Gay Rights Groups Seek to Intervene in Federal Challenge to Calif. Same-Sex Marriage Ban

rights to intervene in a federal challenge of California’s Proposition 8 has created a rift with the high-powered heading the case, turning erstwhile into head-butting competitors.

Both sides have diverging visions of legal strategy. The are pushing a cautious, narrow approach based on the circumstances of Prop 8, while Theodore Olson, David Boies and their are seeking a decisive for all under the U.S. .

The — the National Center for Lesbian Rights, Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund and the American Civil Liberties Union — are also worried that the Olson/ team is underestimating the importance of U.S. District Vaughn Walker’s on a fully developed factual record. They moved this month to intervene (pdf) so they can present evidence of historic against and and answer Walker’s questions, such as whether can be changed and whether same- marriages destabilize opposite- marriages.

See Gay Rights Groups Seek to Intervene in Federal Challenge to Calif

Above the Law

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LA Times Editorial: A court battle California doesn’t need

The ’s ruling last week in the case of a grandiosely unethical justice opened a new field of constitutional review — the high court may now consider when an elected state court has been so tainted by that requires him to recuse himself from a case.

In , a coal executive spent more than $3 million to unseat a sitting state justice; it was well spent, as the justice was defeated by voters and replaced by Brent Benjamin. Benjamin then did what was expected of him and cast a deciding in overturning a $50-million against the executive’s .

Benjamin’s in the case assured him a place in the ’s of , and his was so blatant that the U.S. majority that rebuked him argued that it was not opening the door to many future . Surely, it reasoned, no justice will behave this badly again. That may or may not prove to be true — the court offered little in the way of guidance as to what constitutes impermissible — yet Benjamin’s case sadly but surely will not be the last in which big- and collide.

Indeed, California has wrestled with this problem before — and quite possibly could again.

California’ for selecting justices is much better than ’s. Candidates for the court here are nominated by the governor, confirmed by a state commission and then placed on the . They must periodically stand for retention, but they are not, as they are in , subject to direct challenge by candidates. A retention election can cost a justice his or her seat, but it does not let voters kick out one justice and install their own replacement.

California’s rules have helped balance the ’s independence with the public’s fair on accountability, but even this state’s reasonable retention process has been subject to tilt. Most notable was the 1986 retention election that removed Bird and two , Cruz Reynoso and Joseph Grodin. Much has gone into that race in the since, and opinions differ on its . Two truths, however, stand the test of deep inquiry: The forces arrayed against Bird were not motivated solely by her to the — that was cover for a second complaint, which was her defense of consumer rights against corporate power — and Reynoso and Grodin were victims of a special-interest crusade against a vulnerable chief.

Would that we could relegate that episode to California’s history. In fact, the state rumbles with discontent over its high court and chief, and those stirrings contain alarming of the battle of 1986.

At issue are the court’s rulings on same- and Proposition 8, and its , Ronald M. George. In May 2008, the court overturned the state’s ban on , striking a for in the grandest of constitutional protection of . A few months later, after voters approved Proposition 8 and amended the state to ban the same institution that the court had upheld, George and his upheld the amendment. Both times, George wrote for the majority. He thus angered of in 2008 and supporters of it in 2009.

By California’s rules, George a retention election in 2010, and some predict that he could from either side — or even both — in this polarizing .

That would be a for the state’s , an unfortunate attack on and an unfair castigation of one of this state’s most principled and admirable public officials. In the - cases, George’s votes demonstrated , professionalismand restraint. He voted to uphold same- out of the strong — which this page shares — that the does not allow society to deny the protection of to any more than it once denied it to those united across race. The ruling was right on the law, and will certainly be validated over the long march of history.

Months later, voters tacked in the other , narrowly rejecting and amending the to allow California to recognize only the of . That was challenged, naturally, and the lawsuit offered the court the opportunity to extend its earlier ruling, though on shaky for same- argued that Proposition 8 was such an to the rights of that it revised the rather than merely amending it. Scholars split on the of that argument, and although the strong of rejectedit, an opportunistic justice might have seized the chance to solidify his .

Instead, George subordinated his — as evidenced by his writing — to the weight of constitutional opinion. He voted to uphold the proposition, even though it undid his own work. Permitted latitude within the strictures of the in the first case, George was able to his ; by the in the second case, he yielded.

Such is the of a principled judicial officer, but those concerned only with results already have signaled their unhappiness with George. The moneyed interests that supported Proposition 8 last fall are considering whether to finance a campaign against George next year. Supporters of , who championed his heroism in 2008, were bitterly disappointed when the court upheld the hateful .

This is not . Corporate interests are not knocking off justices who disagree with them and seating more accommodating replacements. But has no place in our judicial life any more than it does in Appalachia. The 1986 campaign against Bird and her now stands for many as a reminder that well-intentioned systems of accountability may be hijacked by special interests, a lesson learned too often and at great cost in California. It was misguided in its first iteration; it would be regrettable in its second.

See A court battle California doesn’t need

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