Ms. Bodiford was very excited at the prospect of what the DOMA ruling means as far as eventually legalizing same-sex marriage in Florida. “…The DOMA ruling ensures that lower courts, including Florida, will now have to apply what is called ‘strict scrutiny’ to the inevitable challenge to the Florida Statute and Constitutional prohibition of recognition of same sex marriage,” she said. “This issue of strict scrutiny is pertinent to us as a group because in the past laws penalizing us were allowed to stand if the court could find any ‘reasonable’ basis for a law that discriminated against us. The Supreme Court has for now and
Proposition 8, which banned same-sex marriage in California, was officially overturned with the Supreme Court ruling 5-4 that they would not accept the case presented before them, allowing a lower court ruling to stand that private parties do not have official standing to defend the 2008 ballot measure. This week’s ruling paved the way for marriage equality to resume in that state. Fort Lauderdale attorney George Castrataro points out, “The 5-4 decision avoids for now a sweeping conclusion on whether same-sex marriage is a constitutionally-protected “equal protection” right that would apply to all states.” Ms. Bodiford agrees: “…In failing to accept the Hollingsworth case, the court has missed the opportunity to rule that no state has the right to deny us equal rights…[the l
Despite small setbacks, it is universally agreed upon that the Supreme Court decisions were not just momentous for LGBT rights, but historic, and unimaginable just a few short years ago. “The collective implications of the DOMA and Proposition 8 rulings affirm and validate LGBT rights and set into motion enormous legal momentum in further advocacy efforts,” Mr. Castrataro said. “The coming years will be very interesting ones to live in, and this time, the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow will be ours,” Ms. Bodiford happily concluded. A sentiment shared by us all.