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| Wash. Court's Surprise Ruling Delights Traditional Marriage Supporters By Allie Martin and Jenni Parker (AgapePress) - Pro-family groups and traditional marriage defenders are hailing yesterday's 5-4 decision by the Washington Supreme Court to overturn two lower-court rulings and uphold the state's 1998 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which defines marriage as a union between one man and one woman. In a case involving 19 homosexual couples who challenged the constitutionality of Washington's DOMA, the State Supreme Court's decision clearly delineated the issues. The court stated: "The two cases before us require us to decide whether the legislature has the power to limit marriage in Washington State to opposite-sex couples. The state constitution and controlling case law compel us to answer 'yes,' and we therefore reverse the trial courts."
Perkins says this decision demonstrates that U.S. courts are not immune to the political reality that the majority of Americans are determined to protect marriage. "It is not a coincidence," he contends, "that these decisions, since the first one in Massachusetts, have turned the other way when state after state after state has passed marriage amendments protecting marriage." Jan LaRue of Concerned Women for America (CWA) says members of her group have been "holding our breath waiting for this one." Now, she says, traditional marriage supporters can "celebrate another win" for marriage, democracy, and judicial restraint. Implications of the Washington State Ruling The effect of that statement by the court is that it "really undercuts their 'civil rights' argument," the CWA spokeswoman explains. "Homosexuals are not a minority class that has ever been confined to the back of the bus or deprived of political power," LaRue asserts. In response to the Washington Supreme Court's ruling, American Family Association (AFA) founder and chairman Don Wildmon sounded a note of empathy. "It must be devastating," he observed, "for those who are promoting homosexual marriage to lose so many court battles that they really expected to win and that, to be honest, all of us expected them to win." But even if the decision is "totally devastating" for same-sex marriage advocates, Wildmon adds, "it's certainly a great win for us." However, since DOMA laws are being challenged in eight other states, he points out, "it's not over. But maybe we've stopped a little bit of the momentum." The AFA chairman figures the mainstream media are probably pretty crestfallen over the ruling as well, particularly after having "pushed homosexual marriage so hard and for so long," he says. Certainly, it must be discouraging for them, Wildmon muses, "to finally realize that some of the most extreme liberal courts in the nation are saying, 'No, there is no inherent right to homosexual marriage.'" Counsel's Caveat: A Series of Big Wins Does Not Mean Ultimate Victory
However, this battle is far from over, the Liberty Counsel spokesman cautions. "The gay activists are not going to stop their agenda," he notes. "I think, however, they have been thrown into a tailspin, so to speak, over the last few weeks -- six consecutive defeats, one after another, just in a couple of weeks' time." Nevertheless, Staver notes, a federal constitutional amendment enshrining the definition of marriage as between a man and a woman is still needed. Only with the passage of a Marriage Protection Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, he insists, will the future of marriage be taken safely out of judge's hands. © 2006 AgapePress all rights reserved.
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