June 18 - As people across the country celebrate pride month and the first same
sex marriages in California, many LGBT advocates are preparing for
their next challenge to marriage - constitutional bans. The measure
will be on the ballot in California and Florida. As Sean Kinane
reports from Tampa, opponents say Amendment 2 could also take away
the rights of opposite sex non married couples as well.
On Valentine's Day of this year, Rev. Phyllis Hunt, Senior Pastor of
Metropolitan Community Church in Tampa, and a group of same-sex
couples attempted to file for marriage licenses. They were refused.
Instead, Rev. Hunt performed a religious marriage ceremony at a park
across the street from the courthouse.
"Many, many couples pick this day to have a wedding, and so we have
picked this day to have a wedding protest because same-sex,
same-gender loving couples are not afforded the over 1,500 rights,
privileges, and responsibilities that civil marriage gives
to opposite-gender loving couples."
During that Valentine's Day ceremony, twelve couples recited vows and
made life-long commitments to each other. Russell Fox is one of the
wed.
"It was a really, really nice little ceremony, even though it wasn't
legal. But it still meant something that meant a lot to me. A lot."
These ceremonies happened even though Florida law denies same-gender
couples the freedom to marry; a measure on November's ballot called
Amendment 2 would take that restriction even further. It would
enshrine it in the state's constitution.
Some worry that Amendment 2 would do more than restrict same sex marriage.
Nadine Smith is Executive Director of Equality
Florida. She said it
could affect opposite-sex unmarried domestic partners as well,
especially the elderly.
"Precisely because it poses a threat to all unmarried Floridians and
would hit unmarried seniors particularly hard. Florida has a large
retiree population and many rely on domestic partnership protections.
And they don't remarry after they've been widowed because they would lose
essential pension and health benefits."
Opponents are looking to Michigan as reason for concern.
In May, the Michigan Supreme Court ruled that their state's
constitutional ban on gay marriage even forbids domestic partnership
benefits, such as hospital visitation rights, for unmarried couples.
Supporters of Amendment 2 say it only forbids same-sex marriage and
does not affect health insurance or other benefits afforded to
domestic partnerships. Terry Kemple is the President and Founder of
the Community Issues Council, a conservative Christian group that
supports Amendment 2. Kemple disagrees with the assertion that the ban would
take away benefits.
"It defines marriage as the union of a man and a woman as the best
arrangement for protecting children and it does not prohibit the
government from extending benefits to any person."
Yesterday, marked that first day that same sex couples in California
could get married, while many see this as a step forward for marriage
equality, the battle continues. Like Florida, California is also
facing a proposed constitutional ban on same sex marriage.
Election
Unspun Producer Karen Miller spoke with David Buckel, Marriage Project
Director for the LGBT legal advocacy group Lambda
Legal. Buckel says
amendments like these are the latest fight in the ongoing struggle.
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