Marriage for Same-Sex Couples

 

Marriage for Same-Sex Couples Marriage for Same-Sex Couples Marriage for Same-Sex Couples Marriage for Same-Sex Couples Marriage for Same-Sex Couples Marriage for Same-Sex Couples Marriage for Same-Sex Couples Marriage for Same-Sex Couples Marriage for Same-Sex Couples

Thea Spyer and Edie Windsor

Nigel Simon and Alvin Williams

Carol Snyder and Heather McDonnell

Donna Colley, Margaux Towne-Colley, and their son Grayson

Richard Rogers and Bill Mullins

Francis Shen and Wade Nichols

Charles Blackburn and Glen Dehn

Jo Rabb and Takia Foskey

Maria Barquero and Donna Myers

Marriage equality. Marriage Fairness. Gay marriage. Marriage for same-sex couples. It is called by many different names, but all of them refer to the same thing: Extending the freedom to marry, along with its special legal status and the thousands of protections and obligations that opposite-sex married couples enjoy, to same-sex couples through civil marriage.

The concept of equal protection under the law, enshrined in the Constitution, requires that fundamental rights like the right to marry be made available equally to same-sex and opposite-sex couples. While religious faiths are free to discriminate between same-sex and opposite-sex marriages, according to their beliefs, the government may not.

The ACLU is fighting, in Congress, state legislatures and the courts, to ensure that the freedom to marry is made available to loving couples in same-sex relationships across the country.

Defense of Marriage Act

The Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) is a federal law passed in 1996 that both created a federal definition of marriage as being between a man and a woman and expressly gave states permission to refuse to recognize marriages entered into by same-sex couples in other jurisdictions. The part of DOMA that defines marriage at the federal level – known as Section 3 – was a radical departure from 220 years of federal practice, which was to rely on each state to define marriage and to recognize any marriage legally entered into under state law as a valid marriage for federal purposes.

We are challenging Section 3 of DOMA on behalf of our client Edie Windsor in Windsor v. United States, which is currently pending before the federal district court. We are also supporting the effort to repeal DOMA through Congressional action, in the form of the Respect for Marriage Act. Other organizations are similarly challenging DOMA.

Marriage in the States

Today, 20 states plus D.C. provide some significant state-level relationship protections and those states are home to 130 million people. LGBT families are making progress, but there is still much work to do. Many states have laws that prevent full recognition of same-sex relationships. Of those states, many have also passed restrictions on same-sex relationships in their state constitutions. Intimate adult relationships are among the most important relationships in the lives of many people, and the ACLU is fighting relationship discrimination at the state level to ensure that LGBT people are able to build committed, loving relationships without taking the risk that their families will be disregarded by the state or society Through litigation, advocacy and public education, the ACLU continues to work to expand marriage fairness.

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