North
Carolina Senate overrides governor's veto of marriage opt-out bill
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[June 02, 2015]
By Marti Maguire
RALEIGH, N.C. (Reuters) - A measure that
would allow some public officials in North Carolina to opt out of
performing gay marriages moved closer to becoming law on Monday, when
lawmakers voted to override Republican Governor Pat McCrory’s veto of
the bill.
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The Republican-led state Senate reached the three-fifths majority
needed to override McCrory’s veto in a 32-16 vote. The legislation
now goes back to the Republican-controlled state House of
Representatives, which passed it in February by a margin wide enough
to override the veto.
The bill allows magistrates and other officials to refuse to perform
marriages or issue marriage certificates by citing a “sincerely held
religious objection.” Once they have asked to opt out in writing,
magistrates would be barred from performing any marriage, gay or
heterosexual, for six months.
Senate leader Phil Berger said the bill struck a balance between the
legal ruling that allowed same-sex marriages to begin in the state
last year and the rights of state employees to exercise their
religion.
“If the federal courts say they will be performed, they will be
performed,” Berger said before Monday's vote. “But if someone takes
a job, they don’t park their First Amendment rights at the door.
They are entitled to exercise those rights.”
Democrats said the measure would likely delay marriages for gay
couples, making the state vulnerable to lawsuits claiming unfair
treatment.
“We want to be on the right side of history, not creating loopholes
for unlawful discrimination," Democratic Senator Floyd McKissick
said.
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Announcing his veto last week, McCrory said public officials who
swore to defend the Constitution and perform their duties of office
should not be exempt from upholding their oath.
Similar bills were filed in several states this year, although none
has become law yet, the American Civil Liberties Union said.
Gay marriage is legal in 37 states and Washington, D.C. The U.S.
Supreme Court is expected to decide by the end of June whether
same-sex marriage should be legal nationwide.
(Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Mohammad Zargham)
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