From Deseret News archives:

LDS Church supports gay-marriage bans

Official stand does not back specific amendments

Published: Thursday, July 8, 2004 6:35 a.m. MDT
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"We're still planning on sitting down with the church and explaining why, in spite of the fact they may be in favor of the traditional definition of marriage . . . this amendment goes too far, and has real consequences for families in Utah," McCoy said. Utah Sens. Orrin G. Hatch and Bob Bennett, both Republicans, have said they support the proposed constitutional amendment. They, and other supporters, say it's necessary to protect marriage from court rulings such as one in Massachusetts that allowed same-sex couples to marry.

Those opposing the amendment say it would write discrimination into the U.S. Constitution and could be used to block civil unions.

Hatch, who chairs the Judiciary Committee and co-sponsored the amendment up for debate, said in a statement Wednesday that the LDS Church "has long stood for the sanctity of marriage and the importance of family."

"This endorsement is further indication of the overwhelming support for an amendment from people of all different faiths, in Utah and across the country," he said.

Brigham Young University political science professor David Magleby said the church statement gives added emphasis to the church's long-standing position on marriage.

"The church's statement was widely assumed," he said. "This simply puts it in writing."

He said the church rarely speaks out on specific ballot issues. The most recent example in Utah was in 1992, when the church opposed an effort to legalize pari-mutuel betting. That initiative failed.

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However, Magleby said the LDS Church's opinion doesn't always drive public opinion in the Beehive State. He said the church opposed efforts to repeal Prohibition in the 1930s, but the state voted to legalize alcohol.

On the gay marriage issue, Magleby said while the church statement reaffirmed its position, it would probably not have much impact at the ballot box in Utah.

"This is an issue that the vast majority of Utah voters had their minds made up on before the LDS announcement," Magleby said. "That's true on both sides."

In another development Wednesday, the American Civil Liberties Union sued the city of Baltimore and four Maryland counties for the right of same-sex couples to marry.

The lawsuit was filed in Baltimore Circuit Court on behalf of nine couples and a man whose partner recently died. The couples had sought marriage licenses and were denied, said Ken Choe of the ACLU's Lesbian and Gay Rights Project, based in New York. Maryland law specifically defines marriage as between a man and a woman.


Contributing: Associated Press

E-mail: dbulkeley@desnews.com

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