News
āWeddingā bells ring off key in nationās Heartland
Apr 8, 2009
Iowa is now the poster child for why it is important to have constitutional amendments that decree that marriage is only between one man and one woman.
It has been my contention for some time that each state needs to have in place a constitutional amendment defining marriage as only between one man and one woman. Without such an amendment, a stateās activist Supreme Court can overturn a law adopted by the legislature, declaring it to be unconstitutional. That is what happened in Iowa and Massachusetts. In passing Proposition 8 in referendum last November, voters reversed a similar move by the California Supreme Court the previous June.
The April 3 decision propelled Iowa to the forefront of our nationās same-sex āmarriageā debate when the stateās highest court ruled the stateās ban on same-sex āmarriageā violated the equal protection clause of the Iowa Constitution. Iowa joins Connecticut, Massachusetts and Vermont in permitting marriages between homosexual and lesbian couples.
Once again, it was the judiciary branch of state government rending the nationās moral fabric, bent on rewriting our countryās social construct.
With no residency requirements, the courtās opinion means at the end of April when the order goes into effect, same-sex couples will be free to travel from other states to exchange āvowsā in the Iowa Heartland.
This ruling turns Iowa into a destination for same-sex āmarriages.ā No doubt there are weekend travel packages already being planned. Iowa will soon be the Las Vegas of same-sex āmarriageā for America. And you know those folks wonāt be resettling in the Hawkeye State, but will be heading back homeāperhaps to your state.
And given there is no provision for citizen-initiated constitutional referendums in Iowa, it will take at least two years for proponents of traditional marriageāif successfulāto get a ban on same-sex āmarriageā in the stateās constitution.
The Iowa Senate Majority Leader Michael Gronstal promised he would block any legislation codifying a ban on same-sex āmarriageā in the stateās constitution, saying he doesnāt see anything wrong with a ābunch of people who merely want to profess their love for each other.ā
The only way to stop another stateās judges from trumping the peopleās elected representatives is to pass an amendment to that stateās constitution. Over 20 states have already done this and are at least protected from the overreach of their stateās Supreme Court.
The Iowa Supreme Court couldnāt have ruled that an amendment to the constitution is āunconstitutional.ā If they had done that, then a government āof the people, by the people, for the peopleā would be imperiled. If the California Supreme Court does this in the case they are currently considering, then weād have to say that our entire system of government is coming to a tragic end.
Original Article: The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission
Written By: Richard Land