Marriage, Hawaiian style.IN A WAY, THE DEBATE OVER SAME-SEX MARRIAGE Noun 1. same-sex marriage - two people of the same sex who live together as a family; "the legal status of same-sex marriages has been hotly debated" couple, twosome, duet, duo - a pair who associate with one another; "the engaged couple"; "an inseparable MIGHT NEVER have happened without John Travolta John Joseph Travolta (born February 18, 1954) is an Academy Award nominated, Golden Globe Award winning American actor, dancer, and singer. He established his career as a leading Hollywood actor with films such as Saturday Night Fever and Grease. . It was 1977 when Joseph Melillo, a New Jersey native transplanted to Hawaii, offered to help a friend with a dance class on Saturday mornings. Since the film Saturday Night Saturday Night may refer to: Music
"I was busy with the students," Melillo recalls. "Then I turned and looked at him, and he looked at me. We instantly fell in love. We've been together ever since." Their commitment led Melillo and Lagon to seek a marriage license in 1990--along with two lesbian couples; Tammy Rodrigues and Antoinette Pregil, and Ninia Baehr and Genora. Dancel--and, when they were denied the license, to sue the state of Hawaii. The upshot: a ruling by circuit court judge Kevin Chang on December 3 declaring the state's ban on same-sex marriages to be unconstitutional under state law. Now the question is whether that legal victory will ultimately prevail or whether same-sex marriage will be a passing fad, the disco of the 1990s. The next several months will see a bruising bruising discoloration and actual hemorrhage at the site of injury, and a serious disadvantage in the meat trade. In the first 12 hours after injury the bruise is bright red, at 24 hours it is dark red, at 24 to 36 hours it loses its firm consistency and becomes watery and at 3 or battle to determine the outcome. While mainland gays and lesbians are awaiting the outcome--too passively in the eyes of many Hawaii activists--opponents of same-sex marriage are preparing a series of measures to prevent the ruling from ever taking effect. Yet in the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified" meantime, meanwhile , what was once unthinkable looks increasingly inevitable. If Chang's ruling is upheld by the state supreme court, as most predict it will be, the only thing that could stop same-sex marriage in Hawaii is an amendment to the state constitution. And while a movement to amend the constitution is under way, such an action could not be effected before the end of 1998. Thus, Hawaii will probably start issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples A same-sex couple is a pair of people of the same gender who pursue a romantic or sexual relationship together. The term "same-sex relationship" may be used when the sexual orientation of participants in a same-sex relationship is not known. by the end of this year. "I didn't plan this, and I didn't predict it," says Dan Foley Dan Foley is the County Commissioner of Montgomery County, Ohio. He was previously the Clerk of Courts. Elected to his current role in the 2006 election, he took office in January 2007. Foley is a member of the Democratic Party. , the attorney who filed the lawsuit for the dime couples in 1991. "But right now it looks like were on the road to civil rights." With last year's passage of the Defense of Marriage AM which bans federal recognition of same-sex marriages, along with similar legislation in 16 states, the road looks to be largely confined to the islands, at least for the time being. The December ruling prompted a year-end flurry of anti-gay-marriage rhetoric in various statehouses, with Colorado, Indiana, and Nebraska as likely locations for the introduction of antimarriage bills in upcoming legislative sessions. Only Massachusetts governor William Weld William Floyd Weld (born July 31, 1945, in Smithtown, New York) was the Republican Governor of Massachusetts from 1991 to 1997.[1] From 1981 to 1988, he was a federal prosecutor in the United States Justice Department. has indicated that he would be willing to recognize gay marriages performed in Hawaii. Right now the laws banning gay marriage are largely theoretical. But if, as Foley predicts, Hawaii starts issuing licenses to same-sex couples, legal activists say these laws, including DOMA DOMA Defense of Marriage Act , will inevitably be challenged by mainland couples who marry in Hawaii and then return home. The result would be a morass of lawsuits wending their way through the courts into the next century In Hawaii, meanwhile, activists are still giddy from their recent victory. "It was wonderful to be in Hawaii that day," says Ku'umeaaloha Gomes, a member of Na Mamo O Hawai'i, a group of native Hawaiians This is a list of notable Native Hawaiians:
