ONTD Political

BREAKING: House GOP Leaders Ask Supreme Court to Review DOMA Case

2:18 pm - 07/03/2012
The Republican-led House Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group today mailed its petition to the U.S. Supreme Court asking it to review the May 31 ruling of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit that the federal definition of marriage contained in the Defense of Marriage Act is unconstitutional.

In a filing obtained by Metro Weekly, BLAG asks the Supreme Court, which must agree to consider the case, to take the appeal for three reasons: (1) the constitutionality of DOMA Section 3 is "an issue of great national importance" and raises separation-of-powers questions; (2) the First Circuit decision conflicts with the Supreme Court's 1972 decision in Baker v. Nelson and other appellate decisions; and (3) the First Circuit "invented a new standard of equal protection review."

In the course of the filing, called a petition for a writ of certiorari, BLAG states that "[t]he executive branch has ... abdicated its traditional role of defending the constitutionality of duly-enacted statutes."

BLAG, which voted 3-2 to defend DOMA in court challenges, is made up of House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) and Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.). Pelosi and Hoyer have objected to the filings.

Paul Clement, of Bancroft PLLC, is the counsel of record in the filing. Clement argued on BLAG's behalf in front of the First Circuit's three-judge panel, which held unanimously that DOMA's definition of "marriage" and "spouse" as only including one man and one woman was unconstitutional.

Judge Michael Boudin, appointed to the bench by President George H.W. Bush, wrote for the court: "Under current Supreme Court authority, Congress' denial of federal benefits to same-sex couples lawfully married in Massachusetts has not been adequately supported by any permissible federal interest."

Writing that "Supreme Court review of DOMA is highly likely," the appeals court stayed, or put on hold, the implementation of its decision pending any appeal.

BLAG is asking the Supreme Court to consider two questions: (1) Whether Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act violates the equal protection component of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment; and (2) Whether the court below erred by inventing and applying to Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act a previously unknown standard of equal protection review.

BLAG has intervened in several court challenges to DOMA following the Feb. 23, 2011, decision by President Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder not to continue defending Section 3 of the 1996 law after concluding that laws that classify people based on sexual orientation, like DOMA, should be subjected to a "heightened" form of court scrutiny.

As of 5 p.m. today, the filing was not on the Supreme Court's docket, but the House General Counsel's office confirmed to Metro Weekly that the filing had been "deposited" today. Metro Weekly reported earlier this month that BLAG's lawyers told a court in another DOMA case in Connecticut that it would be filing the Supreme Court petition by the end of June.

In a statement, Pelosi criticized the filing, saying, "Democrats have rejected the Republican assault on equal rights, in the courts and in Congress. We believe there is no federal interest in denying LGBT couples the same rights and responsibilities afforded to all couples married under state law. And we are confident that the Supreme Court, if it considers the case, will declare DOMA unconstitutional and relegate it to the dustbin of history once and for all."

Other parties have 30 days from the date the petition is received to file their view of whether the Supreme Court should take the case. The cases, which were decided jointly by the First Circuit, involve a challenge to the law brought by Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders, Gill v. Office of Personnel Management, and a challenge brought by Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley (D), Massachusetts v. Department of Health and Human Services.

The GLAD plaintiffs, Massachusetts, the Department of Justice and other interested individuals and organizations will be able to give their input as to whether the court should take the case. The court then will consider whether it wants to take the case, a question most scholars expect it to answer in the affirmative as the constitutionality of a federal statute is at issue. It could, however, hold the case in order to await a decision on one of the further DOMA challenges.


Source also has a scribd widget showing the petition so you can read it yourself.

