Equal
Partners in Faith celebrates Washington State court decision on same sex
marriage; Missouri decision disappoints.
Press
Release 8-05-04 from Equal Partners in Faith [8-9-04]
Equal Partners in Faith celebrates with
progressive organizations and the citizens of Washington State the ruling
handed down by Superior Court Judge William L. Downing in support of
marriage for same sex couples (August 4th). This ruling has been hailed as
"a powerful affirmation of equal rights for gay couples." Downing's ruling
concluded that depriving same sex couples from full marriage rights is "not
rationally related to any legitimate or compelling state interest."
However, on August 3rd, voters in the state
of Missouri voted to approve an anti-gay amendment to the Missouri
Constitution. The amendment passed by a wide margin which dramatically
illustrates that the rights of individuals should not be put to a vote.
Historically, justice has not been served
by popular vote and the US Constitution is constructed to protect minority
groups from the "tyranny of the majority." Equal Partners in Faith believes
in equal justice under the law.
The following articles bring more
illumination on this subject.
Sylvia Rhue, Director,
Equal Partners in Faith.
Missouri Voters Amend their State
Constitution to Add Discrimination
Media release, Tuesday, August 3, 2004
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force
"Fundamental Human
Rights Should Never be up for Popular Vote"
Washington, DC. August 3, 10:30pm ET. -
Tonight, early returns indicate that voters in Missouri have approved by a
margin of approximately 65% to 35% an amendment to their state constitution
which prohibits the recognition of same sex marriages. The campaign against
the amendment was waged by Constitutional Defense League, which raised
$450,000 in just two and one-half months, airing television ads and fielding
scores of volunteers across the state. Other progressive groups in Missouri,
including the ACLU of Missouri and Planned Parenthood, also fought against
the measure. The state's major papers - St. Louis Post, St.
Louis Business Journal, Kansas City Star, Columbia
Missourian, and Springfield News Leader -and the mayors of St.
Louis and Kansas City all opposed the amendment. The National Gay and
Lesbian Task Force conducted field training in St. Louis in May, and
contributed $25,500 to fight the amendment. The Human Rights Campaign also
made significant contributions and provided four field staff to the
campaign.
Statement by Matt Foreman,
Executive Director
"While we are saddened by the vote, we
are not surprised. Fundamental human rights should never be up for popular
vote. Our founding fathers recognized this reality and enshrined our basic
freedoms in the United States Constitution. Missouri's own past highlights
the enduring value of the federal Constitution: until overturned by
various United States Supreme Court decisions, Missouri law prohibited
interracial marriage, criminalized abortion, and supported segregated
schools.
Every gay, lesbian, bisexual and
transgender American owes a debt of gratitude to The Constitutional
Defense League and its campaign manager Doug Gray for waging the largest
campaign that our community has ever had in Missouri. Because of their
work, newspapers across the state and hundreds of clergy came out in
opposition to the amendment. Moreover, they accomplished so much with
limited resources and in the face of a campaign marked by lies,
distortions, fear-mongering, and threats of violence.
The good news is that more then one third
of Missouri voters rejected this mean-spirited, un-American attack.
Moreover, today's vote means that for every vote cast by a gay Missourian,
another 6 non- gay people stood up for us. That is the truly inspiring
story in this vote. (According to exit polls conducted over many years,
approximately 5% of voters identify as gay, lesbian or bisexual.)
It is important for all gay Americans --
especially our heroes in Missouri and all of our people who are right now
fighting similar, ugly measures across the country -- to recognize that a
primary goal of the right in launching these attacks is to demoralize,
drain, and fracture our communities.
We -- not the forces of intolerance --
must define victory. We win when our community builds its infrastructure,
educates thousands of voters about our rights, comes out stronger, and is
ready to fight harder and better. That is certainly the situation in
Missouri and we urge all gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender
Missourians and our allies to give their wholehearted support to PROMO
(Personal Rights of Missourians), Missouri's statewide LGBT civil rights
organization, which will carry the fight into the future.
The fight goes on. We know it and they
know it: we are on the right and winning side of history and ultimately we
will prevail."
NBJC condemns
discriminatory constitutional vote in Missouri
From National Black Justice Coalition
Washington D.C. - August 4, 2004 - The
National Black Justice Campaign (NBJC) condemned today's vote putting
discrimination in the Missouri Constitution by denying gay and lesbian
couples the right to marry and equal protection under the law.
"African Americans oppose discrimination in
all its forms," said H. Alexander Robinson, strategic director of the
National Black Justice Coalition.
"George W. Bush and his radical
conservative allies are seeking to divide us on this issue," commented NBJC
Board Member Jasmyne Cannick. "We believe that most Missourians do not agree
with the unconstitutional ban."
"We will not stand idly by and allow
discrimination to be written into the Constitution of the United States or
the constitutions of any state in America," said Mandy Carter, an NBJC board
member and chair of its Grassroots Mobilization Committee. "We call on all
advocates for fairness to reject injustice and discrimination and to oppose
conservative attempts to enshrine their prejudice."
About National Black Justice Coalition
The National Black Justice Coalition is
an ad hoc coalition of black lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered
leaders who have come together to fight against discrimination in their
communities. The goal of the organization in 2004 is to build black
support for marriage equality and to educate African Americans on the
dangers of the proposal to amend the U.S. Constitution to discriminate in
marriage.
The National Black Justice Board Members
are: Keith Boykin, New York, NY (President), Jasmyne Cannick, Los Angeles,
CA (Media Director), Mandy Carter, Durham, NC, Roddrick Colvin, New York
(Secretary), Maurice Franklin, New York, NY, Donna Payne, Washington, DC
(Vice President), Sylvia Rhue, Los Angeles, CA, Frank Leon Roberts, New
York, NY, Reuben Walker, New York, NY and Sonya Shields, New York, NY.
The National Black Justice Coalition's
Strategic Director is Alexander Robinson.
EQUAL
PARTNERS in FAITH is a multi-racial national network of religious
leaders and people of faith committed to equality and diversity. Our diverse
faith traditions and shared religious values lead us to affirm and defend
the equality of all people, regardless of religion, race, ability, gender,
sexual orientation or gender identity. As people of faith, we actively
oppose the manipulation of religion to promote inequality and exclusion.
Equal Partners in Faith
1040 Harbor Drive
Annapolis, MD 21403
Phone: 877-501-4194
Fax: 1-443-782-0273
Email: EPFinfo@aol.com
Web: www.us.net/epf