- Marriage Protection Act of 2007
The Marriage "Protection" Act of 2007 (MPA, USBill|110|HR|724) is a bill in the
U.S. Congress to amend thefederal judicial code to deny federal courts jurisdiction to hear or decide any question pertaining to the interpretation of theDefense of Marriage Act (DOMA) or the MPA.cite web|url=http://writ.news.findlaw.com/grossman/20040727.html|title=The Proposed Marriage Protection Act: Why It May Be Unconstitutional|author=Grossman, Joanna|date=2004-07-27|accessdate=2008-02-15|publisher=FindLaw |work=Writ] Originally introduced in 2003 as USBill|108|HR|3313, the Republican-controlled108th Congress passed it in the House in 2004, but not in the Senate.Text of proposed code
As agreed to by the House of Representatives, the Act would have added Section 1632 to Chapter 99 in Part IV of
Title 28 of the United States Code (usc|28|1632), governing the judiciary and judicial procedures, to read: cquote|No court created by Act of Congress shall have any jurisdiction, and the Supreme Court shall have no appellate jurisdiction, to hear or decide any question pertaining to the interpretation of, or the validity under the Constitution of, section 1738C or this section. usc|28|1738C forbids requiring any state or equivalent government to credit a same-sex relationship treated as marriage in another state or equivalent government, as codified by passage of DOMA.Major actions
On
October 16 2003 , the bill was introduced in the House of Representatives byJohn Hostettler (R–IN) and immediately referred to theHouse Committee on the Judiciary . The committee considered the proposal onJuly 14 2004 , and subsequently amended the Act, which was then placed on the House calendar onJuly 19 2004 . OnJuly 21 2004 , theHouse Rules Committee provided rules for consideration of the Act. OnJuly 22 2004 , the rules were accepted by the House and the Act was immediately considered. The Act passed the House by 233 yea to 194 nay votes.The bill was handed to the Senate, where it was received and referred to the
Senate Judiciary Committee onSeptember 7 2004 . It died in committee, and was reintroduced by Hostettler as USBill|109|HR|1100 in the109th Congress onMarch 3 2005 , referred to theHouse Judiciary Committee , and passed on to theSubcommittee on Courts, the Internet, and Intellectual Property onApril 4 2005 ; it then had 76 cosponsors. It again died in committee and was reintroduced, this time byDan Burton (R–IN) as USBill|110|HR|724 in the110th United States Congress , onJanuary 30 2007 , with 50 cosponsors. SinceMarch 1 2007 , it has rested with theUnited States House Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties .Analysis
The Act raises Constitutional questions in relation to the
Full Faith and Credit Clause . Joanna Grossman, writing forFindLaw , emphasized "the need for the federal courts to weigh in", rather than for states to continue making a public-policy exception when deciding the status ofsame-sex relationship s independently of the decisions of other states, as states have in fact been permitted to do in the case ofincest uous marriages. The Act was designed to protect DOMA by prohibiting federal courts from hearing cases like that of Nancy Wilson, who sued to have her relationship with Paula Schoenwether treated as marriage inFlorida because it had been treated as marriage inMassachusetts (in that case, the federal court upheld DOMA in that jurisdiction). [cite news|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/politics/bal-te.marriage20jan20,0,3820968.story|title=Federal judge dismisses same-sex marriage lawsuit in Fla.|work=Baltimore Sun |date=2005-01-20|accessdate=2008-02-15|author=Associated Press ]The
U.S. Constitution permits Congress to make "Exceptions" to court jurisdiction. The degree to which such exceptions may undermine federalseparation of powers , theEqual Protection Clause , or theDue Process Clause , may render the MPA unconstitutional, according to Grossman.ee also
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Jurisdiction stripping
*Federal Marriage Amendment
*LGBT rights in the United States
*Same-sex relationship s
*We the People Act References
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