Court gay

Idaho Republican legislators call on SCOTUS to reverse queer marriage ruling

The Idaho Residence passed a resolution Monday calling on the Supreme Court to reconsider its decision on same-sex marriage equality.

The court’s Obergefell v. Hodges decision established the right to same-sex marriage under the equal protection clause and the due process clause of the 14th Amendment.

The resolution comes after Associate Justice Clarence Thomas’s expressed interest in revisiting the Obergefell verdict in his concurring notion on the Supreme Court's landmark opinion on Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization that overturned the federal right to abortion.

Thomas, who issued a dissenting opinion in against homosexual marriage, wrote in , "In future cases, we should reconsider all of this court’s substantive due process precedents, including Griswold, Lawrence, and Obergefell. Because any substantive due process decision is 'demonstrably erroneous,' we have a duty to 'correct the error' established in those precedents."

Lawrence v. Texas over

Some Republican lawmakers increase calls against gay marriage SCOTUS ruling

Conservative legislators are increasingly speaking out against the Supreme Court’s landmark decision on same-sex marriage equality.

Idaho legislators began the trend in January when the state House and Senate passed a resolution calling on the Supreme Court to reconsider its verdict -- which the court cannot do unless presented with a case on the issue. Some Republican lawmakers in at least four other states favor Michigan, Montana, North Dakota and South Dakota contain followed suit with calls to the Supreme Court.

In North Dakota, the resolution passed the state Home with a vote of and is headed to the Senate. In South Dakota, the state’s Residence Judiciary Committee sent the proposal on the 41st Legislative Day –deferring the bill to the concluding day of a legislative session, when it will no longer be considered, and effectively killing the bill.

In Montana and Michigan, the bills have yet to face legislative scrutiny.

Resolutions have no legal command and are not binding law, but instead grant legislati

Mauritius supreme court upholds gay rights, sets aside ‘discriminatory’ penal code provision

Read judgment

 

Given controversial anti-gay laws in some parts of Africa, and the rationale for those laws, it’s perhaps important to start off by spelling out what this significant modern judgment, delivered last week by the supreme court of Mauritius, does not do.

It does not permit sex with children; it does not permit bestiality; it does not permit gay rape, or sex that isn’t consensual; it does not allow sex in widespread. All these efforts are still unlawful.

In short, its only change is to decriminalise gay sex, between consenting adults, in private. More specifically, the opinion declares that section (1) of the criminal code of Mauritius is unconstitutional because it discriminates against gay men.

Homophobia

The judgment was written in response to an action brought by Abdool Ah Seek, a homosexual Mauritian man, together with a local non-government association that campaigns against all forms of homophobia, and that was admitted as an interested party.

Seek argued

Unlike children, gays and lesbians execute not have a special section in the Bill of Rights devoted to their rights. Rather, the relevant part of section 9 of the Constitution, entitled "Equality", states that:

"(3) The articulate may not unfairly discriminate directly or indirectly against anyone on one or more grounds, including race, gender, sex, pregnancy, marital status, ethnic or social beginning, colour, sexual orientation, age, disability, religion, conscience, belief, culture, language and birth."

Gays and lesbians are protected by the inclusion of sexual orientation as one of the listed grounds on which unfair discrimination may not seize place.

The listing of specific cases in section 9(3) does not mean, however, that to be considered unconstitutional, discrimination would contain to be based on one of the grounds mentioned.

Gay rights might enjoy protection even in the absence of the specific reference to sexual orientation. But their explicit mentioning gives our Bill of Rights a distinct place in the world: South Africa was the first land to enshrine gay rights in its Constitut