“Next on the chopping block”: MPs want to save same-sex marriage before the Supreme Court

“Next on the Chopping Block”
MPs want to save same-sex marriage in Supreme Court

In June, the US Supreme Court overturned abortion rights. Now there is growing concern that the judges could cash in on further liberal achievements. Preparations are being made in Congress to protect same-sex marriage.

A group of congressmen want to introduce federal law to protect same-sex marriage in the United States. The MPs around the Democrat Jerry Nadler have announced a corresponding bill. The background is fears that the Supreme Court could also overturn gay marriage after the right to abortion.

The conservative majority on the Supreme Court not only overturned the landmark “Roe v. Wade” ruling, but “also signaled that other rights, such as the right to same-sex marriage, are next on the chopping block,” explained Nadler. “We cannot stand idly by.” In 2015, the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage in all states.

With the passage of the Respect for Marriage Act, laws that define marriage as a union between a man and a woman would be repealed. According to the bill, everyone will be considered married “if the marriage was valid in the state in which it was entered into,” the lawmakers said. This would give same-sex couples “additional security that under federal law they will continue to receive the same treatment as all other married couples – as required by the Constitution,” it said.

The plan is also backed by a Republican senator. At the end of June, the Supreme Court overturned the country’s constitutional right to abortion. The judges raised the appropriate landmark judgment from 1973 that made history with the designation “Roe v. Wade”. While abortions are not automatically illegal, individual US states are free to allow, restrict or ban them altogether. Many Conservative states have since banned abortions or at least drastically more difficult.

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