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Entertainment => Politics and Political Issues => Topic started by: Soldier4Christ on December 06, 2007, 10:39:13 AM



Title: 'Gay' partner opponents sue state
Post by: Soldier4Christ on December 06, 2007, 10:39:13 AM
'Gay' partner opponents sue state
'Citizens are being denied the right to have their vote count'


A lawsuit has been filed over a decision by state officials in Oregon that some votes on petitions seeking to put a state "domestic partnership" plan on a statewide ballot wouldn't be counted.

An organization called Concerned Oregonians has been working to put HB 2007 and SB 2 on a coming election ballot. Those bills were rammed through the last state Legislature and make up a combination that bestows on same-sex couples all the rights given married couples, critics have said. The legislation also provides vast new legal power for those who choose homosexual, bisexual or other alternative lifestyles in their newly designated status as protected minorities.

When the petitions seeking the ballot referral were declared by state and county officials to be a handful of signatures short of the required 55,179, supporters flooded into county clerks offices to make sure their signatures had been counted.

But voters were told while some of their signatures weren't being counted, there was nothing officials would do to correct that.

Bill Burgess, the clerk in Marion County, confirmed the state had given county clerks instructions to follow a "precedent" and not correct any incorrectly classified signatures they may have been told about.

"We also have a legal obligation to follow the guidelines and precedents of the past and our attorney has told us, and the Secretary of State has advised us that there is no place in this petition signature checking process for a person to come in later on and attest that that was their signature," he told WND.

"There's no direct ban [on corrections]," he said. "Well, it's not specified, and both the Secretary of State and my legal counsel have told me not to go there."

The Alliance Defense Fund, however, had a different opinion.

"Our country is founded on the basic principle of government of the people, by the people, and for the people," said ADF Senior Legal Counsel Austin R. Nimocks. "It is un-American that Oregon citizens are being denied the right to have their vote count in an important referendum."

The AFD filed a federal court lawsuit naming the Oregon Secretary of State and several county clerks as defendants after those offices "wrongfully invalidated voters' signatures on a citizen referendum."

The lawsuit said its goal is to place onto the November 2008 ballot an option for voters to repeal the state legislature's domestic partnership proposal.

"The county clerks must fulfill their duty, which is to make sure that every citizen's legitimately submitted signature counts," Nimocks said. "The right to exercise one's voice in the democratic process is a crucial one, and state and county officials must not infringe upon that right."

The action was filed on behalf of Oregon voters whose signatures were invalidated by clerks in 12 counties. Many of them sought – in person – to have their signatures validated, but the clerks refused.

The ADF said the signatures had been invalidated for various reasons, "including determinations that signatures did not match their corresponding voter registration cards, though they did. Other signatures were excluded for voters allegedly not being registered, though they were. Another signer's signature was excluded because the clerk considered the signature 'illegible,' though it could be read. None of the 254 signers who had their signatures excluded by clerks were ever contacted about the matter."

Supporters of the Referendum 303, addressing HB 2007, have noted that about 63,000 signatures were turned in on petitions, for the 55,179 that were required. State officials said 55,083 were valid. Referendum 304 addressing SB 2 lacked a few more signatures.

But supporters noted that under the state formula used to estimate valid signatures, the approval of six or seven more signatures would have generated enough "counted" signatures to put Referendum 303 on the ballot.

"The Plaintiffs, individually and collectively, are disenfranchised signors of Oregon Referendum 303, titled 'Relating to same-sex relationships, creating new provisions; and amending (Oregon statutes)," the lawsuit said. They all voluntarily and freely signed the petitions while they were registered voters."

And while the state constitution expressly provides a 30-day window for officials to verify signatures, officials announced only 12 days into the process the referendum failed for lack of signatures.

"Defendant County Clerks, individually and collectively, who were approached and otherwise contacted ... refused to take any efforts to uphold the 'utmost integrity' of the process and address the 'unexpected issues' of signatures that were improperly excluded," the lawsuit said.

