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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Supreme Court Will Almost Certainly Rule on Gay Marriage Again This Term
On Wednesday, the Supreme Court added several gay marriage cases for consideration at its Sept. 29 conference. The move suggests that the justices wont let United States v. Windsor be their last word on marriage equality. It also reveals that the Supreme Court will almost certainly decide whether all gay marriage bans are unconstitutional by the end of this coming term.
Thus far, three courts of appeals have found state-level gay marriage bans to be unconstitutional, though they have used varying legal rationales. The 4th Circuit subjected the bans to strict scrutiny, the most stringent level of judicial review, because marriage is a fundamental right protected by the U.S. Constitution. The 10th Circuit went the same routebut one judge wrote a notable concurring opinion insisting that gay marriage bans dont exhibit unconstitutional animus. The 7th Circuit, meanwhile, passed over the fundamental right question and performed a more basic equal protection analysis.
On Sept. 29, the court will consider each of these cases and possibly agree to hear one, two, or all three of them. (The justices can combine cases that present the same constitutional question.) In doing so, the court will essentially be forcing itself to resolve the chief civil rights issue of the decadedoes the 14th Amendment protect gay peoples right to marriage?by the end of the current term in late June 2015.
In addressing that question, the justices will also have to land on a precise legal rationale to explain their decision. The court might get ambitious and finally admit that gay people are a quasi-suspect classin other words, a historically disfavored minority that has faced discrimination based on an immutable characteristic. If so, any law targeting gay people will be subject to heightened judicial scrutiny and must be invalidated unless it furthers a substantial government interest. Or the court might simply apply Kennedys vague animus test and decide that because gay marriage bans are motivated by hostility toward gay people, they violate the Constitution.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/outward/2014/09/11/the_supreme_court_will_probably_decide_gay_marriage_in_the_coming_term.html
hifiguy
(33,688 posts)has put the SCOTUS Five in a very tight box. That opinion is a devastating piece of work which they cannot easily work around. Posner basically burned the Wisconsin and Indiana AGs' arguments to the waterline and dynamited what was left. That it comes from a judge as highly regarded as Richard Posner makes the box all that much tighter.