1. pertaining to or characterized by bisexuality. 2. an individual exhibiting bisexuality. 3. pertaining to or characterized by hermaphroditism. 4. and who advocate Hawaiian sovereignty. "We were part of history in the making, and we felt so proud." "There is just no question that this decision was enormous, immense, and wonderful" says Evan Wolfson Evan Wolfson (b. February 4, 1957) is a prominent American civil rights attorney and advocate. He is the founder and executive director of Freedom to Marry, a national non-profit organization working for marriage equality between gay and straight couples. , senior staff attorney at the gay group Lambda Legal Lambda Legal (Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund) is a United States civil rights organization that focuses on gay men, lesbians, bisexuals, transgender people and those with HIV through impact litigation, education, and public policy work. Defense and Education Fund, which is cocounsel in the case. "It's a powerful statement about the truth of our lives." For the couples involved, the ruling was especially sweet, since the suit seemed quixotic quix·ot·ic also quix·ot·i·cal adj. 1. Caught up in the romance of noble deeds and the pursuit of unreachable goals; idealistic without regard to practicality. 2. at best when it was filed six years ago. "When the decision came from the judge, it was our ninth anniversary," says Pregil. "We were really happy. We didn't drink it would be this long and this big." Indeed, the success of the same-sex marriage cause over the past three years stands in sharp contrast to its origins. If ever a gay rights case seemed likely to fail, it was marriage. Even Foley admits that he hoped at best "to get some good language" in a ruling against him that he could put to use in other gay rights cases. The Hawaii marriage case dates back to 1990, when Bill Woods William "Bill" Woods (born 1962 in Moruya, New South Wales) is an Australian television broadcaster. He is currently the co-host of Network Ten's Early News on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, and presents the national weekend edition of Ten News , a local activist, tried to organize a mass commitment ceremony for Hawaii's first gay pride parade A gay pride parade or LGBT pride parade is part of a festival or ceremony held by the LGBT community of a city to commemorate the struggle for LGBT rights and pride. . "He was supposed to get twenty couples together," says Melillo. "But nobody wanted to do it publicly. So then Bill asked whether Pat and I wanted to get married legally, and I said, `Sure why not?"' Melillo and Lagon signaled their intentions in a front-page newspaper story that appeared at the end of November 1990. Meanwhile, Woods had recruited Pregil and Rodrigues as well. The day before the two couples were scheduled to apply for the license, Woods also called Baehr and Dancel, who had previously contacted him to find out whether they were entitled to any benefits as a couple under state law. They were not. "He called and said, `Two other couples are ready to apply for the marriage license tomorrow,'" Baehr recalls. "`If you want to, you have to let me know in half an hour because I'm going to put out a press release! Genora was not out yet and had a lot to lose, but she decided she wanted to do this, so we called Bill back and said, `We'll be there."' The next morning, December 17, 1990, was the first time the three couples met. The event itself had all the trappings of a media stunt. The couples showed up to apply with press in tow. The officials at the license bureau sought an opinion from the state attorney general, who denied the application. It was an effective action that briefly drew public attention to the inequity of the law. Unlike other actions, however, this one refused to fade, even though it had all the earmarks of a momentary diversion from other gay rights issues. Woods and the couples sought legal help to challenge the law. For months the state chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), nonpartisan organization devoted to the preservation and extension of the basic rights set forth in the U.S. Constitution. held the case under consideration before finally turning it down. It was April 1991 when Foley accepted the case. Since then, he has, in the words of Vanessa Chong, an attorney for the ACLU ACLU: see American Civil Liberties Union. and a coordinator of coalitions of pro-marriage groups, "pretty much donated his practice to the case." A straight man and a former legal director of the ACLU, Foley had taken on gay cases in the past. In 1985, for example, he successfully sued the island of Maui when the mayor revoked a park permit for the Miss Gay Molokai Pageant pageant, modern dramatic spectacle or procession celebrating a special occasion or an event in the history of a locality. In medieval times the word pageant had meant the wagon or the