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LISTEN Online: CWA Interviews LaBarbera on HB 1826, Illinois’ “Gay Marriage” (Minus the M-Word) Bill »
Legal Analysis of HB 1826, Illinois’ ‘Civil Union’ Bill: ‘Same-Sex Marriage’ ‘in All but Name’Linton: HB 1826 would “empty the institution of marriage of all substance” Memorandum Date: March 19, 2007 To: Illinois pro-family groups, including Illinois Citizens for Life, Americans For Truth, Illinois Family Institute, CWA of Illinois, and Real Civil Rights Illinois From: Paul Linton, Esq. Re: Analysis of Amendment No. 1 to House Bill 1826 Introduction Amendment No. 1 to House Bill 1826, if enacted by the General Assembly, would create civil unions in Illinois for both same-sex and opposite-sex couples. The Amendment would “deconstruct” the meaning of marriage in two vital respects: First, it would allow same-sex couples to enjoy “all the same protections, benefits, and responsibilities under law . . . as are granted to spouses in a marriage.” § 105(a). This is contrary to the longstanding public policy of Illinois (and, until very recently, every other State in the Union and every other country in the world) to confer such “protections, benefits, and responsibilities” only upon married couples who, by definition and the very nature of marriage, are opposite-sex. Second, it would allow opposite-sex couples to enjoy “all the same protections, benefits, and responsibilities under law . . . as are granted to spouses in a marriage,” § 105(a), see also §§ 105(c), 106, 201, without actually being married, a legislative novelty that has not been adopted in any other State, including those States that have enacted civil unions statutes (Connecticut, New Jersey and Vermont) or their equivalent (California’s Domestic Partner Act). Opposite-sex couples (who, of course, may marry under current law) are included for the twin purposes of diluting the meaning of marriage and blurring the distinction between opposite-sex and same-sex relationships (by calling them by the same name). Amendment No. 1 would empty the institution of marriage of all substance, leaving only an empty form (i.e., the name, “marriage”) as a “consolation prize” for those who oppose same-sex “marriage.” Marriage, however, is more than a name–it is an institution that is fundamental to the existence and continuity of societies throughout history, in all times and places. Apart from the public policy reasons for opposing Amendment No. 1, which are discussed below, there are legal reasons for opposing the Amendment, as well. To begin with, the title of the bill that would be enacted by Amendment No. 1, the “Illinois Religious Freedom Protection and Civil Unions Act,” is deceptive and misleading. In an effort to allay concerns about the bill’s impact on religious practices, the very first substantive section addresses “Religious Freedom.” § 102. The “protection” offered by § 102, repeated in § 209(b), however, is negligible. Essentially, §§ 102 and 209(b), taken together, protect “religious practice” from interference and permit any “religious body” and “officiant thereof” to refuse to “solemnize or officiate a civil union.” But the “protection” afforded by the bill extends only to “religious practice,” which is already secured by the religious freedom provisions of the state and federal constitutions, not practices based on moral considerations. In other words, although a religious body may refuse to perform civil unions, it may not refuse to recognize civil unions performed by others, notwithstanding any moral objections it may have to civil unions. This is apparent not only from the overall structure of the bill, but, more specifically, from § 105 (describing the “Protections and Responsibilities of Persons Joined in Civil Union”). Section 105(e)(12) lists, as one of the “legal protections, benefits, and responsibilities of parties to a marriage, which applies in like manner to parties to a civil union,” “Prohibitions against discrimination based upon marital status under the Illinois Human Rights Act.” So, for example, a church or other institution that has moral objections to (same-sex) civil unions would have to offer the same benefits to a partner in a civil union that are given to married persons. No church could discriminate against a same-sex couple joined in a civil union. Another example involves religiously-based adoption agencies. Under Amendment No. 1, such agencies would have to offer adoption services to same-sex couples in civil unions. This is not an imaginary issue. In Massachusetts, Catholic Charities, operating the largest adoption agency in the Commonwealth, had to cease providing adoption services after Massachusetts recognized same-sex “marriages.” If Amendment No. 1 is enacted and Illinois recognizes same-sex civil unions, it will require religiously-based adoption services in Illinois to provide such services to same-sex couples in civil unions or cease their operations. Such obvious legal coercion of moral conscience should not be concealed in the guise of “Religious Freedom Protection.”
