THRILLING as it was to hear a sitting president endorse marriage rights
for gay and lesbian Americans, there is one man whose opinion on the
subject matters more than President Obama’s. Justice Anthony Kennedy is
the likely deciding vote when this issue reaches the Supreme Court. More
than anyone, he has the power to transform what is now a license
bestowed by the more enlightened states into an all-American civil
right.
Kennedy’s role as the court weather vane has given rise to a species of
argument that Jeffrey Rosen, the George Washington University law
professor, calls “the Kennedy brief,” in which “lawyers on both sides
fall over themselves to court Kennedy’s favor by repeatedly citing the
opinions of Justice Kennedy.” I’ve been trying to envision the Kennedy
brief in defense of gay marriage.
There is plenty of Kennedy to cite on the subject. Although he is a
devout Catholic, he is the author of the two most important
pro-gay-rights decisions handed down by the court. In 1996, in a case
called Romer v. Evans, Kennedy wrote an opinion ending Colorado’s
attempt to repeal local laws protecting gays against discrimination.
There was no plausible explanation for Colorado’s action, he wrote,
beyond “animus” — judicial language for plain bigotry. In his 2003
majority opinion in Lawrence v. Texas, Kennedy and company threw out all
remaining state laws against sodomy, saying that how consenting
homosexuals express their love is none of the state’s business. (The
verdict prompted Justice Antonin Scalia, in an indignant dissent, to warn that Kennedy’s argument “dismantles” any constitutional case against gay marriage.)
Now two lawsuits are inching toward the Supreme Court. The richer opportunity comes from California, where Proposition 8, banning gay marriage, has already been overturned by a three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
The Prop 8 ruling was a great victory for proponents of marriage
equality, but it was a narrow victory, confined to California’s
circumstances. (The state legalized gay marriage for a time, then took
away that right.) That leaves the justices with some options:
They can make history. They could rule that the Constitution affords gay
couples the same marriage rights as straight couples. Or they could
take a big step in that direction by ruling that while states do not
have to issue licenses to gay couples, they must recognize marriages performed in more progressive states.
They can thwart history. They could rule that states are free to
recognize only heterosexual marriages. This would be a disheartening
setback, though I imagine it would energize the movement for marriage
rights.
They can postpone history. This is the easy way out. The court could
endorse the narrowly worded appellate court ruling on Prop 8, either by
actively affirming it or simply declining to hear it. By restoring
marriage rights in California, this would instantly double, to 23
percent, the percentage of Americans living in states that treat gays as
equals. But it would put off the day when this right is afforded to all
Americans.
Ever since Proposition 8 entered the courts, advocates of gay marriage
have been tactically divided about how much to ask for, how fast.
The most prominent champions of a sweeping claim to equality are David
Boies and Ted Olson, the improbable Democrat-Republican duet, who were
famously the rival lawyers in Bush v. Gore. Interviewing them in a
public forum recently, I pressed for their reading of the current court,
and specifically Justice Kennedy. They prudently ducked the question.
But they have been buoyantly, insistently optimistic about the chance of
winning a majority of the Supreme Court. They often cite Kennedy’s
rulings in Romer (to argue that exclusive marriage laws are another
example of mere bigotry) and in Lawrence (where Kennedy contends that a
long history of moralistic disapproval is not, by itself, sufficient
basis for outlawing behavior).
In contrast to constitutional literalists like Justice Scalia, Kennedy
believes the court should track evolving standards in society. The
Kennedy brief can argue that the incremental but steady progression of
marriage equality laws — and the polls showing accelerating public
approval — are evidence that the nation is evolving toward an obvious
outcome.
Moreover, Justice Kennedy, who is widely traveled
and cosmopolitan, is more open than the most conservative justices to
arguments borrowed from foreign and international courts. He took note
of European precedents in the ruling against sodomy laws. So the Kennedy
brief on marriage could draw on the experiences of the 10 countries,
from Canada to Spain to South Africa, that have legalized gay marriage,
and the others (Israel and Mexico for instance) that recognize gay
marriages performed in other jurisdictions. It’s hardly a worldwide
consensus, but the trend is in the right direction, and, really, why
should the United States lag behind Argentina?
Of course, one of the most potent arguments for pushing the court to be
bold on this issue will not be heard in any courtroom: next January gays
could face the prospect of President Romney. Mitt Romney not only opposes gay marriage and civil unions; he is committed to filling any Supreme Court vacancies with Scalias.
Perhaps the most influential advocate of a slower course is William
Eskridge Jr., a Yale law professor, copious writer and litigator in
support of gay rights, and author of an amicus brief in the Prop 8 case
that reads very much like what the appeals court actually decided.
Eskridge, too, has studied Kennedy, and notes that the justice’s passion
for liberty is matched by his fear of getting too far in front of the
social consensus. By the time of the Lawrence case, states had either
repealed anti-sodomy laws or were not enforcing them. In contrast, most
states have constitutional amendments or statutes limiting marriage to
heterosexual couples, and many are of recent vintage.
“Kennedy does not vote in a way that he thinks is going to undermine the
legitimacy of the court,” Eskridge told me. Thus Kennedy has gone out
of his way to stress that his earlier decisions did not necessarily lead
to marriage equality.
Eskridge supports gay marriage, agrees that it is inevitable, but
believes it would be counterproductive, even dangerous, to force it on a
nation that is still evenly and intensely divided. He contends that —
like the Roe v. Wade legalization of abortion — a Supreme Court ruling
in favor of nationwide gay marriage would inflame hostility, even
violence, especially in the Southern states. In the South the prejudice
endures, foolish but devout, that families headed by gay couples are
harmful environments for children.
“I’m a fan of Ted Olson,” he told me. “With all due respect, I think
he’s wrong in 2012. In 2021 he’s right. But it’s going to be after you
get states like Illinois and Colorado and Arizona and Wisconsin
recognizing same-sex marriage.”
That, by the way, seems to be President Obama’s view, too: supportive of
gay marriage, but not, so far, an advocate of forcing it on the states
that are firmly opposed.
“We will still have same-sex marriage,” Eskridge said. “But not in Mississippi for a while.”
Professor Eskridge is a gay man who divides his time between New Haven
and Washington, two cities where same-sex marriage is legal. I asked
whether he felt any pangs about saying to a gay couple in West Virginia,
where he grew up: “Just wait another decade or so, and you can have the
same rights I have.”
“America is a mobile country,” he replied. “You notice that I am not living in West Virginia anymore.”
My head tells me that Eskridge is probably right: Kennedy will be
inclined to stop short of full equality now. But my heart will be
rooting for Boies and Olson. If that lesbian or gay couple in
Mississippi or West Virginia have the courage to ask for a marriage
license, I’d like to think the country has the courage to back them up.