• Voting Record

    Gwen Moore

    Voting Record

    LOADING VOTES....
Print

Wisconsin Democrats ask U.S. attorney general to recognize gay couples' marriages

 
 
 
Wisconsin Democrats on June 16 asked U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to recognize the marriages of same-sex couples in the state for federal purposes.
 
Such a decision from the U.S. Justice Department would not be unprecedented.
 
Hundreds of same-sex couples in Wisconsin obtained marriage licenses beginning June 6, after a federal judge ruled the state's constitutional amendment against gay marriage unconstitutional. But the window closed when the judge issued a temporary stay of her ruling, which required county clerks to stop issuing licenses.
 
That stay was sought by Republican Wisconsin Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen, who plans a full appeal of the judge's ruling.
 
Gay couples in Wisconsin are now wondering about the validity of their marriages.
 
U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin and U.S. Reps. Mark Pocan, Ron Kind and Gwen Moore want the federal government to provide some security and recognize the marriages under federal law and regulations.
 
They wrote to Holder, saying, "To date, same-sex couples across Wisconsin have received marriage licenses, and officials in counties throughout the state continue to issue licenses to eligible couples. These loving couples have valid marriage licenses and should receive the same federal recognition that all other married Wisconsin couples currently do."
 
Last summer, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the provision in the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act that barred federal recognition of marriages entered into by same-sex couples. Since then, courts have ruled for marriage equality and federal agencies have amended regulations and policies to guarantee equal treatment to married same-sex couples.
 
 
Here's the text of the letter from the Wisconsin Democrats:
 
We write to ask you to formally recognize for all federal purposes the marriages between same-sex couples that have been performed in the State of Wisconsin since a federal district judge invalidated the state’s constitutional amendment barring same-sex marriage on June 6.  To date, same-sex couples across Wisconsin have received marriage licenses, and officials in counties throughout the state continue to issue licenses to eligible couples.  These loving couples have valid marriage licenses and should receive the same federal recognition that all other married Wisconsin couples currently do.    
 
On June 6, U.S. District Court Judge Barbara Crabb ruled that Wisconsin’s constitutional and statutory restrictions on marriage for same-sex couples violate the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses.  She did not immediately stay her decision and, within hours, some county clerks opened their doors to same-sex couples seeking to marry.  On Friday, Judge Crabb issued a stay of her decision while the state pursues an appeal, thereby suspending further marriages in the interim.   
 
Following last summer’s U.S. Supreme Court decision in United States v. Windsor, you have led the federal government’s effort to ensure that all lawfully-married same-sex couples have equal access to federal rights and benefits.  As a result, couples who had legally married are finally treated equally and are able to access:
 
  • the ability to sponsor a foreign spouse for legal residency in the United States;
  • health, workers compensation, retirement and other benefits for the spouse of a federal employee;
  • health benefits, spousal ID cards, housing allowances and on-base support services for the spouse of a service member;
  • joint federal income tax filings, as well as spousal exemptions from federal taxation of gifts, inheritances and the value of employer-provided  spousal health coverage;
  • unpaid family and medical leave to care for an ill spouse;
  • and hundreds of other rights and benefits.   
However, until last week, same-sex couples in Wisconsin were unable to receive these benefits because they could not lawfully marry.  Now that Judge Crabb’s decision has allowed many of them to obtain marriage licenses, the federal government should provide Wisconsin’s married same-sex couples with all of these federal benefits now available to them under the law.      
 
Earlier this year, you made clear that couples who married in Utah and Michigan after federal judges struck down those states’ bans are entitled to full federal recognition.  We are grateful for this tremendous leadership on behalf of fairness and equality.  We ask that you similarly declare that those same-sex couples who married in Wisconsin since the June 6 decision are equally entitled to the federal benefits they deserve.
 
 
To view this article online, please click here.