California’s Supreme Court Upholds Gay Marriage Ban

Religious groups and conservatives swiftly began organizing against them.

California’s supreme court has upheld a ban on gay marriage in the state after voters used a referendum to overturn an earlier ruling in favour of recognising homosexual weddings.

But the court ruled that the 18,000 gay marriages that have already taken place will continue to be recognised by the state government.

The ruling is the latest twist in a social battle that is increasingly replacing abortion as a rallying point for conservatives after several states legalised gay marriage in the past years, with more expected to follow in the coming months, while others have passed laws barring them.

The California judgement was met with cries of “shame on you” by angry gay rights activists outside the court who said they will not let the issue rest and will attempt to organise a second referendum to overturn the ban.The original vote, known as Proposition 8, imposed a constitutional amendment defining marriage as a union “between a man and a woman” in the state’s constitution. It passed in November with 52% of the ballots in favour.

The backlash against gay marriage came after a supreme court ruling in May that the state constitution’s ban on discrimination did not permit a bar on homosexuals marrying. The court said that the unions were a “basic civil right” and “an individual’s sexual orientation, like a person’s race or gender, does not constitute a legitimate basis upon which to deny or withhold legal rights.” The court also spoke of the need for gay couples to be treated with “respect and dignity”. Marriages began in June but religious groups and conservatives swiftly began organising against them.

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2009-05-26