-of-state marriage licenses and benefits on the basis of sex,
race, ethnicity or national origin. The 1996 law, the Defense of Marriage Act,
had basically been sidelined by Obama-era court rulings, including Obergefell
v. Hodges, which established the rights of same-sex couples to marry
nationwide, a landmark case for gay rights. But last month, writing for the
majority in overturning Roe v. Wade, Justice Samuel Alito argued for a more
narrow interpretation of the rights guaranteed to Americans, noting that the
right to an abortion was not spelled out in the Constitution. In a concurring
opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas went further, saying other rulings similar to
Roe, including those around same-sex marriage and the right for couples to use
contraception, should be reconsidered. While Alito insisted in the majority
opinion that “this decision concerns the constitutional right to abortion and
no other right,” others have taken notice. “The MAGA radicals that are taking
over the Republican Party have made it abundantly clear they are not satisfied
with repealing Roe,” said Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.,
referring to Trump’s backers. He pointed to comments from Sen. Ted Cruz,
R-Texas, who said over the weekend that the Supreme Court’s decision protecting
marriage equality was “clearly wrong” and state legislatures should visit the
issue. But Schumer did not commit to holding a vote on the bill. Jim
Obergefell, the plaintiff in the landmark ruling legalizing same-sex marriage
and now running as a Democrat for the Ohio House, said after the court’s ruling
on abortion, “When we lose one right that we have relied on and enjoyed, other
rights are at risk.”
^ This will
fail in the Senate because of the Republicans and then Clarence Thomas will get
what he wants: an end to Same Sex Marriage and something he doesn't: an end to
Interracial Marriage (he's Black and his 2nd Wife is White.) Then it will be up
to each State.
States that ended
Abortion will also end Same-Sex Marriage and with the same “logic” Interracial
Marriage. I see that happening in Texas even though Gov. Abbott is in an
Interracial Marriage (his Wife’s Hispanic) and in other Southern and Midwestern
States.
Once the
Supreme Court and these States opened the floodgates on Abortion, Same-Sex
Marriage, Interracial Marriage and many other now-legal practices and rights
will be taken away using the same exact justification that Repealing Roe did.
I wouldn’t be
surprised if the Southern and Midwestern States also made incest legal as well
as child brides.
Sadly, we will
be no better than Russia at that point. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/politics/house-approves-same-sex-marriage-bill-retort-to-high-court/
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.