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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMichigan’s Defense of Its Same-Sex Marriage Ban Cost Taxpayers $1.9 Million
http://www.slate.com/blogs/outward/2015/10/08/michigan_taxpayers_will_pay_nearly_2_million_for_defense_of_gay_marriage.htmlOn Wednseday, Michigan agreed to pay a jaw-dropping $1.9 million of taxpayer money to attorneys who represented the gay plaintiffs who sued the statesuccessfullyto secure their right to marry and adopt. Under federal law, plaintiffs who sue the government to vindicate their civil rights and win in court are entitled to attorneys fees. The lead lawyer in the case, Carole Stanyar, spent four years fighting to bring down the states anti-gay lawswithout pay. She was awarded $763,875, praising the compensation law as an effective way to empower and encourage the vindication of civil rights.
Every state that chose to defend its discriminatory marriage laws wound up paying out a pretty serious sum. As Al Jazeera America reported, Kentucky paid gay rights attorneys $2.1 million; Pennsylvania, $1.5 million; Wisconsin, $1.05 million; Virginia, $580,000. Several states, including Florida ($700,000), are still fighting these fees in court. And for the most part, these figures dont factor in the money states spent on their own attorneys, who were tasked with defending blatantly unconstitutional laws.
Many of these states have, one hopes, learned their lesson from these payouts, and will no longer fight to deprive gay people of their constitutional rights. Mississippi, however, is not so chastened. Somehow, the state still has an anti-gay adoption ban on the books, and has decided, against the odds, to defend it in court. Looks like Mississippi taxpayers arent quite done compensating gay rights attorneys.
Every state that chose to defend its discriminatory marriage laws wound up paying out a pretty serious sum. As Al Jazeera America reported, Kentucky paid gay rights attorneys $2.1 million; Pennsylvania, $1.5 million; Wisconsin, $1.05 million; Virginia, $580,000. Several states, including Florida ($700,000), are still fighting these fees in court. And for the most part, these figures dont factor in the money states spent on their own attorneys, who were tasked with defending blatantly unconstitutional laws.
Many of these states have, one hopes, learned their lesson from these payouts, and will no longer fight to deprive gay people of their constitutional rights. Mississippi, however, is not so chastened. Somehow, the state still has an anti-gay adoption ban on the books, and has decided, against the odds, to defend it in court. Looks like Mississippi taxpayers arent quite done compensating gay rights attorneys.
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Michigan’s Defense of Its Same-Sex Marriage Ban Cost Taxpayers $1.9 Million (Original Post)
KamaAina
Oct 2015
OP
Behind the Aegis
(56,031 posts)1. Kick
I guess the right-wing was correct: marriage equality would come at a price.
irisblue
(37,064 posts)2. How much did this cost Ohio?
Obergefell v. Hodges started here in July 2013. (Thanks John Kasich! Thanks Mike DeWine!)
