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Civil Liberties

Congress Formally Grants Federal Recognition to Gay Marriage

While same-sex marriage was already protected under federal law, that protection was afforded by the Supreme Court, not Congress.

Scott Shackford | From the March 2023 issue

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Gay Marriage Formally Granted Federal Recognition by Congress | Illustration: Joanna Andreasson; Source image: siraanamwong/iStock
(Illustration: Joanna Andreasson; Source image: siraanamwong/iStock)

Congress in December passed the Respect for Marriage Act, granting formal federal recognition to same-sex and interracial marriages. President Joe Biden quickly signed the bill into law.

While both types of marriages were already protected under federal law, that protection was afforded by the Supreme Court, not Congress. In the wake of Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, the 2022 case in which the Supreme Court overturned the federal abortion protection established by its 1973 decision in Roe v. Wade, supporters of gay marriage worried that the Court might also revisit that subject.

Hence the Respect for Marriage Act, which included compromises aimed at attracting enough Republican votes to avoid a filibuster in the Senate. The law requires the federal government to recognize same-sex marriages performed in states where they are legal. That ensures gay spouses will continue to enjoy the privileges, rights, and benefits federal law has long afforded straight spouses, such as the marital tax deduction, joint filing, and Social Security benefits.

Sen. Tom Cotton (R–Ark.) said he opposed the bill because it interfered with an issue that the Constitution leaves to the states. Yet many federally recognized privileges are contingent on state marriage licenses, and there is no sign that Congress is inclined to scale back those benefits.

The Respect for Marriage Act does not require states to legalize same-sex marriage. Many states still have bans on the books. If the Supreme Court ever decides to overturn Obergefell v. Hodges, the 2015 decision mandating legal recognition of gay marriages, those bans could take effect again.

The new law does require states to recognize same-sex marriages legally performed in other states. While that provision may seem contrary to federalist principles, states historically have recognized marriages performed in other states with different rules (regarding minimum ages or marriages of cousins, for example). Although the courts have not yet resolved the issue, such accommodation is arguably mandatory under the Constitution's requirement that "full Faith and Credit shall be given in each State to the public Acts, Records, and judicial Proceedings of every other State."

The Respect for Marriage Act says houses of worship, religious groups, and faith-based social agencies "shall not be required to provide services, accommodations, advantages, facilities, goods, or privileges for the solemnization or celebration of a marriage." It adds that "any refusal under this subsection to provide such services, accommodations, advantages, facilities, goods, or privileges shall not create any civil claim or cause of action."

The law does not address the issue of whether religious organizations can be required to recognize same-sex marriages in certain circumstances. Can a church-connected foster agency refuse to place children with same-sex couples? Does a religious school with a position against gay marriage have to employ teachers with same-sex spouses?

The law is silent on such questions. Republicans and Democrats are largely on opposite sides here, and attempting to resolve this dispute legislatively would have doomed the bill.

Many states have public accommodation laws that require wedding contractors to prepare wedding cakes, invitations, or floral arrangements for gay couples. The Respect for Marriage Act does not address that issue either, which likewise probably would have made it impossible to pass the bill.

Days after the Senate passed the Respect for Marriage Act, the Supreme Court heard arguments in 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis, which poses the question of whether a website designer with moral objections to same-sex marriage has a First Amendment right to refrain from producing websites for gay weddings. A ruling is expected in the spring.

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NEXT: The U.S. Probation System Has Become a Quagmire

Scott Shackford is a policy research editor at Reason Foundation.

Civil LibertiesGay MarriageMarriageCongressLGBT
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  1. Chumby   3 years ago

    There’s a lot to unpack.

    1. ElizabethSimon   3 years ago (edited)

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  2. Mickey Rat   3 years ago

    "The law does not address whether religious organizations have to recognize same-sex marriages under certain circumstances..."

    Which means that the progressives in the judiciary are going to interpret that as meaning it does. It also means that non-religious private entities will receive no protection at all. See the continuing legal harassment Jack Philips has endured since winning his Supreme Court case because SCOTUS avoided making a precedent and give clear direction to the lower courts.

    This is social left "libertarianism".

    1. damikesc   3 years ago

      Remember when we were promised gay marriage would have no impact on straight folks?

      1. Brandybuck   3 years ago

        Still doesn't.

        1. mad.casual   3 years ago

          Do you think a trite "The sky's not blue." also convinces anyone of anything?

          Do you think there are no straight libertarians or conservatives out there who think, "The government shouldn't be in the marriage business gay, straight, black, white, or other."?

