Addison Morris at 8:59 AM ET
Sunday, September 1, 2013
US to recognize all same-sex marriages for federal tax purposes
US to recognize all same-sex marriages for federal tax purposes
Addison Morris at 8:59 AM ET
[JURIST] The US Treasury Department [official website] announced [press release] Thursday that the Treasury, along with the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) [official website] will now recognize the marriages of all
same-sex couples for federal tax purposes. This recognition is to take
place for legally-married couples living in all states, including
jurisdictions that do not recognize same-sex marriage
[JURIST backgrounder]. The ruling, however, does not apply to
registered domestic partnerships or civil unions. Thursday's decision
has been met with both praise and criticism. Freedom to Marry [advocacy website] lauded the decision, calling it a victory [press release] for the rights of same-sex couples. Meanwhile, the National Organization of Marriage [advocacy website] criticized
[press release] the Obama administration for overstepping its
boundaries in a nation where "only Congress has the authority to change
the law."
Thursday's announcement follows the recent US Supreme Court decision in US v. Windsor [SCOTUSblog backgrounder; JURIST report] which overturned Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act
(DOMA). The ruling did not create a constitutional right to same-sex
marriage, but it entitles couples in lawfully recognized same-sex
marriages to certain federal benefits. A judge for the Second Judicial District Court of New Mexico [official website] on Tuesday ordered [JURIST report] district court clerks to begin granting marriage licenses to same-sex couples. Last week the Texas Supreme Court [official website] announced that it will consider whether the state has jurisdiction [JURIST report] to grant divorces to two same-sex couples who were legally married in Massachusetts. In July the ACLU filed a federal lawsuit
[JURIST report] in Pennsylvania on behalf of 21 residents who wish to
marry their same-sex partner or who are seeking recognition by the state
of their out-of-state same-sex marriage. In March Vermont's House of
Representatives approved a bill
[JURIST report] that would require out-of-state employers to provide
the same health care coverage to same-sex couples as employees with an
opposite-sex spouse. Also in March the Colorado House of Representative voted in favor of a bill [JURIST report] that would legalize civil unions in the state.
Addison Morris at 8:59 AM ET
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