Friday, June 26, 2015

NE gay marriage sore losers: Washington, Cass, Dodge Seward and Butler counties

KETV says the Washington County Clerk is footdragging waiting to hear from the county attorney. Cass isn't issuing licenses yet. Dodge, Seward and Butler counties are waiting on the Department of Health and Human Services and the Office of Vital Statistics.
     Waiting for what? State bureaucrats to approve the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States of America? The right forms that you should have stocked weeks ago? What is your continuing problem?
     The state's two biggest counties, Lancaster and Douglas, were issuing licenses and even marrying gay couples within an hour of the Supreme Court Decision. They were prepared with the correct forms. They didn't invent excuses blaming either the Office of Vital Statistics or the Department of Health and Human Services. They cleared everything with the county attorney within minutes of the Supreme Court's decision.

Statement from Governor Ricketts:
The U.S. Supreme Court has spoken and ruled state same-sex marriage bans to be unconstitutional. While 70 percent of Nebraskans approved our amendment to our state constitution that defined marriage as only between a man and a woman, the highest court in the land has ruled states cannot place limits on marriage between same-sex couples. We will follow the law and respect the ruling outlined by the court.
     Today five Supreme Court Justices created a new constitutional right based upon sexual choices.
     The Constitution doesn’t speak, one way or the other, to the question of same-sex marriage. Under our system of federalism, the definition of marriage as a male-female union is properly a matter of state law. I agree with Chief Justice Robert’s contention that “The majority’s decision is an act of will, not legal judgment. The right it announces has no basis in the Constitution or this Court’s precedent.”
     The Court overstepped its proper role in our system of government. Instead of interpreting and applying the law, the Court invented a new constitutional right. Nothing in the Constitution mandates a nationwide redefinition of marriage. Sadly, the Court stripped all Americans of our freedom to debate and decide marriage policy through the democratic process. The freedom to democratically address the most pressing social issues of the day is the heart of liberty. The Court took that freedom from the people.
     In addition to Nebraska, Americans in 30 other States have voted to affirm marriage in their constitutions, while the people of only 3 states have voted to redefine marriage. Of the states that now issue same-sex marriage licenses, more than 2/3 had it imposed by court dictate. The Court’s decision represents a profound loss of freedom. It shows a lack of faith in democracy for the Court to force this decision on every state.
     Nebraska has until today’s decision in Obergefell relied upon the 8th Circuit’s 2006 opinion in Citizens for Equal Protection v. Bruning, which specifically upheld the constitutionality of Nebraska’s marriage laws. Obergefell has effectively reversed the 8th Circuit’s sound decision in Bruning and effectively renders the state’s case in Waters v. Ricketts, currently pending in the 8th Circuit, moot.
     Recognizing the rule of law, the State of Nebraska will comply with the ruling of the United States Supreme Court in Obergefell. Nebraska officials will not enforce any Nebraska laws that are contrary to the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell.

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