Emphasis added. Article I, § 2, is the due process and equal protection guaranty, and § 18 is the equal rights provision. The finding set forth in § 103(e) could be used, in conjunction with the findings set forth in §§ 103(a) and (d), in support of a lawsuit challenging the reservation of the name of “marriage” to opposite-sex couples. The legislative findings set forth in § 103 could be used in an effort to persuade a state court that, under the Illinois Constitution, there is no justifiable reason to reserve marriage to opposite-sex couples. Similar findings in the California Domestic Partner Act have been used for precisely that purpose. See In re Marriage Cases, 49 Cal. Rptr. 3d 675, 709 n. 22 (Ct. App. 2006). Although the California Court of Appeal narrowly upheld the marriage statutes, that judgment has been appealed to and is now under review by the California Supreme Court. To date, most state reviewing courts have rejected state constitutional challenges to state laws reserving marriage to opposite-sex couples. Nevertheless, there is no question that the more “rights and benefits” legislatures confer upon homosexuals, whether individually or jointly, the more difficult it becomes to defend traditional marriage. See Lewis v. Harris, 908 A.2d at 215 (“this State’s decisional law and sweeping legislative enactments, which protect gays and lesbians from sexual orientation discrimination in all its virulent forms, provide committed same-sex couples with a strong interest in equality of treatment relative to comparable heterosexual couples”). For example, despite the commonsense view that children generally thrive and do best in an environment in which both their father and mother are present –– a view supported by social science research –– state laws allowing joint adoptions by unmarried same-sex couples (which is permitted in a minority of States) undermine an asserted interest in dual gender parenting. See Lewis, 908 A.2d at 212-15; Goodridge, 798 N.E.2d at 962-64. Yet such adoptions would be allowed by Amendment No. 1. See § 105(11) (identifying “[a]doption laws and procedures under the Adoption Act”). The impact of such legislation on the ability of the State to draw a meaningful distinction between opposite-sex and same-sex couples (for any purpose) is not hard to predict. In Baker v. State, the Vermont Supreme Court acknowledged that in reserving marriage to opposite-sex couples, “the Legislature could conclude that opposite-sex partners offer advantages in this area [childrearing].” 744 A.2d at 884. “The argument, however, contains a . . . fundamental flaw, and that is the Legislature’s endorsement of a policy diametrically at odds with the State’s claim.” Id.