movable stage on which one scene of a mystery or miracle play was performed. , a drag festival. Fole's commitment to fighting antigay discrimination stemmed from personal feeling: His uncle had suffered greatly at the hands of his own family because of his sexual orientation sexual orientation n. The direction of one's sexual interest toward members of the same, opposite, or both sexes, especially a direction seen to be dictated by physiologic rather than sociologic forces. . While Foley gave the case his all, the lawsuit took a toll on the plaintiffs as well. "I lost my family doing this," says Pregil. "When it went public, they said, `Let someone else fight for it.' Well, hello, who is going to? If s really sad, but it's their loss, not mine." "Our private life has been this public issue since basically the beginning of our relationship," says Baehr. "We wanted to have some private life." The couple have since moved to Baltimore, where Dancel attends medical school. Even small spats take on enormous import. "The stress got to us one day, and we were arguing," says Lagon. "My sister-in-law said, `You guys have to work it out because we're all looking to you.'" The earliest ruling in the lawsuit dismissed the challenge to state marriage law out of hand on the grounds that the existing law was "obviously designed to promote the general welfare interests of the community by sanctioning traditional man-woman family units and procreation PROCREATION. The generation of children; it is an act authorized by the law of nature: one of the principal ends of marriage is the procreation of children. Inst. tit. 2, in pr. ." It wasn't until May 1993 that the case finally took off when the state supreme court returned it to a lower court for trial, with the strong suggestion that the ban on same-sex marriage was unconstitutional. In the meantime, the couples found little sympathy from national gay groups or indeed from many gays and lesbians. "They had valid concerns that we were never going to win, so why waste resources?" says Baehr. "Then there was the whole debate that maybe we shouldn't ape heterosexuals. Then there was another argument that maybe we shouldn't win because it would make the right wing angry and there would be a terrible backlash." For the couples, who endured more than two years tilting at the marriage windmill windmill, apparatus that harnesses wind power for a variety of uses, e.g., pumping water, grinding corn, driving small sawmills, and driving electrical generators. Windmills were probably not known in Europe before the 12th cent. with little support, attitudes toward them changed overnight with the state supreme court ruling. "The day after the decision, we agreed to have a strategy meeting in my office," Baehr says. "When I walked in, there were 40 people, most of whom I didn't know. It was a quick transition from feeling very alone on this issue to having people say, `We're going to tell you what to do.'" That first victory in the state supreme court could have been undone by the state legislature A state legislature may refer to a legislative branch or body of a political subdivision in a federal system. The following legislatures exist in the following political subdivisions: n. 1. A narrow strip of wood forming part of the sides of a barrel, tub, or similar structure. 2. A rung of a ladder or chair. 3. A staff or cudgel. 4. Music See staff1. off any legislative moves. In its last session of 1996, the Hawaii house of representatives The Hawaiʻi House of Representatives is the lower house of the Hawaiʻi State Legislature. voted in favor of a constitutional amendment limiting marriage to couples of the opposite sex, but the state senate rejected such a measure. The new session, which convenes in January, says Foley, promises "the toughest fight we have faced in the legislature." While pressure is on lawmakers to do something in fight of the ruling, the current political climate is so complicated, its difficult to know exactly what that something might be. "We have a choice of scenarios here, none of which are going to be easy, all of which require significant resources," says Chong. Supporters of Chang's ruling are laboring under an initial burden as a result of last November's election. While the outcome was, in Foley's words, "a wash," with equal numbers of incumbent opponents and supporters of same-sex marriage losing their elections, many legislators are nonetheless feeling the political heat. "There's a perception that same-gender marriage is an important issue for a large part of the electorate," says Chong. "The net result is a lot more legislators are shaking in their shoes." Lawmakers have two options for amending the state constitution, which at this point is the only way to stop same-sex marriage. They could pass an amendment directly by a vote of the legislature, in which case, says