          To what degree will you willfully and obviously retard yourself and others to pretend the gay rights lobby doesn't exist? How stupid are you willing to make yourself and any who associate with you or your cause look?

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        2. damikesc   3 years ago

          Explains the cases before SCOTUS regarding people not wishing to participate in gay marriages.

          Because they do not impact them.

          1. fowomi   3 years ago (edited)

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          2. Dr. JSH   3 years ago

            You should be more skeptical of anti-gay hate groups' talking points.
            States ban places of public accommodation from discriminating based on sexual orientation, not on marriage.
            A bakery that will make a wedding cake for a straight couple but not a gay couple discriminates twice -- once against each person in the gay couple.
            The sole difference between the two substantially similar couples is sexual orientation.

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    2. Moonrocks   3 years ago

      Apparently, the Libertarian position is that the government needs to regulate marriage.

      1. SQRLSY One   3 years ago

        SOME libertarians live in the real world, of only real (excluding the unreal) political possibilities!

        SOME humans understand that low-life biological parasites are real, and will realistically never go away completely, short of humans collectively undertaking an operation in which all of the world's plutonium is ground into a fine dust, and scattered over all of the Earth, thereby killing ALL parasites... And everyone and everything else, along with it!

        So then I guess that the human position is that biological parasites are just WONDERFUL, and we ALL need to hug them and squeeze them and kiss them!

      2. mad.casual   3 years ago

        Not just the government needs to regulate marriage, all branches of the government need to regulate it all the time.

        1. Adrian Smith   3 years ago

          It became not difficult to track garbage in the water expanses of the oceans, it is a lot and there are ways to analyze its structure and possible harm to nature, the sustainable space race. We also observe a similar situation with space pollution, where the wreckage of an outdated orbital technology randomly wanders the harmonization of new space infrastructure.

      3. Jefferson's Ghost   3 years ago

        "Apparently, the Libertarian position is that the government needs to regulate marriage."

        Apparently, the Libertarian position is that the government needs to protect marriage as a right. Fixed it for you.

        1. mad.casual   3 years ago

          Fixed it for you.

          Just because you plucked something more out of the emanations and penumbras up your own ass than SCOTUS did when they invented a right to abort, doesn't mean you fixed shit.

          1. Jefferson's Ghost   3 years ago (edited)

            Then… you believe marriage is not a right? Or, is it just a right for some folks?

            1. damikesc   3 years ago

              If it requires somebody else to actually participate in...then, no, it is not a right.

              1. mad.casual   3 years ago (edited)

                Yes, then the enforcement of it is actually a violation of a right.

                1. fowomi   3 years ago (edited)

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            2. mad.casual   3 years ago

              You do realize that when you say "the government needs to protect marriage as a right", you're literally and unequivocally saying that it's not a right but that the government needs to enforce it as though it were, correct?

              1. Jefferson's Ghost   3 years ago

                So, the States should not have to recognize interracial marriages, either?

                1. mad.casual   3 years ago

                  Why do you want to make single black mothers second class citizens?

                2. mad.casual   3 years ago (edited)

                  I mean, keep it up you dumb shit. I'm not the one saying "is it a right just for some folks" and "it should be protected *as though it were a right*".

                  The more you do this the more everyone sees exactly what this law is and why it should be struck down. It's got nothing to do with equality and you wouldn't give a shit if it did. It's about scoring political points for your favorite political class.

                  1. Jefferson's Ghost   3 years ago

                    Your take on this a classic example of why I believe that the government, any government, should never be involved, in any way whatsoever, with "marriage." Any marriage.

            3. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

              No, recognition of marriage by the government is not a right. If a state or the federal government decided to stop acknowledging marriage entirely, that would not violate anyone's rights.

              1. Jefferson's Ghost   3 years ago

                "If a state or the federal government decided to stop acknowledging marriage entirely, that would not violate anyone’s rights."

                I agree. What the government is not permitted to do is to grant special status to "some" married folks, but not others.

                Again, my position is that the federal and state governments should not be involved in marriage at all.

                1. mad.casual   3 years ago

                  What the government is not permitted to do is to grant special status to “some” married folks, but not others.

                  FIFY dumbfuck. Or is it OK in your book for the government to discriminate against some groups of people and not others?

                  Oh, that's right, it's right up there:

                  Jefferson's Ghost 4 hours ago

                  Apparently, the Libertarian position is that the government needs to protect marriage as a right. Fixed it for you.

                  1. Jefferson's Ghost   3 years ago

                    Yawn.

