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Connecticut Battle Begins
Posted by Tom McFeely
Friday, October 10, 2008 3:27 PM
Connecticut Supreme Court.
An article in the Register’s Oct. 19 print edition:
Connecticut Marriage Fight
Bishops Back Constitutional Convention
HARTFORD, Conn. â When Connecticut justices voted to force same-sex âmarriageâ on the state, they provoked a firestorm.
The Catholic bishops of Connecticut are backing a November ballot initiative that would change the stateâs constitution in hopes of protecting marriage.
That decision came Oct. 10, the same day the Connecticut Supreme Court ruled that the state must allow same-sex âmarriage.â
âThe bishops of Connecticut have been cautious as theyâve approached this question,â said Michael Culhane, executive director of the Connecticut Catholic Conference, speaking of Question 1 on the Nov. 4 ballot. But because of the courtâs decision in Kerrigan vs. Commissioner of Public Health, he told the Register, âthe Connecticut Catholic Conference will take a more aggressive stand on this issue and urge the 1.3 million Catholics of the state of Connecticut to vote Yes.â
Connecticut is the latest state whose highest court has determined that homosexuals have the constitutional right to âmarry,â following Massachusetts and California. The long-awaited Kerrigan decision was released Oct. 10, almost two weeks after a coalition of pro-marriage groups held a rally urging a yes vote on the ballot question.
That rally on Sept. 28, organized by the non-partisan, non-sectarian Family Institute of Connecticut, drew almost 3,000 people to the state capitol in Hartford. Backers of Question 1 hope it will lead to amending the constitution to allow for direct initiative, where voters would have a say on laws such as same-sex âmarriage.â
Coincidentally, the Family Institute was conducting a poll on the ballot question the day of the court decision and was expecting to announce results Oct. 14.
The Kerrigan decision, written by Justice Richard Palmer, ordered the reversal of a 2006 decision by the Superior Court upholding Connecticutâs same-sex âmarriageâ ban. It said that separating heterosexual and homosexual couples into marriage and civil unions, which Connecticut has allowed since 2005, is discriminatory.
âThe Family Institute of Connecticut opposed the passage of civil unions in 2005,â Peter Wolfgang, executive director of the institute, told the Register. âWe warned the Legislature that it would be used by the court to find the law against same-sex âmarriageâ discriminatory.â
A statement issued by the Family Institute of Connecticut called the Kerrigan decision a âusurpation of democracy.â
âEven a Legislature as liberal as ours has heeded the will of the people and said no to same-sex âmarriageâ year after year,â said Wolfgang in a statement. If Ballot Question 1 passes, he said, âwe will put a question on the ballot to allow the public â not our robed masters â to decide once and for all if marriage will be protected in our state constitution as the union of a man and a woman.â
But that will be another fight.
An hour before the decision was issued, the Hartford Courant newspaper was running an online reader survey about âgay couplesâ right to marry in Connecticut.â Seventy-one percent of respondents said they supported that right, while 21% said they did not.
â Register Staff
Filed under connecticut, homosexuality, marriage
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