Gay couples in Utah urged not to sue
"If and when we do, we will be husband and husband under the law and in the eyes of the community in California," Sen. Scott McCoy, D-Salt Lake, said on the Senate Democrat blog.
However, McCoy concedes that in Utah, same-sex marriages won't be recognized because it's banned in the state's law and constitution. And, he adds, he has no intention to challenge that.
"We won't sue, and frankly neither should any other Utah couple," McCoy wrote in the posting. "Utah courts are not likely to lead out on marriage equality for Utah. ... Those first legal recognition battles will be fought elsewhere in more favorable venues."
Earlier this month, the potential for lawsuits led Utah Attorney General Mark Shurtleff to join in an unsuccessful request that the California Supreme Court delay its ruling allowing same-sex marriages until after the November election.
Shurtleff had argued that because California voters could overturn the ruling by constitutionally banning marriage, the state could face "premature, unnecessary, unnecessarily difficult" litigation by couples who wed in the interim.
McCoy didn't immediately return phone calls for comment. Nor did Mike Thompson, executive director of Equality Utah, which posted a statement on its Web site issued by several national advocacy groups, including Lambda Legal and the American Civil Liberties Union, urging couples not to sue.
"We need to start with states where we have the best odds of winning," the joint statement reads. "When we've won a critical mass of states, we can turn to Congress and the federal courts."
The statements are simply part of a long-term strategy by the "genderless marriage" players of cherry-picking courts, says Monte Stewart, president of the Marriage Law Foundation, which supports traditional marriage.
"We want to pick courts that are favorable to us ... we want to pick off the opposition one by one until we build momentum," Stewart said. "There should be no doubt in the mind of anyone that this is their strategy."
Stewart stressed the importance of California's upcoming initiative on marriage. He predicts a "tsunami of litigation" in 48 states, including Utah, if the provision to ban same-sex marriage fails.
"The fight is going to have to focus on the courts and very much is going to have to focus on the ballot measure in California," Stewart said. "In terms of survival of the man-woman institution, passage of the California marriage amendment is a life or death matter."
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