UtahDan |
11-01-2008 05:28 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Indy Coug
(Post 287776)
OK, so I'm admittedly ignorant of California law, but what you're saying is that if you can get more than 50% support on any law, no matter how unconstitutional it is, it is immune from judicial review and not subject to being overturned?
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Sort of. What he is saying is that if you put something on the ballot in California to amend the constitution (which it is very easy to do there) then it becomes the constitution of that state. Once it is part of the constitution, all a judge can do is interpret it. Never strike it down, at least on the state leve. Recall that the Ca SC found that there was a right to gay marriage under its state constitution, not the federal constitution. One of the things to keep in mind is that a state constitution can give its citizens more rights than the federal constitution, but never fewer. The federal constitution is the floor, which is why all the states whose highest cousrt ahve found the right does exist there have found that it does under the constitution of that state. So change the constitution in a way that is only subject to one interpretation and you fix the issue.
The further issue is whether under the federal constitution you have created a "classification" that runs a foul of the fourteenth amendment (equal protection clause) which has several layers for deciding whether a classification is permissible depending on what it is. The SCOTUS has never found that sexual orientation is a "suspect class" (that is, in laymans terms, you have to have a really good reason for making that classification) like race or religion or even a quasi-suspect class like gender. For any of those a state must show a really, really good reason for having a law that treats people differently based on one of those.
Everything else, all other classifications, just meet a rational basis test. That is, if there is any rational reason at all the law treats people differently then the law is okay. So far, sexual orientation is in this latter class. So any articulable reason for a law (or a state constitution) that treats them differently will suffice.
The SCOTUS, however, could decide to expand its definition of "suspect class" to include sexual orientation and no doubt it is going to get asked to do exactly that at some point. Hope that is helpful.
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