New York

  • September 15, 2011
    Guest Post

    This post is part of an ACSblog Constitution Week Symposium. By Martha F. Davis, Professor of Law, Northeastern University School of Law.


    The national Constitution is a singular document, but it is not unique. All fifty states of the U.S. and Puerto Rico have their own constitutions, some of which -- through text or interpretation -- stake out approaches that are very different from the federal document. It is worth thinking about the alternative paths that these state documents take, and the possibilities that they raise, as we celebrate and critique the national Constitution on this Constitution Day.

    This entry focuses on one area of significant difference between state and federal constitutions: their treatment of economic and social rights.

    The national Constitution addresses economic and social rights prominently but with little specificity. The Preamble states that an overriding purpose of the U.S. Constitution is to “promote the general welfare,” indicating that issues such as poverty, housing, food and other economic and social welfare issues facing the citizenry were of central concern to the framers. However, the Bill of Rights has been largely construed to provide procedural mechanisms for fair adjudication of those rights rather than carving out claims on the government to ensure that individuals actually have any social and economic assets to protect. Efforts to convince courts of alternate constitutional interpretations have generally failed. The Supreme Court has ruled, for example, that while the due process clause of the 14th amendment ensures fair processes for welfare recipients, there is no underlying constitutional right to a minimum standard of living. Similarly, the Supreme Court has not found a general right to education derived from the more explicit constitutional guarantees of political participation and equal protection that might be deemed to presuppose an educational baseline.

  • July 14, 2011
    Guest Post

    By Craig J. Konnoth, Legal Research Fellow, The Williams Institute, UCLA School of Law. Mr. Konnoth's views are his own, and not those of any institutions or activities in which he is involved.


    New York marks the fifth state in a row in which marriage equality has been achieved legislatively rather than through state court intervention: soon after Varnum v. Brien in Iowa, Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine and the District of Columbia all passed marriage recognition bills for same-sex couples legislatively (though Maine’s law was later overturned by voter referendum). This is part of a pattern: since Iowa, all other relationship recognition victories have been legislative: Rhode Island, Hawaii, Illinois and Delaware passed civil union laws; Washington, Wisconsin, and Nevada recognized domestic partnerships, and Colorado passed a designated beneficiaries bill. The only court victory on state recognition of same-sex marriage has been federal, with a district court striking down Proposition 8 in California. Contrast with early victories which were all court based – including marriage in Hawaii in 1993 (repealed by referendum) and Massachusetts (2003) and civil unions (Vermont), or events leading up to Iowa when the supreme courts of Connecticut and California also recognized marriage rights in quick succession. 

    The issue is not that court-based strategies are important, as some commentators have argued. There have been numerous high-profile developments regarding marriage rights in the federal arena, including in immigration, bankruptcy, district and appellate courts. Yet these concern federal laws and benefits that spouses enjoy in the areas of bankruptcy, immigration, and taxation, and thus differ from the Proposition 8 litigation. However, is the battle for state marriage rights in state courts over?

    The answer depends on how broadly you define the struggle for marriage equality. If one is simply talking about going to state court, and filing suit for the right to marry under the state constitution, the answer, I would argue, is probably “yes.” As of today, thirty states have banned marriage recognition by state constitutional amendment. In the remaining twenty states, six already recognize marriage rights. The remaining fourteen states include three states in which the supreme courts have already rejected challenges (Washington, New Jersey, Maryland, though activists recently re-filed in New Jersey, a possible exception), four other states (Wyoming, Minnesota, Indiana and Rhode Island) in which courts are Republican dominated (or dominated by Republican appointees –hardly an exact predictor of judicial voting patterns, but not an insignificant one either), and in another state, Maine, voters rejected marriage equality at the ballot, possibly making a court wary of going the other way on the issue. Finally, Minnesota and North Carolina seek to pass constitutional amendments banning marriage equality. The five remaining states, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Delaware, New Mexico and Illinois, are not necessarily the best candidates for litigation, when the other options are also considered. Thus, in short, victories in these types of cases will be fewer and further between: the most promising litigation, I would argue, has already been filed.

  • June 24, 2011

    by Jeremy Leaming

    Under the leadership of Gov. Andrew Cuomo, the New York legislature passed a measure recognizing gay marriage -- making the action the nation's biggest step forward for marriage equality. 

    By a vote of 33 to 29, the Senate, after a week of wrangling, moved the bill, introduced by Gov. Cuomo, to his desk for approval. The New York Times reported that the governor signed the bill into law not long after the measure's passage. New York is the sixth state to legalize gay marriages. The District of Columbia also recognizes same-sex marriages.

    The vote came late Friday night, and after many days of intense debate, especially over an exemption for religious groups that refuse to perform same-sex marriages, citing religious liberty rights.

    A few Republican senators, including Sen. Stephen Saland, who TPM reported on, supported the measure:

    Republican Sen. Stephen Saland, who had been undecided about the bill and was one of the legislators who led the negotiations, announced during the debate on the Senate floor that he would support the bill; effectively giving it the 32 votes it needed to pass.