Foley, the measure would certainly be a hybrid bill A hybrid bill is a public bill which affects the private interests of a particular person or organization. It is generally initiated by the Government on behalf of non-Parliamentary bodies such as local authorities and is treated like a private bill for part of its passage through that would include domestic-partnership rights and other benefits rather than simply ban same-sex marriage. Some supporters of same-sex marriage say they aren't willing to accept such a compromise "I don't want to "I Don't Want To"/"I Love Me Some Him" is the third single released from Toni Braxton's multiplatinum second album, Secrets. Written and produced by R. Kelly, this ballad describes the agony of a break-up. settle for domestic partnership," says Rodrigues. "As far as giving us some benefits, I say forget it. We're halfway there--let's go for it" Strategically, however, the move makes sense. Gay-marriage advocates are betting that such an amendment would create so much turmoil that it would never pass. "If we have a constitutional amendment where you have to vote up or down on both marriage and domestic-partner benefits, people will go all sorts of ways," says Foley. A similar strategy effectively killed a measure to outlaw same-sex marriage in the California legislature last year. And even if the amendment passed in Hawaii, it would have to be approved by voters in November 1998. Another option for legislators opposed to same-sex marriage would be to clear the way for a constitutional convention, known in local shorthand shorthand, any brief, rapid system of writing that may be used in transcribing, or recording, the spoken word. Such systems, many having characters based on the letters of the alphabet, were used in ancient times; the shorthand of Tiro, Cicero's amanuensis, was used as a "concon," where the issue could be considered by specially elected delegates. Voters approved such a convention last November, but the results are being challenged in court. "If the legislature passes enabling legislation Noun 1. enabling legislation - legislation that gives appropriate officials the authority to implement or enforce the law legislation, statute law - law enacted by a legislative body ," says Chong, "the 1998 general election would be when concon delegates are elected and 1999 would be the convention. The propositions would be on the ballot in 2000." By that time, however, voters will find themselves in the unusual position of deciding whether to annul an·nul tr.v. an·nulled, an·nul·ling, an·nuls 1. To make or declare void or invalid, as a marriage or a law; nullify. 2. hundreds, perhaps thousands, of legal unions that have already taken place. "If we can show the public real, existing families and ask them not to dissolve those marriages, it will be different," says Foley. For the opposition, he adds, "it will be a real hard fight." Foley is also betting that the reality of gay marriage will seem less threatening than the picture painted by its opponents. "Once we have [legalized gay marriage], those arguments can be seen for their speciousness spe·cious adj. 1. Having the ring of truth or plausibility but actually fallacious: a specious argument. 2. Deceptively attractive. ," he says. "Desegregation desegregation: see integration. met with resistance because it forced a group of people to be with people they didn't want to be with. It changed white people's lives. Gay marriage doesn't do anything like that. The composition of the workplace will not change; your neighbors will not change. Nothing else happens." Or, as Melillo puts it, "The sky doesn't fall; the world doesn't end." That's something opponents of same-sex marriage are not eager to find out "The religious right is very aware of this timetable," says Chong. The organized opposition to the marriage decision, a group called Hawaii's Future Today, is composed primarily of Mormon and Roman Catholic leaders. So far they have avoided alliances with inflammatory conservative leaders from the mainland. Foley notes that Bill Horn, an antigay activist from Iowa, was scheduled to appear in Hawaii but canceled his visit after Hawaii's Future Today signaled its displeasure. In fact, the fight over same-sex marriage in Hawaii has been unusually civil. Gomes recalls that at a press conference announcing Chang's ruling, a spokesman for Hawaii's Future Today even gave her a congratulatory hug. "Luckily, public discussion has never risen to the kind of hurtful hurt·ful adj. Causing injury or suffering; damaging. hurt ful·ly adv.hurt , malicious, violent climate seen in other parts of the country," says Chong. "There's too much diversity here. There's a climate of having to get along." So far no increase has been reported in antigay bias crimes because., of the debate. Indeed, with its long-standing liberal tradition and tolerance for racial and ethnic intermarriage in·ter·mar·ry intr.v. in·ter·mar·ried, in·ter·mar·ry·ing, in·ter·mar·ries 1. To marry a member of another group. 