The lawsuit alleges violations of the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment as well as violations of the First Amendment's right to vote.

"Defendants have violated the Plaintiffs' right to exercise their voice in the democratic process by improperly disenfranchising them," the lawsuit said. "Each of the Plaintiffs signed the petitions, yet Defendants improperly excluded their signatures and have refused to grant them the opportunity to rehabilitate their signatures. Thus, Plaintiffs have been unconstitutionally deprived of their right to have their voice heard."

As WND has reported, the charge first was made by Concerned Oregonians, which issued a statement that, "Oregon voters who support traditional marriage and morality are being denied their right to vote, for purely political reasons…"

The case developed when 54 state lawmakers and Democratic Gov. Ted Kulongoski rejected the will of the people to approve and sign into Law HB 2007 and SB 2.

For 148 years Oregon had recognized marriage as the union of a man and a woman, and voters four times have addressed the issue, most recently in 2004 when they collected more than a million votes and by a substantial 57-43 percent margin decided to keep traditional marriage defined as being between only one man and only one woman.

But the newest legislation simply rejects that vote, and even makes a move to address such citizen "attitudes," requiring schools to seek to change the minds of those who don't support homosexual duos.

David Crowe, a leader of Restore America, one of the groups coordinating the petition effort, told WND that there were a number of county clerks who colluded with state officials who endorse the special privileges for homosexuals to prevent people from voting on the issues.

"It's political," he said. "There are people who are hostile to us in three or four counties who are in collusion with state officials behind the scenes, those who we know are not for us."

Crowe said he knew of the instructions from the Secretary of State to counties not to make any corrections in the tabulation; he said he had gotten a copy of a state e-mail to that effect.

He said Burgess is a Democrat and a vocal supporter of "lesbian state Sen. Kate Brown for Secretary of State."

Several different pro-family individuals and organizations endorsed the petition drive, including former state lawmaker Marylin Shannon, who worked with Let Oregon Vote.

She said Oregonians have never given a million votes to any other issue or candidate until the marriage vote, and 34 of 36 counties specified marriage was to be between one man and one woman.

Shannon told WND she observed the pro-homosexual lawmakers who held the majority in the Oregon Legislature. "They were intoxicated with their power. They had the power and they were going to do it," she said. Several issues were raised during debate, such as the law's impact on prisons and other institutes, but lawmakers decided against addressing those concerns.

Among the groups whose members supported the initiative effort were the Oregon Republican Party, Oregon Family Council and others.


Title: Re: 'Gay' partner opponents sue state
Post by: Soldier4Christ on December 27, 2007, 11:34:43 AM
Prison benefits given same-sex pairs, not marrieds 
New law to discriminate against wedded inmates

Prisons in Oregon are preparing to offer inmates who claim a same-sex partnership special privileges specifically denied married inmates, a memo from state officials has confirmed.

The e-mailed memo from Max Williams, director of the Oregon Department of Corrections, was sent to workers in his department.

The memo referenced two state laws, Senate Bill 2 and House Bill 2007, through which lawmakers created legally recognized partnerships for same-sex duos.

"After the New Year, the Department of Corrections will be implementing two new laws that were passed by the Legislative Assembly and signed by the governor into law during last year's regular legislative session," the note began. "The new anti-discrimination and family fairness laws, Senate Bill 2 and House Bill 2007, establish and extend new legal protections and benefits to affected persons."

The memo said lawyers have been in consultation over the changes, and as a result, "the Department is reviewing and will be amending its rules as the Department determines is necessary and advisable in order to comply with the requirements of the new laws."

Specifically, the e-mail said, the department will change its rules so that, "inmates that have entered into a RDP [registered domestic partnership] will be allowed to live in the same facility and unit, subject to the needs of orderly operation, safety and security of the facility."

That just doesn't make sense, or meet the goals of any "fairness" concept, according to one Department of Corrections worker who raised concerns about it.

