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Gay marriage moves closer to Supreme Court

Civil unions supporters rally in downtown Denver before the Colorado House Judiciary Committee hearing on the Colorado Civil Union Act in Denver May 3, 2012. REUTERS/Rick Wilking

(Reuters) – Two big

cases addressing marriage rights for gays and lesbians are on track to reach the U.S. Supreme Court as

soon as this year, keeping the focus on an issue President Barack Obama reignited with his endorsement

this week.

Civil unions

supporters rally in downtown Denver before the Colorado House Judiciary Committee hearing on the

Colorado Civil Union Act in Denver May 3, 2012. REUTERS/Rick Wilking

The

cases, originating on opposite coasts, go to the heart of a question that has churned for two decades:

whether states and the federal government may refuse to recognize same-sex marriage.

How the

high court would rule is impossible to know. In the court’s most recent gay-rights case, the justices

in 2003 struck down state anti-sodomy laws as an improper intrusion on private activity.

Lawyers

for California same-sex couples are urging the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit to end its

involvement, which would clear the way for a request for the Supreme Court to settle the

issue.

Each day the government does not recognize the couples “is a day that can never be

returned to them,” lawyer Ted Olson wrote in a court filing in March.

Obama got both sides of

the marriage debate fired up on Wednesday when he said he believes gays and lesbians should be able to

marry. The comments to ABC News completed the president’s self-described evolution on the subject and

thrust the issue into his 2012 re-election campaign.

The California case tests whether the

state’s same-sex marriage ban, which voters approved in 2008 after 18,000 same-sex couples had

obtained marriage licenses, violates due-process and equal-protection rights.

After a

three-judge panel ruled for gay marriage in the 9th Circuit in February, backers of the ban asked that

an 11-judge panel rehear the case. Should the court refuse, the backers are expected to ask the U.S.

Supreme Court to intervene.

Brian Brown, president of the National Organization for Marriage, a

group that opposes same-sex marriage, struck a confident note in an interview. Lawyers for gays and

lesbians, he said, need to prove that “our entire common law history going back to England was

wrong.”

The second major case is from Massachusetts, where gays and lesbians can legally marry

but are ineligible for the federal benefits of marriage.

Seventeen married or widowed men and

women suing for benefits won a 2010 ruling that is now on appeal. A decision is likely in the next

several months from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit, with the high court a possible next

step.

Other cases in earlier stages are challenging laws that restrict same-sex relationships. A

New York widow is suing over the tax treatment of her late wife’s estate. The two were married in

Canada in 2007.

Mary Bonauto, a lawyer for the Massachusetts plaintiffs, said it was hard to

gauge how Obama’s support for same-sex marriage might affect legal proceedings. “When you have the

conversation, then you have the opportunity to change discriminatory laws,” said Bonauto, director of

the civil rights project for the legal group GLAD.

(Reporting by David Ingram; Editing by Howard

Goller and Eric

Walsh)

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