Three things:
  • I just can't wait for straight people to decide whether or not I have rights! I'm literally on the edge of my seat. Seriously. I mean it.
  • I'm guessing they wouldn't be doing this if they didn't think they had a decent chance of winning, so I'm bracing for a Scalia-induced setback.
  • I'm officially coining the phrase "Hater Boehner."
crossfire 3rd-Jul-2012 09:38 pm (UTC)
Hot damn our mods are on the job, this was in the queue for less than five minutes! :D
angry_chick 3rd-Jul-2012 09:48 pm (UTC)
fucking republicans are trying really, really hard after they lost the Obamacare chances.
romp 4th-Jul-2012 06:55 am (UTC)
and don't you think it will misfire? the number of people against same-sex marriage is smaller every year
angry_chick 4th-Jul-2012 07:12 pm (UTC)
Of course. If they keep talking all of this shit, they might actually have a repeat of 2006 on their hands.
teacup_werewolf 3rd-Jul-2012 09:50 pm (UTC)
This is my face
mindrtist 3rd-Jul-2012 09:51 pm (UTC)
well well well. Nothing like 'depositing' something on the equivalent of 5pm Friday afternoon...
moonbrightnites 3rd-Jul-2012 10:22 pm (UTC)
MTE.
theguindo 3rd-Jul-2012 09:56 pm (UTC)
I'm officially coining the phrase "Hater Boehner."

This works perfectly with how I instinctively pronounce his name as Böhner
bex 3rd-Jul-2012 10:13 pm (UTC)
The insistence that it's "Bayner" just makes me all the more determined to call him Boner. I can't even help myself.
trivalent 3rd-Jul-2012 10:16 pm (UTC)
Woaaaah. I get most of my news from NPR because I can listen while I work (reading here is on breaks from work), and therefore there are some things I don't pick up on. "Bayner" as I hear it regularly being spelled "Boehner" is like wtf. Because I was looking at this article going, "John Boehner? That doesn't look right. I thought Bayner was the speaker of the house..."

Mystery solved. o.O
layweed 3rd-Jul-2012 10:21 pm (UTC)
It's a boat!
moonshaz 3rd-Jul-2012 10:02 pm (UTC)
Got to find something to take the focus off the SCOTUS NOT overturning health care reform, I guess.

I can't help thinking how delicious it would be if the GOP got their wish, the SCOTUS heard the case, and DOMA ended up getting struck down. Of course, I have no idea how much chance there is of that, but it's loads of fun to imagine. *sigh*
____jonas 3rd-Jul-2012 10:09 pm (UTC)
I will forever love Judge Tauro for his questioning in MA v. HHS: "what interest does the federal government have in perpetuating heterosexuality in the graveyard?"
belleweather 3rd-Jul-2012 10:14 pm (UTC)
Does anyone else think that while raising the stakes, that this is probably a better decision to have reviewed that Perry v. Schwartzenegger? I really can't see the court deciding Perry on grounds that apply just to the 'No Marriage - Marriage - No Marriage again' fact pattern. A decision on Gill would apply to all states with legalized equal marriage laws and is possibly even a stronger fact pattern than Perry, IMO.
jenny_jenkins 3rd-Jul-2012 10:19 pm (UTC)
I just can't wait for straight people to decide whether or not I have rights! I'm literally on the edge of my seat. Seriously. I mean it.

Oh dear - only one sentence and you've summed it up.
nicosian 3rd-Jul-2012 10:38 pm (UTC)
this married person ( I'm bi, he's straight if you want the correct labelling) would very much like the GOP to get over their damn selves and give people the full rights they're due as part of a society, end stop. Fuck em, they make me embarrassed, and I LIVE in a country where we did just that and the sky? just as it was 7 years ago.

I've still not seen one cromulent argument against same sex marriage. Not one. Not a damn single instance, and not one single reason why the majority should be denying full equality to other consenting adults.

fuck, its embarrassing. The right is so anti progress they're actually advocating regression with a vengeance.

mindrtist 4th-Jul-2012 11:04 pm (UTC)
Looking from the small screen of my phone I thought your icon was Al Gore. Haha.
jenny_jenkins 5th-Jul-2012 12:29 am (UTC)
It's Mesut Ozil - attacking play-maker of Real Madrid and for the German National Team - the world's most elegant little player, in my opinion!

