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#1
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Gay marriage and US acceptance
Since it is now legal in Canada (at least Ontario) for same sex marriages to take place, I was wondering about any requirements of the US to recognize these marriages.
For instance, if a couple from Canada (legally married there) were to move to the US, is the US obligated (by some sort of treaty) to recognize that marriage here? I don't know how detailed treaties are and whether they even mention marriage. If yes, is this recognition a sort of 'back door' approach to gay marriages (which I am in favor of) here? Bob
__________________
"Senator, when you took you oath of office, you placed your hand on the Bible and swore to uphold the Constitution. You did not place your hand on the Constitution and swear to uphold the Bible." |
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#2
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From Canada? Nope. There is even some question about this in the US and our own Constitution has something to say on the matter. It is in Article IV and is called the 'Full Faith and Credit Clause'.
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I'm not sure if this has been challenged in the US Supreme Court yet but it will be interesting. However, when a foreigner visits the US I don't think the US gives a hoot about your marriage status. In a legal sense being married in the US affects taxes, your ability to participate in a spouses health insurance and so on. Noe of this would apply to a foreigner. If you became a citizen of the US then you forego whatever legal status of your previous citizenship and have to abide by the laws of the US. For instance, I don't think the US would allow an Arab man to keep multiple wives upon becoming a citizen of the US. |
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#3
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Previously under US law, there was a requirement that stated that each state had to accept the marriage rules of other states and countries which basically (and with some exceptions) that if a marriage was legal where it was performed, then it would be accepted wherever the married couple might live.
A few years back, the Defense of Marriage Act was passed. This act basically left it to each state to decide which marriages to accept and which marriages to declare as void as against public policy. The specific purpose of this law was to allow states the right to deny acceptance of same-sex marriages. Many states now have specific laws on the books which state that marriages between two people of the same sex are against the public policy of the state and are therefore void and not accepted as marriages by that state. Since the ongoing legality of a marriage is based on the place where the couple lives, a marriage of two men (or two women) performed in Toronto would not be accepted in most states. Some states do not have such specific statutes on their books. In many of those states there is current litigation which is testing the limits of the state laws as they are written. IIRC, Massachusetts is set to have its state supreme court decide whether that state's statutes allows for the recognition (as well as the performance) of same-sex marriages. If the answer is "yes," Mass. will become the first state in the union to fully recognize the right of two consenting same-sex people to marry each other. On preview I see that someone has already responded. I will respond to Whack-A-Mole by saying that foreign tourist should care about the recognition of their marriage here in the US. If one of the married couple gets sick or gets into legal trouble while on vacation, the rights of their spouse to visit, care for, and help defend their spouse would greatly curtailed if the state they were visiting did not accept their same-sex marriage as legally valid. |
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#4
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Hawaii voters amended the state constitution to outlaw marriage consisting of anything other than male and female, one each. Over 30 other states have passed "mini-DOMAs" doing the same. The only place currently where a Canada marriage might be recognized as a matter of course is Vermont, which has "civil unions," a separate-but-supposedly-equal state recognition of same-sex partnerships which is not marriage. Obviously this has not been tested. I am unaware of any specific treaty provision which requires the United States to honor marriages performed outside the United States although such marriages are recognized as a matter of course, presuming that they do not violate the law or public policy of the United States. Since same-sex marriages violate both the law and the public policy of the United States, any couple seeking to have its marriage recognized in any state or by the federal government will most likely have to fight for it. There's a hell of an equal protection argument to be made by such a couple, especially if they're two American citizens who travel to Ontario and marry.
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#5
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I had forgotten about the (IMO) stupid 'Defense of Marriage' laws. I believe that Colorado has one too. I really need to get more involved.
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Bob
__________________
"Senator, when you took you oath of office, you placed your hand on the Bible and swore to uphold the Constitution. You did not place your hand on the Constitution and swear to uphold the Bible." |
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#6
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The word 'since' doesn't make sense here. Should be:
A court ruled that the non-hospitalized person was able to visit and make medical decisions because of the civil union. bob
__________________
"Senator, when you took you oath of office, you placed your hand on the Bible and swore to uphold the Constitution. You did not place your hand on the Constitution and swear to uphold the Bible." |
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#7
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Can DOMAs possibly overrule the Full Faith and Credit clause of the Constitution? I don't see how...the US Constitution is THE rule of the land against which any other law or state constitution must abide. Do they pass these laws to send a message to the US Supreme Court to 'encourage' it to not overrule DOMAs?
For instance, if Indiana allowed 15 year-olds to marry and Illinois said they had to be 18 I think Illinois is still obliged to recognize the marriage (this is just an example for illustration...I doubt Indiana allows 15 year-olds to marry). |
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#8
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Such a potential case has strong potential for a major constitutional crisis, as I think you can see. |
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#9
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--Cliffy |
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#10
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No, the Constitution (and the [federal] laws passed in accordance with it) are the supreme law of the land.
That's why the Supreme Court can declare Acts of Congress unconstitutional. The question boils down to, did the second sentence of Art IV Sec 1 give Congress the power to supersede the apparent duty of the states seemingly imposed by the first sentence? Opinions will differ. However, Congress cannot just decide that it will pass a given law and have that govern what the states can and cannot do; it must have the power under the Constitution to pass that law in the first place. |
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#11
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Whack-a-mole Quote:
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#12
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Out of curiosity, how was it handled when interracial marriage was first legalized at the state level? (I'm assuming that most states had initially outlawed it.) Was South Carolina, for instance, required to recognize interracial marriages from, say, New York? Was any DOMA-equivalent legislation introduced/passed?
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#13
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#14
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I'll keep looking but so far it doesn't look promising. Good responses here, thanks all. Bob
__________________
"Senator, when you took you oath of office, you placed your hand on the Bible and swore to uphold the Constitution. You did not place your hand on the Constitution and swear to uphold the Bible." |
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#15
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![]() --Cliffy |
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#16
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urban1z Quote:
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#17
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Thank you, Otto.
Bob |
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#18
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Wait-I thought Hawaii was the first state to allow gay marriages, and/or unions?
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#19
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