FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Media@dcacluorg
WASHINGTON - The American Civil Liberties Union today strongly condemned
President Bush for publicly supporting a proposal to amend the Constitution to
deny marriage protections to gay and lesbian couples and their children. Both
houses of Congress overwhelmingly rejected a similar Federal Marriage Amendment
in 2004, and the Senate is expected to consider the proposal on Wednesday.
"The Federal Marriage Amendment is neither compassionate nor conservative,"
said Caroline Fredrickson, Director of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office.
"Lawmakers rightly rejected it in 2004, but election year politics and
Republicans pandering to their base have resurrected this mean-spirited
amendment. Congress must -- and will -- reject this anti-family proposal again.
Discrimination has no place in America, and certainly not in our founding
document."
The Federal Marriage Amendment, offered by Senator Wayne Allard (R-CO), would
amend the Constitution to deny states the ability to define marriage themselves
- mandating that marriage be only between one man and one woman - and would deny
all benefits of marriage to all unmarried couples. It is identical to the
proposed constitutional amendment that was considered - and rejected - by
Congress in 2004.
If adopted, the amendment’s broad language would attack marriages, civil
unions, domestic partnerships and other legal protections for gay and lesbian
American families. Similar state-level constitutional amendments have already
been used to undermine important protections for gay and lesbian couples and
their families, such as health insurance and other benefits.
Opposition to the amendment has come from a diverse crowd, including
conservative sources: former Congressman Bob Barr (R-GA), the author of the 1996
Defense of Marriage Act, Vice President Dick Cheney, former Senator John
Danforth (R-MO), columnist George Will, Senator John McCain (R-AZ), and others
have all spoken out against the measure.
The Senate will likely vote on Wednesday on whether to invoke "cloture," or
limit debate, on the amendment. Even proponents of the measure agree that
support for Federal Marriage Amendment falls short of even a simple 51-vote
majority, far less than the 67 votes needed to amend the Constitution.
"President Bush underestimates the goodness of Americans by once again
pushing divide and conquer politics;" said Christopher Anders, an ACLU
Legislative Counsel. "Personal decisions on marriage and family should be made
in each family’s house, not in the White House. America - and all Americans -
deserve better from their president."
To read more about the ACLU’s concerns with the Federal Marriage
Amendment, go to: www.aclu.org/marriageamendment