Sunday, April 5, 2009

What a difference Iowa court has made

A UCLA study says that Iowa's decision to legalize same-sex marriage will result in a net economic gain of $5.3 million, today's Des Moines Register reports:
- Income tax: $1,254,000
- Inheritance tax: -$1,391,000 (Iowa would lose money because of a marital deduction for state inheritance taxes)
- Sales tax: $2,668,000 (annually for the first three years)
- Public assistance savings: $2,786,000

TOTAL: $5,317,000 net gain

Source: The Williams Institute at the University of California, Los Angeles
This morning I wrote this letter to my old newspaper, the West Branch Times, highlighting the difficulties that citizens have had in obtaining the rights granted to them by constitutions:
Oh, what a difference a court can make.

In January 1857, 21 Republicans and 15 Democrats met in Iowa City to draft a new constitution for the state of Iowa, focusing primarily on banking and the rights of African-American men. When Iowans ratified the document, they agreed to allow banking, but flatly denied the vote to black men. Iowa women would not get the full right to vote for another 63 years, with the passage of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

Despite this obvious discrimination in the original Iowa Constitution, the drafters included an important provision as Article 1, Section 6: "All laws of a general nature shall have a uniform operation; the general assembly shall not grant to any citizen, or class of citizens, privileges or immunities, which, upon the same terms shall not equally belong to all citizens." With the 1857 ratification, Iowa's version of the equal protection clause passed 11 years before the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which granted equal protection of the laws to all U.S. citizens — at least in theory.

But as so frequently happens, rights granted to people in the Constitution did not become reality until a court said so. Not until 1954 did the U.S. Supreme Court decide that the 14th Amendment meant that black schoolchildren could attend the same public schools as white schoolchildren. Only in 1967 did that same Court hold that equal protection meant blacks and whites could marry, striking down a heartless Virginia law. And not until 2009 did the magnificent Iowa Supreme Court recognize that same-sex couples could enjoy a right, marriage, that most certainly belongs equally to all citizens.

Because the Iowa Supreme Court can recognize rights in the Iowa Constitution that the U.S. Supreme Court has not yet found in the 14th Amendment, same-sex couples in 47 states now look to Iowa with envy. Since the decision last Friday, I have worn my black and gold wardrobe with pride. I come from a place that recognizes rights, "even when the rights have not yet been broadly accepted, were at one time unimagined, or challenge a deeply ingrained practice."

As is so often the case, today I am proud to be an Iowan.

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