California Supreme Court Grants Review In Prop 8 Legal Challenges (11/19/2008)
Court To Determine Constitutionality Of Prop 8
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org SAN FRANCISCO — Today the California Supreme Court granted review in the
legal challenges to Proposition 8, which passed by a narrow margin of 52 percent
on November 4. In an order issued today, the Court agreed to hear the case and
set an expedited briefing schedule. The Court also denied an immediate
stay.
On November 5, 2008, the National Center for Lesbian Rights, the American
Civil Liberties Union, and Lambda Legal filed a lawsuit challenging the validity
of Proposition 8 in the California Supreme Court on behalf of six couples and
Equality California. The City of San Francisco, joined by the City of Los
Angeles, Los Angeles County, and Santa Clara County, filed a similar challenge,
as did a private attorney in Los Angeles.
The lawsuits allege that, on its face, Proposition 8 is an improper revision
rather than an amendment of the California Constitution because, in its very
title, which was "Eliminates the right to marry for same-sex couples," the
initiative eliminated an existing right only for a targeted minority. If
permitted to stand, Proposition 8 would be the first time an initiative has
successfully been used to change the California Constitution to take away an
existing right only for a particular group. Such a change would defeat the
very purpose of a constitution and fundamentally alter the role of the courts in
protecting minority rights. According to the California
Constitution, such a serious revision of the state constitution cannot be
enacted through a simple majority vote, but must first be approved by two-thirds
of the legislature. Since the three lawsuits submitted
on November 5, three other lawsuits challenging Proposition 8 have been filed.
In a petition filed on November 14, 2008, leading African American, Latino, and
Asian American groups argued that Proposition 8 threatens the equal protection
rights of all Californians.
On November 17, 2008, the California Council of Churches and other religious
leaders and faith organizations representing millions of members statewide, also
filed a petition asserting that Proposition 8 poses a severe threat to the
guarantee of equal protection for all, and was not enacted through the
constitutionally required process for such a dramatic change to the California
Constitution. On the same day, prominent California women's rights organizations
filed a petition asking the court to invalidate Proposition 8 because of its
potentially disastrous implications for women and other groups that face
discrimination.
In May of 2008, the California Supreme Court held that barring same-sex
couples from marriage violates the equal protection clause of the California
Constitution and violates the fundamental right to marry. Proposition 8 would
completely eliminate the right to marry only for same-sex couples. No other
initiative has ever successfully changed the California Constitution to take
away a right only from a targeted minority group.
Over the past 100 years, the California Supreme Court has heard nine cases
challenging either legislative enactments or initiatives as invalid revisions of
the California Constitution. In three of those cases, the court invalidated
those measures.
The case is Strauss, et al, v. Horton, et al. For today's ruling, go to: www.courtinfo.ca.gov/courts/supreme/highprofile/prop8.htm
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