I'm a genuine socialist. Gore never did it for me :P
aviv_b 3rd-Jul-2012 10:58 pm (UTC)
Not surprised at all. They lost on health care and they aren't going to be able to keep whipping up the base on this until election day. Even those against the Affordable Health Care Act think its time to move on.

The economy is doing a bit better, and the market is up, so if that holds, they won't have that as an issue.

So, they go to their fall-back issue. What's the one sure issue to make a bigoted asshat's conservative's blood boil?. The gay people who want the same rights as every one special rights. They can keep feeding the base the importance of electing bigots Republicans - because who else will protect the sacred sparkly family. This will ensure that the bigots Christian right comes out in force on election day.

And they figure that the Supremes 'owe them one' (how I would love for it to swing against DOMA and have Kennedy be the dissenter this time around).
agentsculder 4th-Jul-2012 01:06 am (UTC)
I frankly can't believe that they did this because they could very well LOSE because of Kennedy. Did they forget he was the deciding vote AND wrote the opinion that struck down sodomy laws (Lawrence v. TX)? It would just be DELICIOUS is it came back to bite the GOP in the ass.
frith_in_thorns 3rd-Jul-2012 11:00 pm (UTC)
I just can't wait for straight people to decide whether or not I have rights! I'm literally on the edge of my seat. Seriously. I mean it.

I can't possibly improve on this, so I'll use my comment to admire your icon instead.

Edited at 2012-07-03 11:00 pm (UTC)
redstar826 3rd-Jul-2012 11:14 pm (UTC)
flawless commentary from OP is flawless <3
tabaqui 4th-Jul-2012 01:06 am (UTC)
OMFG.
Fuck them so hard. DOMA will *not* stay. Beating this dead horse will only make you all look like the fuckheads you are.
brucelynn 4th-Jul-2012 02:17 am (UTC)
Ugh fuck off already

Republicans are such children......
kittymink 4th-Jul-2012 02:26 am (UTC)
I'll just leave this here:

http://shop.hrc.org/clothing/kissing-elephants-t-shirt.html

I saw this today in the window of the HRC store in San Francisco. In the Castro. In Harvey Milk's old camera shop.

It's HRC, so I'm not suprised but why any gay man (let alone a woman) would *want* to be Republican is a mystery to me. Apart from the obvious answer.
bnmc2005 4th-Jul-2012 03:17 am (UTC)
um.....wow?
poetic_pixie_13 4th-Jul-2012 12:09 pm (UTC)
I haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaate that HRC is in Harvey's old camera shop.
jwaneeta 4th-Jul-2012 06:49 am (UTC)
Of course they do.
alryssa 4th-Jul-2012 07:24 am (UTC)
I just can't wait for straight people to decide whether or not I have rights! I'm literally on the edge of my seat. Seriously. I mean it.

IKR? Holy shit.
bear100 5th-Jul-2012 04:15 am (UTC)
""Hater Boehner"

New tag please. lol
psychicherz 5th-Jul-2012 05:34 am (UTC)
Doesn't it all hinge on whether the Supreme Court only applies rational basis vs intermediate or (ideally) strict scrutiny, though? I know Obama & Holder issued their opinions that it ought to be applied, and I appreciate it, but as far as I can see the SC cannot be compelled to do so.

Edited at 2012-07-05 05:34 am (UTC)
eyetosky 5th-Jul-2012 07:42 pm (UTC)
Oh come on, GOP. Really. Debating healthcare actually requires facts and some economic considerations and there can be a genuine dialogue about it on policy grounds.

The only argument opponents of gay marriage have left for this is "THIS IS WRONG AND MAKES ME FEEL BAD YAY JESUS BLEEEEE" which... I'm pretty jaded on a lot of the Justices, sure, but I'd be really interested to see which one would go for that.
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