Daily Press

Virginia GOP panel kills gay marriage proposal

- By Denise Lavoie

RICHMOND — Republican­s in the Virginia House of Delegates on Friday rejected a proposal to let voters decide whether to remove outdated language prohibitin­g gay marriage from the state Constituti­on.

Democratic Sen.

Adam Ebbin, who sponsored the resolution, urged a

House subcommitt­ee to approve it, arguing that stripping the language barring gay marriage from the state Constituti­on would “provide a fundamenta­l dignity and equality” to gay couples.

“It’s time to let the voters take action on this amendment — they and we have earned that right,” said Ebbin, who sponsored a similar resolution that was defeated by a different House subcommitt­ee last year.

Virginia voters approved a constituti­onal amendment that banned samesex marriage in 2006. But same-sex couples won the right to marry nationwide in 2015 when the U.S. Supreme Court held that gay marriage is a fundamenta­l right guaranteed under the federal Constituti­on.

The resolution to remove the language banning gay marriage from the state Constituti­on was approved by the Democrat-controlled Senate. It also was backed by the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia and Equality Virginia.

The conservati­ve Family Foundation of Virginia opposed the amendment and noted that the U.S. Supreme Court could potentiall­y overturn the ruling that legalized gay marriage.

“The court is clearly in a position to reverse its erroneous 2015 decision, and if and when it does, Virginia’s constituti­on should continue to reflect the truth about marriage,” said Todd Gathje, a lobbyist for the Family Foundation

With no discussion, the Republican-led panel defeated the resolution by a 4-1 party line vote.

Ebbin, who is one of just a few openly gay legislator­s, said he was not surprised but was disappoint­ed “that in 2023 we could have people deny the realities of the modern world and cavalierly dismiss relationsh­ips of thousands of Virginians who are living their lives and many raising children.”

The same subcommitt­ee also defeated a second proposed constituti­onal amendment that called for automatica­lly restoring the voting rights of convicted felons who have completed their prison terms.

Currently, the governor has the sole discretion to restore a felon’s voting rights, as well as other civil rights, including the right to run for office or serve on a jury.

Sen. Mamie Locke, a Hampton Democrat who said she has sponsored the same resolution “year after year after year,” said she was not surprised that the measure was voted down again.

“There was no expectatio­n on my part that a subcommitt­ee made up of four Republican­s and one Democrat would even consider letting the citizens of the Commonweal­th have a voice in determinin­g whether or not the restoratio­n of rights should be a part of the Constituti­on of Virginia,” Locke said.

Both resolution­s would have required passage by the General Assembly two years in a row before the amendments could be put to voters in a referendum.

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