                    As long as the government is going to recognize the "right," and regulate it, then the government needs to recognize that right for everybody.

                    If the government decides NOT to define and regulate marriage, then it doesn't need the laws.

                    Do you not see the difference, oh wise one?

                    1. mad.casual   3 years ago

                      Do you not see the difference, oh wise one?

                      We can all see the difference. It's the same difference as when Binion said his vote doesn't matter, but if it did, he'd vote for Biden. You're a true blue libertarian when you get pigeonholed and can pontificate on things you won't get because you don't want them. Otherwise, you're perfectly content with expanding law to further accommodate your pet cause.

                      Everybody else everywhere recognizes equality *or* liberty, but you're certain that, right here, just a little bit, on this issue, Congress can and did somehow legislate them both into existence.

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    3. mad.casual   3 years ago

      This is social left “libertarianism”.

      As if it weren't a joke before. Reason-style libertarianism has got all your needs covered: Weed, Mexicans, Ass sex. If you want legal weed, free foreign labor, or fucked up the ass, Reason's the place for you.

      Now, if you want freedom from vaccine mandates and passports, pseudo-religious social indoctrination in schools, progressive inroads into your right to self-defense, fascist collusion between business and government, ossification of voting standards around the current status quo, ongoing and documented blatant corruption at pretty much every level of government, pointless escalation of yet another ego war... you've got to go somewhere else. They don't do that kind of libertarianism around here.

      1. Nemo Aequalis   3 years ago

        The libertarian bait and switch was actually pretty funny to watch. In the 1990's, there was a big influx of newly well-to-do tech bros coming into the libertarian movement, with visions of being able to legally snort blow off a hooker's ass.

        When they realized all they were actually going to get was homeless illegals pissing on their BMW's, they lost interest fast.

        I'll note that even after giving the shop away in the name of Freedom'n'Equality, it's still illegal to snort blow off a hooker's ass.

    4. Dr. JSH   3 years ago

      Someone has been watching too many Alliance Defending Freedom videos on YouTube.

      Obergefell: "This is wrong! Follow the democratic process!"
      Masterpiece Cakeshop: "This is wrong! Don't follow the democratic process!"

      If Jack Phillips would stop discriminating against LGBT people, his so-called "harassment" would dry up immediately.

      This is fundamentalist Christian antinomianism.

  3. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

    Of course, they had to include interracial marriage, as if there were actually a possibility that any state would outlaw it, in order to promote the "white supremacy" conspiracy theory.

    1. Brandybuck   3 years ago

      What about "underage" marriage? My neighbor was married at age 16. She's now in her 80s. Imagine her going to jail just for crossing state lines? Never happened because states are SUPPOSED to recognize legal marriages in other states. That's all this law does, is say that states have to recognize legal marriages performed in other states.

      This WAS an issue with interracial marriage no too distant from my lifetime. People went to jail over it when crossing state lines. It's not an issue today, but what about in the future?

      If you're going to protect marriage then protect marriage, not carve out exceptions for race because it's not currently needed.

      1. Jefferson's Ghost   3 years ago

        "This WAS an issue with interracial marriage no too distant from my lifetime."

        SCOTUS threw out interracial marriage bans in 1967, well WITHIN my lifetime.

        1. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

          Within my lifetime, too, because we're OLD. The people who wrote those laws are long dead, and the people who would still support them are a tiny handful of marginalized kooks.

          1. Jefferson's Ghost   3 years ago

            "... and the people who would" still support them are a tiny handful of marginalized kooks."

            That is a given.

      2. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

        That’s all this law does, is say that states have to recognize legal marriages performed in other states.

        Apparently you haven't read it. It does specifically and unnecessarily mention interracial marriage. It obviously does so to stoke the fear of the "white supremacy" bugaboo. It is absurd to suggest that any state outlawing interracial marriage today or in the future is a real possibility.

        If you’re going to protect marriage then protect marriage

        Fine. If all they wanted to do was require states to recognize legal marriages from other states, that's all they needed to say. Specifically mentioning interracial marriage, when interracial marriage is under no threat, is clearly racial fear-mongering.

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        2. Liberty_Belle   3 years ago

          Didn't they also say that it was absurd to think that SCOTUS would overturn Roe v Wade as it was established precedent ?

          1. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

            I never heard anyone say that.

        3. Dr. JSH   3 years ago

          https://jezebel.com/republican-u-s-senator-openly-questions-the-right-to-i-1848692588

          Including interracial marriage had ABSOLUTELY nothing to do with fearmongering about white supremacy, although clearly it inadvertently touched a nerve for you.

