Statement Of Sen. Patrick Leahy,
Ranking Member Of The Judiciary Committee,
On S.J. Res. 1, The Marriage Protection Amendment
June 5, 2006


It should come as no surprise to any observer
of partisan politics that the Republican Leader has decided that
today our Nation's most pressing priority is concern over committed
relationships between same sex couples. That we are devoting the
precious few Floor days we have left in this session to this issue,
when so many of us are trying to focus on solutions to high gas
prices, the rising costs of healthcare, the ongoing situation in
Iraq, and strengthening our national security, is a testament to the
misplaced priorities of the Senate Republican leadership. News
reports have clearly revealed how this proposed constitutional
amendment is being used to satisfy the most extreme right-wing
supporters of Republican politicians. I do not believe that
Americans are well served by this strategy.
Election-Year Strategy
The Constitution is too important to be used
for such a partisan political purpose. I agreed with First Lady
Laura Bush when she recently told Fox News that this proposed
amendment should not “be used as a campaign tool, obviously.” Even
so -- obviously -- that is exactly what Karl Rove and others are
doing. That is why we only vote on such partisan measures in the
run up to an election, and apparently high campaign season has
arrived on Republican leaders' calendar. And right on the heels of
this campaign-season bid to amend the Constitution, they are
readying yet another constitutional amendment for the Floor.
Many people have aptly noted that this
amendment would write discrimination into our nation’s
Constitution. I agree. That is exactly what we are being asked to
spend our time doing this week.
The Republican leadership's strenuous efforts
to move this proposed amendment to the Senate floor for debate shows
how important it is to the Republican leadership of the Senate to
cater to the extreme right-wing and special interest groups
agitating for a fight over this issue. They intend to stir up an
election year fight and use it as a “campaign tool” and “a political
strategy.”
Displacing Americans’ Real Priorities
Right now the Senate should be addressing
Americans' top priorities, including ways to make America safer, the
war in Iraq, rising gas prices, health care and health insurance
costs, stem cell research, fixing FEMA, assisting our veterans whose
privacy has been compromised by the Veterans Administration, and the
reauthorization of the Voting Rights Act. Instead, the President's
political strategists and his Senate allies are doing their best to
divide and distract the American people and the Senate from the work
of fixing real problems, by pressing forward with this controversial
proposed constitutional amendment.
As a nation we are currently facing many
pressing issues - the continuing sectarian violence in Iraq,
stunning investigations, indictments and convictions for government
corruption, a complicated drug program that now penalizes our
seniors, a burgeoning national debt, historically high gas prices,
the largest theft of private information maintained by the
Government in history, and on and on. The Judiciary Committee has
been conducting hearings but has yet to get to the bottom of the
Bush-Cheney Administration's warrantless wiretapping and other
programs that have been gathering information on Americans. We also
need to make reauthorizing the expiring provisions of the Voting
Rights Act a priority in the remaining months of this session.
But on the Senate Floor, we are being made to
turn, again, to a divisive measure that will do nothing to correct
the weaknesses in our homeland security, will do nothing to enact a
budget that is now overdue, will do nothing to stem the rise in gas
prices and will do nothing to respond to the most pressing issues
facing hardworking Americans.
What Has Changed Since 2004?
As some may remember, proponents of a Federal
Marriage Amendment in 2004, the last election year, could not
assemble a majority of Senators to even move to consider the
proposed amendment. Remember that in 2004 we were warned that
immediate action was required to protect the fragile institution of
marriage, which was said to be under immediate threat. Of course
the real threats to marriage include adultery and unfaithfulness.
The pressures on marriages come from economic stresses and
unhappiness.
By contrast, in the past two years, no
States have been forced to recognize same-sex marriages. Rather,
several States voted to amend their State constitutions to define
marriage. The Defense of Marriage Act which defines marriage as a
union between a man and a woman for federal purposes and prevents
any State from being forced to recognize another States’ approval of
same sex marriage remains the law of the land. This bipartisan law
has been upheld three times in federal court and is under no threat
of being overturned. There never was then, nor is there now an
imminent crisis that demands the diversion of Congress's attention
from all these other urgent problems or that justifies an alteration
of our founding document to federalize marriage. Unlike the
Republican leadership and the Bush-Cheney Administration, I trust
the 50 States to define marriage and the rules of marriage as they
always have.
I am sure we will continue to hear a lot of
rhetoric about "judicial activism" as a reason why we need to
dramatically alter the United States Constitution. Even the
President in his weekly radio address invoked the notion of rogue
judges that flaunt the law as a justification for this drastic
measure. This politically convenient criticism is surprising
considering the fact that the majority of federal judges have been
appointed by Republican presidents. Any judicial decision that was
a dramatic departure from the status quo on this issue would
certainly be appealed to the United States Supreme Court where seven
out of nine justices have been appointed by Republican presidents.
Does anyone really believe that Chief Justice Roberts is going to
preside over a United States Supreme Court that will override the
law in this regard? Moreover, any State can define marriage in
their Constitution.
Ironically, the proposed federal marriage
amendment, now renamed the Marriage Protection Amendment, would
itself produce a wide range of litigation that judges, the
very boogeymen that proponents of the proposed amendment demonize,
would be required to resolve. It will be judges who will be forced
to resolve the acknowledged ambiguities and meaning of these words
if they are added to our Constitution.
Ambiguous Language
The proposed language we are being required to
consider is exceedingly confusing and subject to interpretation.