2. To be bound together by the marriages of members. 3. , Hawaii seems the logical place for the issue of I same-sex marriage to have come up. "If you look at our history, we have that kind of openness and acceptance," says Gomes. "I think we're a different kind of community." And yet the hunger for same-sex marriage goes far beyond the islands' shores. In Fort Lauderdale Fort Lauderdale (lô`dərdāl), residential, commercial, and resort city (1990 pop. 149,377), seat of Broward co., SE Fla., on the Atlantic coast; settled around a fort built (c.1837) in the Seminole War, inc. 1911. , Fla., in February, some 200 couples are expected to join together in a mass commitment ceremony as part of the city's Winter Gayla 97. "Publicly acknowledging your relationship is something many gay couples want to do," says Arnoldo Ramirez, an organizer for the event "Hawaii has given people hope that the civil right of marriage is within our grasp, that it's a matter of time." Yet activists in Hawaii are concerned that mainland gays and lesbians are just sitting back and waiting to fill in a date on their wedding invitations while a handful of people on the islands pave the way. Says Melillo: "We feel frustrated frus·trate tr.v. frus·trat·ed, frus·trat·ing, frus·trates 1. a. To prevent from accomplishing a purpose or fulfilling a desire; thwart: that we haven't gotten as much support from the mainland as we would like--not just financially but also morally." The largest group seeking such support is the Hawai'i Equal Rights Marriage Project, which runs on a shoestring budget largely out of a spare bedroom in director Sue Reardon's home and on the covered terrace of activist Tom Ramsey's apartment. "I'd hate to say we're a virtual organization," says Ramsey, pointing to the group's Web site. "We do have a post-office box." Gays and lesbians in Hawaii have been energized by the marriage effort, says Ramsey. But for a cause with far-reaching national implications, HERMP's fund-raising efforts Noun 1. fund-raising effort - a campaign to raise money for some cause fund-raising campaign, fund-raising drive crusade, campaign, cause, drive, effort, movement - a series of actions advancing a principle or tending toward a particular end; "he supported on the mainland have met with spotty spot·ty adj. spot·ti·er, spot·ti·est 1. Lacking consistency; uneven. 2. Having or marked with spots; spotted. spot success at best Foley is still owed some $50,000 in legal fees. The financial shortfall grates on local activists, who are convinced that a relatively modest investment could produce big results. "We really need to change public perception here," says Ramsey. "And Hawaii is the perfect place for this; it's an isolated media market. It's a great place to learn how to change opinions about gay and lesbian people. By mainland standards it's cheap." Ramsey estimates that a $250,000 media campaign would turn public opinion around and save gay marriage from being just a passing phenomenon. "My sense is that it should be a high priority for mainland organizations," says Ramsey. "It would carry from one state to another. To us, it's been frustrating frus·trate tr.v. frus·trat·ed, frus·trat·ing, frus·trates 1. a. To prevent from accomplishing a purpose or fulfilling a desire; thwart: not to somehow get the message over." Ramsey, Foley, and others criticize national gay groups, particularly the Human Rights Campaign--whose executive director, Elizabeth Birch Elizabeth Birch (born 1956, Dayton, Ohio) is an American attorney and former corporate executive who came to Washington in January of 1995 to head the Human Rights Campaign, the nation's largest LGBT organization. , once lived in Hawaii--for using the marriage issue to raise money for themselves without passing any along to HERMP. But Kim Mills, a spokeswoman for the HRC HRC Human Rights Campaign HRC Human Rights Council (UN) HRC Human Rights Commission HRC Hard Rock Cafe HRC Hillary Rodham Clinton (democratic senator/presidential candidate; former first lady) , says that such criticism is misplaced mis·place tr.v. mis·placed, mis·plac·ing, mis·plac·es 1. a. To put into a wrong place: misplace punctuation in a sentence. b. . "The fact is that we are primarily a federal lobby," she says. "We have provided information and assistance to people in Hawaii. We have spent money on this issue." When--not if, as Foley insists--same-sex marriage becomes the law in Haw haw, common name for several plants, e.g., the hawthorn and the black haw (see honeysuckle). 