    2. Brandybuck   3 years ago

      And why are you so bloody concerned that congress legalized interracial marriage? Why do you feel that a marriage too far? What are you hiding? It's people like you that make this necessary.

      1. Mickey Rat   3 years ago

        Because it was a poison pill to shut down any objection to the same sex marriage part.

        1. mad.casual   3 years ago

          And distract from the fact that the whole thing is, once again, anti-libertarian/anti-free association as fuck.

          You must recognize the specific contracts/human rights from another State the Fedgov says you must recognize because the Fedgov says so, BECAUSE FREEDOM!

          1. Jefferson's Ghost   3 years ago

            "... anti-libertarian/anti-free association as fuck."

            ??????

            1. mad.casual   3 years ago

              I know it's tough to conceptualize with a "LOVE IS LOVE" sign in your yard but, yes, using the government to force other people the next 49 states over to recognize your union isn't a libertarian or pro-free association position.

              1. Jefferson's Ghost   3 years ago

                In California, as I suspect in most other States, married people have a definite potential advantage over single folk when it comes to paying income taxes. So it would be okay with you to tax gay couples differently than straight couples?

                1. fowomi   3 years ago (edited)

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                2. mad.casual   3 years ago

                  So it would be okay with you to tax gay couples differently than straight couples?

                  You're the one arguing in favor of more laws that don't fix the things you identify as problems. If you want to pass more laws to tax single black women differently than married gay couples, it's on you to explain that, not me.

                  1. Jefferson's Ghost   3 years ago

                    Somehow, the federal government's recognition of a right of the people, recognized by SCOTUS doesn't really qualify as a "new law."

      2. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

        why are you so bloody concerned that congress legalized interracial marriage?

        I'm not concerned about that at all. I'm concerned about fanning the flames of racial division by falsely suggesting that interracial marriage is under some kind of threat.

        It’s people like you

        What do you mean by "people like you"? Have we met?

    3. Dr. JSH   3 years ago

      Whatever you have to tell yourself to sleep at night:

      https://www.indystar.com/story/news/politics/2022/03/22/mike-braun-indiana-us-senate-interracial-marriage-law-loving-virginia/7131891001/

  4. Medulla Oblongata   3 years ago

    I've found it fascinating that the same logic never gets applied to carry licenses.

    When SCOTUS ruled on Obergefell, courthouses were expected to immediately provide same-sex marriage licenses even when state laws had some wrinkles in them that made that difficult.

    But when SCOTUS ruled on Heller and McDonald, D.C and Chicago has hemmed and hawed and are still not complying, or just barely.

    Never understood the disparity, nor why my driver's license and marriage license are good in all 50 states but my carry permit is not.

    1. Vernon Depner   3 years ago

      Or why professional licenses aren't good in all states.

    2. mad.casual   3 years ago

      The best part is the Federal layer-cake, FFnC aspect of it. That is, if IL says, "Wait 72 hrs. between purchase and pickup." and IN says, "Purchasers can take home same day." and I go to IN to buy a gun, they're required to enforce IL's 72 hours wait against me. *If* somehow, I get around the 72 hour wait without perjuring myself, they drag my ass back to IL to get charged for the shit I did *legally* in IN under IN law.

    3. Jefferson's Ghost   3 years ago

      "Never understood the disparity, nor why my driver’s license and marriage license are good in all 50 states but my carry permit is not."

      Indeed.

  5. Bill Falcon   3 years ago

    The Federal Govt has no authority on how marriage is defined. It is up to the States. The Federal Govt has no authority on overruling parents when a trannie activist has groomed their confused child and is pushing for sexual mutilation. States should define marriage. If you don't like your State, move.

    1. Dr. JSH   3 years ago

      Setting aside your deep ignorance about transgender people, the Respect for Marriage Act does not not tell states how to define marriage, only that states must recognize as valid and legal same-sex and interracial marriages that were legal in the jurisdiction where and when the marriage commenced. This applies to marriages abroad too.
      This was Congress' prerogative under the Full Faith and Credit Clause.

  6. Dr. JSH   3 years ago

    You should be more skeptical of anti-gay hate groups' talking points.
    States ban places of public accommodation from discriminating based on sexual orientation, not on marriage.
    A bakery that will make a wedding cake for a straight couple but not a gay couple discriminates twice -- once against each person in the gay couple.
    The sole difference between the two substantially similar couples is sexual orientation.

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