"The problem I have with this is that the department will not allow heterosexual inmates who are married to live together in the same institution or on the same housing unit," said the employee, whose name was being withheld from publication.

"The new policy gives homosexual RDP inmates the special privilege of living together but denies it for heterosexual married inmates, just the opposite of what the policy is trying to achieve, and discriminates against heterosexuals based on their sexual orientation," the employee continued.

"In Oregon, if you're a homosexual inmate, only then will you be allowed to live with your partner.

"Not only is this a discriminatory policy but it will be an enforcement nightmare for correctional staff. If the RDP inmates are allowed to live on the same housing unit, are we going to allow them to shower together or … let them sleep next to each other? And if we don't allow them to do those things will we be sued for discrimination because of their sexual orientation? The whole thing is just nuts!" the employee said.

The state memo does note that such inmates will not be allowed "to cell together," but does not define the term.

A spokeswoman for the Department of Corrections initially told WND that married heterosexual couples wouldn't be offered the option because the prisons are not coed. But she called back later to say after consulting with attorneys for the state, the department's response was that officials were working to implement the state's laws.

The memo does include instructions that Senate Bill 2 "recognizes and declares that the opportunity to obtain employment or housing or to use and enjoy places of public accommodation without discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, national origin, marital status, age or disability is a civil right under Oregon law."

The other legislative plan, House Bill 2007, "grants legal recognition in Oregon to same-sex domestic partnerships," the memo continues.

"Establishing a registered domestic partnership (RDP) affords same-sex couples all the rights and responsibilities that are granted under state law through a marriage contract," the memo said. "HB 2007 also provides that any privilege, immunity, right, benefit or responsibility granted or imposed by statute, administrative or court rule, policy, common law or any other law to an individual because the individual is or was married … is granted on equivalent terms, substantive and procedure, to an individual because the individual is or was in a domestic partnership."

"Because the Department grants certain privileges and benefits to inmates on the basis of marriage (e.g., the opportunity to participate in a ceremony to solemnize a marriage, the opportunity to possess and wear a plain wedding band), the Department will be extending these privileges and benefits to inmates that enter into an RDP in order to comply with the requirements of HB 2007."

The issue also is the subject of a court hearing, scheduled Dec. 28. The Alliance Defense Fund is seeking a delay in the law until all votes on the issue are counted, an effort county clerks have refused to pursue.

An organization called Concerned Oregonians worked on a referendum that would put HB 2007 and SB 2 before Oregon voters in 2008.

But when the state declared the referendum was five signatures short, and county clerks refused to correct mistakes that had been made in the counting, the ADF filed a lawsuit.

In a new column on the issue, Alan Sears, chief of the ADF, noted that the issue of marriage consisting of – and only of – one man and one woman is supported overwhelmingly in the United States. Twenty-seven of 28 states where voters have decided the question, they have limited marriage to one man and one woman.

"Those seeking to fabricate same-sex 'marriage' have long recognized the American public is a roadblock to their success. In 1998, after ADF-allied litigation allowed Alaska citizens to vote on (and pass) a constitutional amendment barring same-sex unions, the ACLU executive director declared: 'Today's results prove that certain fundamental issues should not be left up to a majority vote.'

"When the (new) referendum was submitted to the Oregon Secretary of State on Sept. 26, signatures exceeded the required number by more than 6,000. However, the Secretary of State announced there were not enough signatures to sustain the referendum. The evaluated 'sample' was said to be only five signatures short. If you wonder how this could happen, you aren't alone. As it turns out, there is a very clear explanation – many of the signatures were wrongfully rejected," Sears said.

"Signatures were invalidated for allegedly not matching their voter registration cards, being illegible, or coming from unregistered voters. But according to ADF attorneys who examined the signatures, several of those kicked out did match, were legible, and the affected voters actually were registered. In other words, many valid signers were ignored," he continued.

Clerks have "adamantly"' resisted efforts by signers to authenticate their signatures. "One county clerk even told a rejected signer, in person, and to their face, 'tough nuggets,'" Sears said.