Id. at 884-85. Even in decisions that have upheld state marriage laws, dissenting judges have pointed to the laws in those States allowing same-sex couples to adopt and/or raise children together as a reason for challenging the asserted state interest in dual gender parenting. See, e.g, Hernandez v. Robles, 855 N.E.2d 1, 32 (N.Y. 2006) (Kaye, C.J., dissenting); Andersen v. King County, 138 P.3d 963, 1018-19 (Wash. 2006) (Fairhurst, J., dissenting). It should be apparent from the foregoing that legislation that obliterates any distinctions in the law between opposite-sex couples and same-sex couples jeopardizes the uniqueness of marriage. Another problem raised by Amendment No. 1 may be found in § 105(f):
Depending upon its interpretation, this provision presents at least the possibility of conflict with the federal Defense of Marriage Act, under which federal statutes, administrative rules and other sources of law recognize as “marriage” only opposite-sex unions, not same-sex unions. The State of Illinois obviously cannot overturn or limit the scope of the federal DOMA, yet the concluding phrase of § 105(f), treating partners in a civil union “as if federal law recognized a civil union,” purports to mandate what DOMA prohibits. Policy Considerations Entirely apart from the foregoing legal and constitutional implications of Amendment No. 1, there are policy considerations to be taken into account. Should the rights and benefits of marriage be bestowed upon same-sex couples? Or are there serious reasons why such a radical change in public policy should be deferred, if not denied? On July 6, 2006, the New York Court of Appeals (New York’s highest court) upheld the constitutionality of the Domestic Relations Law which reserves marriage to opposite-sex couples. The court held that reserving marriage to opposite-sex couples was reasonably related to at least two legitimate state interests: “First, the Legislature could rationally decide that, for the welfare of children, it is more important to promote stability, and to avoid instability, in opposite-sex than in same-sex relationships” because “[h]eterosexual intercourse has a natural tendency to lead to the birth of children,” while “homosexual intercourse does not.” Hernandez v. Robles, 855 N.E.2d 1, 7 (N.Y. 2006). Second, “[t]he Legislature could also rationally believe “that it is better, other things being equal, for children to grow up with both a mother and father.” Id. Less than three weeks later, on July 26, 2006, the Washington State Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of Washington’s Defense of Marriage Act. The court held that “limiting marriage to opposite-sex couples furthers the State’s legitimate interests in procreation and encouraging families with a mother and a father and children biologically related to both.” Andersen v. King County, 138 P.3d 963, 985 (Wash. 2006). The legitimacy of these interests cannot be gainsaid. Moreover, it is (or should be) self-evident that same-sex couples cannot procreate by themselves [see Endnote 2], or provide dual-gender parenting [see Endnote 3].
Goodridge, 798 N.E.2d at 995-96 (Cordy, J., dissenting) (internal citations and footnote omitted).
Id at 999-1000 (Cordy, J., dissenting). A same-sex family structure “raises the prospect of children lacking any parent of their own gender[:]”
Id. at 1000 n. 29. In light of the foregoing considerations, the legislature could assume that “a recognition of same-sex marriages will increase the number of children experiencing this alternative,” and “conceivably conclude that declining to recognize same-sex marriages remains prudent until empirical questions about its impact on the upbringing of children are resolved.” Id. at 1000 (Cordy, J., dissenting).
Id. at 1000. What, ultimately, is the essential purpose for which society recognizes and privileges the institution of marriage? In Goodridge, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court answered that the exclusive and permanent commitment of the marriage partnership rather than the begetting of children is the sine qua non of civil marriage, 798 N.E.2d at 961-62, and added that “the ‘marriage is procreation’ argument singles out the one unbridgeable difference between same-sex and opposite-sex couples, and transforms that difference into the essence of legal marriage.” Id. at 962. But, as Justice Cordy noted, “The court has it backward.”
Id. at 1002 n. 34. See also Morrison v. Sadler, 821 N.E.2d 15, 28-31 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005) (same) [see Endnote 4]. Conclusion In all but name, Amendment No. 1 would recognize same-sex “marriages” in Illinois. But recognition of such “marriages,” denominated as “civil unions,” would not promote either of the legitimate state interests set out above. Moreover, by blurring, if not obliterating, the line between opposite-sex and same-sex unions. Amendment No. 1 would make it far more difficult to retain even the name of “marriage” for opposite-sex unions. There is no need to confer the rights and benefits of opposite-sex unions (marriages) upon same-sex unions (“civil unions’). Furthermore, enactment of Amendment No. 1 would seriously interfere with the religious liberty of churches to maintain their moral objections to same-sex unions in a wide range of areas, including adoption services and employment benefits. ___________________________ Endnotes 1. A fourth case involving a civil union statute and state marriage laws is pending in the Connecticut Supreme Court. See Kerrigan v. Comm’r. ______________________________ Paul Linton Biographical Sketch Paul Linton is an attorney in private practice in the Chicago area. He has Mr. Linton has filed friend-of-the-court briefs defending the traditional
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