4 people are bracing for an influx of gay and lesbian couples looking to get hitched. But unlike their Hawaiian peers, who have had years to consider the issue, many mainland gays and lesbians may not understand exactly what marriage would entail. "When I talk to the well-to-do Hollywood types, they don't think they need it," Foley marvels. "They think they have all the legal arrangements they need. They don't understand that if the breadwinner bread·win·ner n. One whose earnings are the primary source of support for one's dependents. bread·win ning n. is hit by a truck, you can't sue." Many gay men and lesbians also have not considered that marriage is i the ultimate coming-out statement. "The first thing you have to do before even thinking about getting married is come out," says Rodrigues. Because the idea of same-sex marriage is still so new for many mainland gay and lesbian couples, it is impossible to predict how they will avail themselves of the opportunity once they have it. Foley, for one, believes that some couples will choose romance over activism, privately getting married in the islands and then not making much of their union publicly once they return to the mainland. (No one in Hawaii believes that same-sex marriage will lead to the permanent relocation of a large number of gays from the mainland.) "I think there will be a marriage closet," Foley says. "They will come here and get married, but when they go home they won't demand their rights." He also believes, based on experience with same-sex unions A Same-sex union refers to an enduring relationship between two people of the same gender. Literary, historical, and archaeological evidence of such unions has been found for a number of diverse cultures as early as 2400 B.C. in Denmark, that the number of couples who get married will be a trickle at first. Still, at least some couples will probably want to make a public statement about their marriages, guaranteeing a round of media coverage in their hometowns and generating a new discussion of the issue. Among the first to tie the knot, of course, will be the plaintiffs. "We feel we've waited all our lives for this," says Melillo. "Every year is a hardship." He and Lagon, both of whom are ministers, have talked about Melillo's performing the ceremony himself "We have family expecting a fabulous ceremony," Melillo says. "We'd be neglectful ne·glect·ful adj. Characterized by neglect; heedless: neglectful of their responsibilities. See Synonyms at negligent. ne·glect if we didn't have one." Baehr and Dancel plan a private wedding on a mountain slope in Maui, away from the glare of the media. "We may have found ourselves doing our best to live up to our surprise responsibility as role models," says Baehr. "But on our wedding day it's not about public education. Its about our commitment to each other, and that's private and personal." Sitting on their patio in Waianae on Oahu with their daughter, her boyfriend, and their 7-month-old grandson, Pregil and Rodrigues talk about the case every night They keep a running conversation of their plans. "I wanted to get married on Christmas Day On Christmas Day was released just as a single for Christmas holidays. Doesn't have a video clip. Maria did some Christmas concerts to release the song. Track listing Norwegian CD Single
"But we have our grandson's party coming up, so we'll have to do that first," Rodrigues explains. "She wants it fabulous," adds Pregil. "I want it simple." "I guess I'm old-fashioned," Rodrigues concludes. "You do it once and one time only. For me, once I'm married, even if there are hard times, I'm not getting a divorce. Ill do whatever I have to to make it work. I don't fight for something just to let it go." RELATED ARTICLE: Landmarks on the road to legal gay marriage 1990-1991 * December 17, 1990 Three same-sex couples apply to the Hawaii state health department for marriage licenses. Officials deny the licenses, saying state law allows only a man and a woman to marry. * May 1, 1991 The couples sue the state for the right to marry, citing equal-protection and privacy laws. 1991-1992 * September 9, 1991 Hawaii circuit court judge Robert Klein Robert Klein (born February 8, 1942) is an American stand-up comedian and actor. Biography Early life Klein was born in the Bronx to Frieda (née Moskowitz) and Benjamin Klein[1][2] finds that the same-sex couples are not protected by state laws in regard to the right to marry. His ruling further states that restricting marriage to a man and a woman is a "rational, legislative effort to advance the general welfare of the community." 1992 - 1993 * May 5, 1993 Overruling o·ver·rule tr.v. o·ver·ruled, o·ver·rul·ing, o·ver·rules 1. a. To disallow the action or arguments of, especially by virtue of higher authority: Judge Klein, the Hawaii state supreme court The Hawaiʻi State Supreme Court is the highest court of the State of Hawaiʻi in the United States. finds that same-sex couples do have a right to marry unless the state can provide a compelling reason why it should ban such unions. The case returns to the lower court. The new trial, however, is delayed while third parties, including the Church of Latter-Day Saints Lat·ter-day Saint n. See Mormon. Noun 1. Latter-Day Saint - a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Mormon and Hawaii lawmakers, make unsuccessful attempts to intervene. 