    Saland said in his speech that the new language would ensure that "conflicts [were] resolved in favor of religious exemptions." He added that people on both sides of the debate had contacted him and asked him to "do the right thing."

    "My intellectual and emotion journey has ended here today," Saland said, "and I have to find doing the right thing as treating all persons with equality, and that equality includes within the definition of marriage. And I fear that to do otherwise would fly in the face of my upbringing."

    Civil rights groups hailed the victory as a landmark.

    The Human Rights Campaign’s Joe Solmonese said, "History was made today in New York. This victory sends a message that marriage equality across the country will be a reality very soon.”

    The Daily Beast blogger Andrew Sullivan called the approval of gay marriage in New York a really big deal because it was a "Republican-led State Senate" that passed the measure. He added that the credit goes to "one of the most determined, consistent, professional and impassioned campaigns we have ever fought for marriage equality."

     

  • April 28, 2011
    Guest Post

    By Emily Hecht-McGowan, Director of Public Policy, Family Equality Council


    In a stunning reversal of both the district and appellate court rulings in Adar v Smith, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit sitting en banc found that the refusal of the Louisiana state registrar to issue an amended birth certificate to a child adopted by a gay couple did not violate the Full Faith and Credit clause of the U.S. Constitution.

    Parents Oren Adar and Mickey Smith’s (no relation to the state registrar also named Smith) child was born in Louisiana and adopted jointly by the two men in New York. Although Louisiana state law requires the registrar to issue a new birth certificate upon receipt of a valid adoption decree, the registrar refused to do so in this case on the ground that Louisiana state law prohibits adoption by unmarried couples. Adar and Smith sued under both the Full Faith and Credit Clause and the Equal Protection Clause.  The federal district court agreed with plaintiffs’ Full Faith and Credit argument, and ordered the registrar to issue a new birth certificate identifying both men as the child’s parents. A panel of the 5th Circuit affirmed. Louisiana then sought en banc review by the full 5th Circuit, and in a divided decision with a vigorous dissent written by Judge Weiner, the en banc Court reversed and ordered that Adar and Smith’s complaint be dismissed. 

    With respect to plaintiffs’ Full Faith and Credit claim, the Court noted that the state “is bound by the New York adoption decree, such that the parental relationship of Adar and Smith with Infant J cannot be re-litigated in Louisiana.”  The Court nevertheless concluded that Louisiana’s failure to issue a new birth certificate reflecting that adoption did not deny recognition of the New York adoption.  Although the Court emphasized that the adoption’s validity could not be contested in a Louisiana court, same-sex couples who jointly adopt children born in Louisiana will find these statements of very little comfort in light of the practical effects of this decision.  Specifically, by permitting the state registrar to refuse to issue a new birth certificate on the ground that the adoption decree entered by N.Y. would not have been permissible under Louisiana law, the Court has essentially given permission for any entity other than a court to refuse recognition of any out-of-state adoption decree for any purpose.  There is no legitimate state interest in refusing to issue a birth certificate that accurately reflects the established legal relationship between a child and the child’s parents. The clear objective here is to attempt to delegitimize an adoption by a gay couple and to stigmatize an innocent child.  

  • November 12, 2010
    The efforts to advance the National Popular Vote law, which would allow for the election of president by popular vote instead of the Electoral College, are gaining momentum.

    As noted by one of the driving forces behind the proposed law, the National Popular Vote Inc., Massachusetts and New York made significant strides on behalf of the law this year. Late this summer, Gov. Deval Patrick signed a National Popular Vote bill into law, making the state the sixth to enact the law and giving the National Popular Vote movement 27 percent of the electoral votes needed to make it the law of the land. (The National Popular Vote would become effective if states holding a majority of electoral votes, 270, enact it.)Upon signing the bill, Gov. Patrick said, "Voter participation in all 50 states is critical to the strength of our democracy and the national popular voter movement will bring more voters into the fold and ensure that every vote counts."

    New York state lawmakers also made major progress toward enacting the provision. The New York Senate overwhelmingly passed the National Popular Vote bill, which is now pending in the 150-member New York Assembly, where the bill has 80 sponsors. The New Yorker's Hendrik Hertzberg said the state senate's action revealed that lawmakers' "interests coincide not only with those of all their constituents, regardless of party, but also with an elementary tenet of democracy: that elections should be decided by counting up the votes of citizens, with every individual vote being of equal vote."

    The New York Times also got behind the National Vote bill, saying in an editorial that the "Electoral College was established by the nation's founders in part to appease slave-owning states. It is based indirectly on population, and slaves were counted as three-fifths of a person. Each state now gets as many electoral votes as it has representatives in Congress. The results can be what we all saw in 2000, where the votes of one state, Florida, decided the election despite the fact that Mr. Gore was the nation's choice by more than a half-million votes."

    In addition, earlier this month the District of Columbia Mayor Adrian Fenty signed the National Popular Vote bill. In reporting on Fenty's action, Reuters cited recent polling that "points to overwhelming majorities of voters" in Idaho, Nebraska, South Dakota, Kentucky and several other states "favor the National Vote plan over current winner-take-all rules (i.e. awarding all of a state's electoral votes to the candidate who receives the most popular voters in each state)."