High-profile litigators Ted Olson (a Republican) and David Boies (a Democrat) famously squared off against each other in Bush v. Gore. They have now joined forces in a federal lawsuit challenging California’s definition of marriage as a union of a man and a woman — a definition California voters added to their constitution after an activist state court struck down the statutory definition. Mr. Olson’s part in this odd-couple alliance is especially striking because he held senior positions in both the Reagan and George W. Bush administrations, and because he is a longtime leader in the conservative Federalist Society, a group dedicated to the proposition that it is the province and duty of the judiciary to say what the law is, not what judges think it should be.
Judging from the players, it may look as though we now have a consensus among liberals and conservatives that the federal Constitution includes a right to same-sex marriage, to which only bigots and religious zealots could object. But nothing could be farther from the truth: The position these lawyers are advocating has no support in Supreme Court case law, let alone in the Constitution. Their arguments (in papers filed in court and in a recent op-ed signed by Mr. Boies in the Wall Street Journal) consist entirely of out-of-context snippets from Supreme Court opinions, nasty attacks on millions of American citizens, and astonishing assertions that an institution central to virtually every civilization in the history of the human race is patently irrational.
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Boies and Olson appeal to the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses. First, they claim that the Supreme Court has recognized a fundamental right “to marry the person you love,” relying especially on
Loving v. Virginia, which held that bans on interracial marriage violated the Equal Protection Clause. Second, they point to
Romer v. Evans, which used the Equal Protection Clause to invalidate a provision of the Colorado constitution that the Court interpreted as prohibiting
all government actions designed to protect homosexuals. Third, they cite
Lawrence v. Texas, which invalidated anti-sodomy statutes under the Due Process Clause.
None of these cases remotely suggests a right to same-sex marriage. All of the cases referring to a fundamental right to marriage involved traditional marriages between men and women, and did not so much as suggest that people have a right to marry “the person you love” regardless of whether the other person is a minor, or is already married to someone else, or is a close relative, or is a person of the same sex. The Boies/Olson invocation of the
Loving case is both misplaced and peculiarly offensive. In that case, the Court recognized that anti-miscegenation laws had no other purpose than the maintenance of white supremacy. Analogizing the traditional definition of marriage to these Jim Crow devices demeans both the civil-rights movement and the countless millions of people who accept the traditional definition of marriage.
Reliance on
Romer and
Lawrence is equally preposterous. The
Romer opinion emphasized the unique and unprecedented nature of Colorado’s sweeping denial of legal protection to a narrowly defined class of persons, which had no resemblance at all to California’s marriage laws.
Lawrence stressed that its invalidation of anti-sodomy laws was based on the severe deprivation of personal liberty they imposed. The traditional definition of marriage does not interfere with anyone’s personal liberty, and it certainly does not exclude homosexuals from the protection of the laws. It is particularly strange that these decisions are being invoked in an attack on the laws of California, which has a domestic-partnership statute that provides same-sex couples with the same substantive rights and privileges available to married couples.
As if this weren’t enough, in 1971 the Supreme Court dismissed as meritless a constitutional challenge exactly like the Boies/Olson challenge, and the 2003
Lawrence opinion specifically said that it was not implying a right to same-sex marriage. Perhaps recognizing that they really don’t have any support in Supreme Court case law, Boies and Olson argue that the traditional definition of marriage is so utterly irrational, so bereft of any legitimate purpose, that it can be explained only as something “born of animosity” against a politically unpopular group.
If Boies and Olson really believe what they say, they have also condemned President Obama. He supports domestic-partnership laws like California’s but opposes same-sex marriage. They have classified the president as an anti-gay bigot and also smeared a long list of prominent public figures ranging from Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton to Sandra Day O’Connor. One would like to be there when these indictments are delivered face to face.
The notion that the fundamental features of an institution adopted by virtually every civilized society are based on nothing but moral opprobrium toward homosexuals is so weird that one wonders why serious people should even have to discuss it. Apparently, however, we’ve come a long way since the Supreme Court summarily dismissed such a claim in 1971. But here we are, so let’s point out the obvious.