The lawsuit alleges Oregon voters from 12 counties have been disenfranchised by administrative fiat, because their signatures were rejected and they were not allowed a procedure to restore them to the petition.

Bill Burgess, the clerk in Marion County, confirmed the state had given county clerks instructions to follow a "precedent" and not correct any incorrectly classified signatures they may have been told about.

"We also have a legal obligation to follow the guidelines and precedents of the past and our attorney has told us, and the Secretary of State has advised us that there is no place in this petition signature checking process for a person to come in later on and attest that that was their signature," he told WND.

"There's no direct ban [on corrections]," he said. "Well, it's not specified, and both the Secretary of State and my legal counsel have told me not to go there."

cont'd


Title: Re: 'Gay' partner opponents sue state
Post by: Soldier4Christ on December 27, 2007, 11:35:12 AM
The case developed when 54 state lawmakers and Democratic Gov. Ted Kulongoski rejected the will of the people to approve and sign into Law HB 2007 and SB 2.

For 148 years Oregon had recognized marriage as the union of a man and a woman, and voters four times have addressed the issue, most recently in 2004 when they collected more than a million votes and by a substantial 57-43 percent margin decided to keep traditional marriage defined as being between only one man and only one woman.

But the newest legislation simply rejects that vote, and even makes a move to address such citizen "attitudes," requiring schools to seek to change the minds of those who don't support homosexual duos.

David Crowe, a leader of Restore America, one of the groups coordinating the petition effort, told WND that there were a number of county clerks who colluded with state officials who endorse the special privileges for homosexuals to prevent people from voting on the issues.

"It's political," he said. "There are people who are hostile to us in three or four counties who are in collusion with state officials behind the scenes, those who we know are not for us."

Crowe said he knew of the instructions from the Secretary of State to counties not to make any corrections in the tabulation; he said he had gotten a copy of a state e-mail to that effect.



Title: Re: 'Gay' partner opponents sue state
Post by: Shammu on December 27, 2007, 07:52:00 PM
So again, the queer community forces themselves on the "normal" society. I don't use the word "gay" because it really means "HAPPY". Where as the word queer means........

1.  Deviating from the expected or normal; strange: a queer situation.
2. Odd or unconventional, as in behavior; eccentric.
3. Of a questionable nature or character; suspicious.
4. Slang. Fake; counterfeit.
5. Feeling slightly ill; queasy.
6. Offensive Slang. Homosexual.

Homosexuals are highly offensive to me, and a abomination before God. Though I do pray they find Jesus, before it becomes to late.


Title: Re: 'Gay' partner opponents sue state
Post by: Soldier4Christ on December 29, 2007, 09:14:08 PM
Court victory for Oregon pro-family forces

A federal judge on Friday placed on hold a state domestic partnership law that was set to take effect Jan. 1, pending a February hearing.

The big issue for pro-family forces is that the law would give some spousal rights to homosexuals.

Opponents asked U.S. District Judge Michael W. Mosman to intercede after the Oregon secretary of state's office ruled in October that they had failed to collect enough valid signatures on a referendum to block the law.

The Oregon measure covers benefits related to inheritance rights, child-rearing and custody, joint state tax filings, joint health, auto and homeowners insurance policies, visitation rights at hospitals and others. It does not affect federal benefits for married couples, including Social Security and joint filing of federal tax returns.

After the Legislature approved the domestic partnership law this year, pro-family forces launched an effort to collect enough signatures to suspend the law and place it on the November 2008 ballot for a statewide vote.

But state elections officials said this fall that the effort fell 116 valid signatures short of the 55,179 needed to suspend the law.

In court Friday, Austin Nimocks, a lawyer for Alliance Defense Fund, which opposes the measure, said the state's review process was flawed, disenfranchising citizens who had signed petitions.

Eight other states have approved spousal rights in some form for same-sex couples - Connecticut, Vermont, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Maine, California, Washington and Hawaii. Massachusetts is the only state that allows gay couples to marry.