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The Washington Times Online Edition

D.C. issues first gay-marriage licenses

Darlene Garner (left) smiles as her partner, Candy Holmes of Washington, is overcome with emotion after the couple obtained their marriage license on Wednesday, March 3, 2010, the first day possible for gay couples to obtain the licenses in the District of Columbia. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)Darlene Garner (left) smiles as her partner, Candy Holmes of Washington, is overcome with emotion after the couple obtained their marriage license on Wednesday, March 3, 2010, the first day possible for gay couples to obtain the licenses in the District of Columbia. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

The District of Columbia on Wednesday began issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples, following a last-minute U.S. Supreme Court decision not to address the issue.

The District now becomes the sixth jurisdiction in the United States to issue such licenses to same-sex couples — joining Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont. Weddings cannot be performed in Washington until Tuesday because of a mandatory waiting period.

“Our mood is absolute jubilation,” Darlene Garner said outside the Moultrie Courthouse, blocks from the Capitol and the White House. She and partner Candy Holmes were among the first in line to apply for a license.

“The accomplishment of today is that finally I’m able to marry the love of my life,” added Ms. Garner, who plans to wed Tuesday.

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The 13-member D.C. Council voted in December in favor of the Marriage Equality Act.

The vote was 11-2, with the council’s two openly gay members — David A. Catania, at-large independent, and Jim Graham, Ward 1 Democrat, voting yes. Council members Marion Barry, Ward 8 Democrat, and Yvette Alexander, Ward 7 Democrat, voted no. Mayor Adrian M. Fenty, a Democrat, promptly signed the bill.

Opponents of same-sex marriages have tried several ways to stop the legislation, including the appeal to the Supreme Court for a temporary injunction. They said D.C. residents should vote on the legislation, not the council.

Late Tuesday, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. issue what the high court calls an “in chambers opinion” — a measure to address eleventh-hour requests and written by the justice who presides over the courts from which the case started.

He said voters will have the right to challenge the legislation in D.C. courts and pointed out that Congress declined to stop the law from taking effect.

“This argument has some force,” Justice Roberts wrote in the three-page opinion regarding the case Jackson v. District of Columbia Board of Elections and Ethics. “However, I conclude that a stay is not warranted. … It has been the practice of the court to defer to the decisions of the courts of the District of Columbia on matters of exclusively local concerns.”

The D.C. Court of Appeals last week unanimously rejected the case.

The judges’ one-page opinion provided only the legal basis for their decision: that a temporary injunction is granted only when the plaintiff likely would win the case or when allowing something to go forward would bring harm to the plaintiff.

Republicans in Congress have said they lacked the votes to oppose the legislation successfully.

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About the Author
Joseph Weber

Joseph Weber

Joseph Weber is a congressional reporter, his first job upon coming to Washington in 1992. Mr. Weber joined The Washington Times in 2002 as a metro desk editor and ran the section for several years, working on such stories as the Virginia Tech massacre, the Supreme Court case on the District’s handgun law, the D.C. snipers and the 2008 presidential ...

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