Its sweeping language will inevitably create uncertainty. For
example, who would be bound by the provisions of the Marriage
Protection Amendment - State actors, private citizens, or religious
organizations? What would constitute the “legal incidents” of
marriage? Can a legislature pass a “civil unions” law that mirrors
its marriage law, so long as it does not use the word “marriage?”
Can the people of a State put protections for civil unions in their
State constitution? What State actors are forbidden from construing
their own constitutions - the judiciary only, or State executive
branch officials as well? Committee hearings on these precise
language issues did not resolve these questions.
I am particularly concerned about the fate of
the Vermont civil unions that have been formed under the color of
State law. Despite an initially wrenching debate, our State law
remains on the books after five years. There has been no ensuing
crisis in the lives of Vermont families. It is not clear to me,
however, whether the proposed amendment would make the Vermont law
unconstitutional. In short, while the language of the amendment
before us has changed slightly from the original version, it raises
the same concerns.
Presidential Inconsistencies
I started this afternoon by alluding to my
agreement with the recent statements of the First Lady that the
Constitution should not be used for political purposes. I agree
with her statement. Just as I agreed with her sense that the
President’s “bring it on” language from the early days of the Iraq
occupation was not helpful.
Starting this last weekend we have seen that
suddenly the President is, nonetheless, involving himself in this
effort and is now prepared to endorse a specific constitutional
amendment on this divisive topic. I have written President Bush on
more than one occasion to ask precisely what language he and his
Administration endorse. My most recent letter was last month. I
ask that a copy be included in the Record. My letters have gone
unanswered. The Administration did not send a representative to any
of the Committee hearings on this amendment, nor did the
Administration comment on the specifics of the current proposal or
respond to questions about its language. His general endorsement
during the last couple of days is in the nature of a political
campaign -- more in the nature of a signal than of substance. The
President's recent statements on Saturday and at the rally today at
the Old Executive Office Building adjacent to the White House remain
general and vague. After the last campaign and his re-election, the
President indicated that he had no intention of including such an
amendment among his Administration's top priorities, and he had no
intention of pressing Congress to approve it. What has changed
since that day and today? Only his standing in the public opinion
polls. The right wing elements of his base are agitating, and he
has responded to them as he always does.
Undermining States’ Prerogatives
I remember a time when leaving States in
control of issues of family law was an easy decision for Members on
both sides of the aisle. It is disappointing that Senators would
endorse this broadly drafted amendment when it so clearly violates
the traditions of Federalism and local control that many in this
body have claimed to respect and cherish.
As prominent conservative and former
congressman Bob Barr put it, “Marriage is a quintessential state
issue. The Defense of Marriage Act goes as far as is necessary in
codifying the federal legal status and parameters of marriage. A
constitutional amendment is both unnecessary and needlessly
intrusive and punitive.”
It reminds me of last year when we were called
into emergency session to try to overturn highly competent state
courts that had thoroughly reviewed the medical decisions in the
Terri Schiavo case. What has happened to conservatives who would
oppose the Federal Government's intrusion on the prerogatives of the
States? The States have traditionally set the laws on marriage.
That has been a foundational principle in laws pertaining to our
families. The States determine what age you must be in order to
marry, whether you have to have your parents' permission, and so
on. The States have done that and do it well. And what we ought to
do is to continue to allow the States to do that.
Most States are going to say marriage is
between a man and a woman. My own State of Vermont, because of our
Constitution, was given a question: Would we support gay marriage?
My State said no. Instead, we have civil unions, which give gay
couples legal rights of inheritance and hospital visitation and
other prerogatives. In Judiciary Committee hearings, experts
disagreed about whether this proposed amendment would likely
invalidate Vermont’s civil unions.
In addition to my concerns that this effort
will trample on State authority and responsibility, I am deeply
concerned that this proposal is writing discrimination into the
Constitution. For the first time in our nation’s history, we would
be amending the Constitution to narrow individual rights and to
federalize an issue of family law. I am a conservative when it
comes to the Constitution and to conserving the Constitution.
How will this measure affect American families
that currently exist in this country whose members seek the
protection of civil unions and the acknowledgment of their committed
relationships? How will it affect child support enforcement,
inheritance and insurance benefits? I hope that those who claim to
care about families will turn away from wedge politics and
scapegoating and diminishing others. Instead, we should join
together to work on the many pressing issues already piling up on
Congress's agenda that affect the American family – like healthcare,
like gas prices, like pensions, like paying for college educations
and like raising the minimum wage.
Divisiveness and Demonization
Last month, President Bush spoke eloquently
about this country and our values. He emphasized something I wish
that this White House and the Republican leadership of the Congress
would keep in mind in connection with their efforts to demonize gay
and lesbian Americans. The President said: “We cannot build a
unified country by inciting people to anger, or playing on anyone's
fears, or exploiting the issue of” - and here I insert ‘marriage’
for ‘immigration’ – “for political gain. We must always remember,”
he continued, “that real lives will be affected by our debates and
decisions, and that every human being has dignity and value . . .
.” Mean-spirited rhetoric does not serve this Nation or its diverse
population. Our Nation would be better served if we refrained from
divisiveness that is wielded like a weapon in order to score
political and emotional points before an election.
As an American who has been married for more
than 40 years, I am a great fan of the institution of marriage. I
also believe it is important to encourage and to sanction committed
relationships. I respect the people of my State for the careful
manner in which they resolved this matter by recognizing civil
unions. And let us be real -- this state action did nothing to
diminish or to threaten the marriages in Vermont or in any other
State. For all these reasons, I continue to oppose measures such as
this proposed constitutional amendment.
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