1994 - 1995 * February 2, 1995 Spurred on in part by the case in Hawaii and by fear that the U.S. Constitution's "full faith and credit" clause would require other states to recognize gay marriages performed there, South Dakota South Dakota (dəkō`tə), state in the N central United States. It is bordered by North Dakota (N), Minnesota and Iowa (E), Nebraska (S), and Wyoming and Montana (W). state representatives introduce a bill that would outlaw gay marriages in that state. By the time the bill is signed into law on February 21, 1996, a similar bill has also passed in Utah. 1995-1996 * March 1996 With the campaign season under way, the drive for states to introduce legislation banning gay marriage picks up momentum. By March 12, the date of seven presidential primaries, such bills are pending in 18 state legislatures. By year's end 37 states will have considered similar measures; 16 of them will have passed into law. * May 8, 1996 Conservative Republicans introduce the Defense of Marriage Act into both houses of the U.S. Congress. The bill would deny federal benefits to same-sex spouses and allow states to ignore homosexual marriages legalized in other states. * September 10, 1996 DOMA sails through the Senate, 85-14, and is signed by President Clinton on September 21. It had passed the House of Representatives by a vote of 342-67 in July. * September 10-20, 1996 In a nonjury trial before Hawaiian circuit court judge Kevin Chang, lawyers for the state argue for upholding the ban on same-sex marriage on the grounds that it benefits children. Lawyers for the plaintiffs produce experts who say children raised in gay households are as well-adjusted as those raised in heterosexual households. * December 3, 1996 Judge Chang finds that the state failed to show a compelling reason to justify sex discrimination in the marriage law and orders the state to start issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples. The next day, however, he grants a state motion to delay his order pending one more appeal to the Hawaii state supreme court. RELATED ARTICLE: Same-sex marriage, Nordic-style So far no country gives lesbians and gay men the same unrestricted rights to marriage that heterosexuals have. But the Netherlands may well become the first-and soon. "There is no objective justification for the ban on marriage of couples of the same sex," declared the Dutch house of representatives last April. It passed, by a vote of 81-60, a resolution urging the government to submit draft legislation legalizing gay marriage by August 1 of this year. Already, however, five nations allow gay and lesbian couples to many, though only via special laws designed just for homosexuals. Denmark, Norway, and Sweden have essentially identical "registered partnership" laws granting all the rights and obligations of matrimony MATRIMONY. See Marriage. except access to adoption, church weddings, and artificial-insemination services. Iceland's law is the same, with one exception: A gay spouse is allowed to adopt his or her partner's biological child. Denmark led the way in passing a registered-partnership law in 1989; Norway followed in 1993, and Sweden, in 1995. Gay partnerships became legal in Iceland last year on June 27, which is gay pride day there. Foreign couples may not, however, travel to Denmark, Iceland, Norway, or Sweden for a gay wedding. At least one member of the couple must be a citizen of the nation in question and must be living there when the wedding occurs. A different concept of gay marriage unfolded last year in Hungary. In May the Hungarian parliament voted 207-73 to legalize le·gal·ize tr.v. le·gal·ized, le·gal·iz·ing, le·gal·iz·es To make legal or lawful; authorize or sanction by law. le common-law gay marriage, heeding a 1995 constitutional court ruling that mandated the change. The ruling had been completely unexpected and did not result from any gay campaigning. Gay couples who live together and have sex have all the rights of matrimony with one exception: They cannot adopt children. In Denmark, where "gay marriage" has been legal the longest, 2,083 gay or lesbian couples had tied the knot as of January 1, 1996, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the nation's sole gay newspaper, PAN-Bladet. Seventeen percent of the couples (357) later divorced, and 219 marriages ended when a partner died. More male couples have gotten hitched than female couples--1,449 versus 634. Danish lesbians also have a higher divorce rate--23%, compared with 14% for gay men. |
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