WASHINGTON (RNS) What a difference 10 years makes.
In
May 2004, Massachusetts became the first state to allow same-sex
marriage. Six months later, with dire warnings about schoolchildren
being forced to read “Heather Has Two Mommies” and threats of legalized
polygamy, so-called “values voters” passed bans on same-sex marriage in
11 states and ushered George W. Bush to another four years in the White
House.
Fast-forward
to 2014, and the cultural and legal landscape could hardly be more
different. Today, 19 states and the District of Columbia allow same-sex
marriage, and federal courts have struck down bans in 11 more states.
The U.S. Supreme Court ordered the federal government to recognize
same-sex marriages after ditching a central portion of the 1996 Defense
of Marriage Act last year, and 44 percent of Americans now live in
states that allow same-sex marriage.
After
four same-sex couples filed suit Wednesday (May 21) challenging
Montana’s ban on same-sex marriage, neighboring North Dakota is the only
state that isn’t facing a challenge to its gay marriage ban — at least
not yet.
So
what changed? The issue is far from settled — and some conservatives
insist that it never will be — but pro-gay groups clearly have the
momentum. Here’s why:
1. Rapid cultural shifts
The
culture changed faster than conservatives thought possible. Led by the
popular gay characters on “Will & Grace” and “Glee,” gays and
lesbians are more visible in public life, and Americans are growing
increasingly comfortable with that. A generation ago, coming out as gay
was a career-killer; now it’s almost trendy.
Within
religion, the 2003 election of openly gay Episcopal Bishop Gene
Robinson dramatically shifted the conversation about gays in leadership,
and Presbyterians and Lutherans voted to allow gay clergy with barely a
shrug. The wildly popular Pope Francis changed the tenor of the
discussion by famously asking “Who am I to judge?” as his church
struggles to reclaim its moral credibility on sexual ethics in the wake
of the clergy abuse scandal.
Coupled
with an aggressive campaign targeted at gays and lesbians to come out
to their families and colleagues, America now has innumerable friends,
co-workers, celebrities, siblings and children that are the new face of
the gay movement. And that, says Evan Wolfson of New York-based Freedom
to Marry, carries more weight than any court ruling or legislative vote.
“There’s
no question that popular culture and celebrities and religious figures
who speak out create the air cover for the ground game of personal
conversations,” said Wolfson, whose group has been at the forefront of
the legal fights over marriage. “And that is what really closed the
deal.”
2. An ally in the White House
It’s
hard to overestimate the power of a bully pulpit, and there’s no bigger
microphone than the chief executive’s. While President Obama may be the
country’s first black president, he will also be remembered as the most
pro-gay occupant of the Oval Office — even if it took him time to get
there.
Obama’s
White House shaped the cultural narrative around gay rights by ending
the 17-year Don’t Ask/Don’t Tell ban on gays and lesbians serving in the
military. Like Obama, millions of Americans reached the same
conclusion: If gay men and women can die for their country, why
shouldn’t they be allowed to get married? And if it’s OK for the
military, why not for everyone else?
Perhaps
most significantly, Obama’s Justice Department dropped its defense of
the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act, concluding that the federal ban on
same-sex marriages was unconstitutional. Attorney General Eric Holder
encouraged state attorneys general to do the same, and when the
attorneys general in Pennsylvania and Oregon followed Holder’s advice,
federal courts swiftly struck down bans in both states.
“No
one defended the law in court,” fumed Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone
of San Francisco, the Catholic bishops’ point man on same-sex marriage.
“Is this justice, or just a farce?”
Whatever it was, it worked for the gay rights side.
“If
we would have known 10 years ago that the rule of law would no longer
be in play, maybe we would have had a different strategy,” added Family
Research Council president Tony Perkins, who accused Obama of
“unleashing lawlessness on the country.”
3. A problem of overreach
Starting
with the Defense of Marriage Act in 1996, conservative activists
concluded that the only solution to stopping gay marriage was a
nationwide ban. A federal constitutional ban on same-sex marriage has
languished in Congress for years — and now Russell Moore, head of the
Southern Baptists’ Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, calls such a
strategy “a politically ridiculous thing to talk about right now.”
In
addition, conservative groups resisted moves to compromise on a
half-measure like civil unions; Perkins’ organization calls civil unions
nothing more than “a slow-motion surrender.” And that, said veteran gay
marriage proponent Jonathan Rauch, was a critical mistake.
“They
set an impossible goal for themselves by saying from day one that the
goal of success would be not one gay marriage on not one square inch of
American soil, and that was never going to happen,” said Rauch, a senior
fellow at the Washington-based Brookings Institution.
That,
in turn, only strengthened the resolve of gay rights groups, even if it
meant passing gay marriage state by state, or mounting legal challenges
one ban at a time.
“I
don’t think a lot of gay people are really in a mood to say ‘Let’s meet
the other side halfway’ because the other side has never been
interested in meeting us halfway,” Rauch said.
4. Religious influence rises — and falls
In 2004, popular support for same-sex marriage was stuck in the low 30s. According to the latest Gallup Poll released this week, that number is now at 55 percent. It’s now rare to see a poll that finds only minority support for gay marriage.
In 2004, popular support for same-sex marriage was stuck in the low 30s. According to the latest Gallup Poll released this week, that number is now at 55 percent. It’s now rare to see a poll that finds only minority support for gay marriage.
But
another poll number may be more telling about the underlying cultural
shift: A decade ago, 71 percent of Americans said religion was
“increasing its influence” on American life. Today, nearly the exact
opposite is true — 77 percent of Americans say religion is “losing its
influence” on public life.
In
short, Americans have concluded that while marriage may well be a
sacred institution, couples tying the knot have to seek a marriage
license at the courthouse, not the altar. With the moral influence of
organized religion on the wane, more Americans have decided that there’s
a difference between marriage rights — and all the legal and financial
benefits that go with them — and matrimonial rites.
“Some
of our citizens are made deeply uncomfortable by the notion of same-sex
marriage,” federal Judge John E. Jones III ruled in striking down
Pennsylvania’s gay marriage ban. “However, that same-sex marriage causes
discomfort in some does not make its prohibition constitutional. Nor
can past tradition trump the bedrock constitutional guarantees of due
process and equal protection.”
5. ‘Hateful and bigoted’
Perhaps
the biggest obstacle facing proponents of traditional marriage was a
negative image that they were never able to overcome. While chafing at
comparisons to racism and Jim Crow laws, the matriarch of the
traditional marriage movement, Maggie Gallagher, concedes that her side
has been labeled as “hateful and bigoted.” It’s no accident that
opponents of Proposition 8 — the 2008 ballot measure that banned
same-sex marriage in California — adopted the logo of “No H8T.”
Some conservative activists say they brought it on themselves.
“There
was the evangelical belligerence, often, in the last generation that
spoke, for instance, about the gay agenda, in which there was this
picture, almost as though there is a group of super villains in a lair,
plotting somewhere the downfall of the family,” Moore told a gathering
of journalists in March.
Conservatives
also weathered a host of guilt-by-association charges, which were
equally hard to dislodge. In Arizona, a bill that supporters said would
protect religious freedom was conveyed as license to turn gays away from
public businesses. Evangelical opposition to homosexuality was exported
to Africa, which took the form of harsh laws to jail or even sentence
to death known homosexuals.
In
short, it was no longer popular or politically correct to stand against
popular culture and a swiftly changing popular opinion.
“They
showed no compassion for gay people, they didn’t offer any substitutes
like protecting gay families or gay kids,” Rauch said. “That lack of
compassion came through. It took a little while to register, but the
American public does not like lack of compassion.”
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