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By Jason Collum | AFA
Journal Staff Writer
At least three important pieces of legislation tied to family values
will be in front of Congress in 2004. And, with this year being
an election year, it is more than likely presidential candidates
and others will weigh in heavily on these issues.
One of these bills would protect and define the meaning of marriage,
while two other major bills focus on rights of the unborn and abortion.
The bill at the forefront of many Americans minds is presently
working its way through the House of Representatives, with a similar
measure introduced in the Senate in late November. The Federal Marriage
Amendment (H.J. Res 56), sponsored by Rep. Marilyn Musgrave (R-CO),
proposes an amendment to the U.S. Constitution defining marriage
in the United States as being between one man and one woman. In
light of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Courts ruling
that that state cannot ban same-sex marriages, and the U.S. Supreme
Courts ruling in Lawrence v. Texas, backers of the amendment
say its ratification would preclude state laws from sanctioning
same-sex marriages.
The proposed amendment states, Marriage in the United States
shall consist only of the union of a man and a woman. Neither this
Constitution or the constitution of any State, nor state or federal
law, shall be construed to require that marital status or the legal
incidents thereof be conferred upon unmarried couples or groups.
The Senates measure, introduced November 25, 2003, by Sen.
Wayne Allard (R-CO), is very similar. In order for either measure
to become an amendment, it would need to garner two-thirds of the
vote in both houses, and then be ratified by three-fourths of the
states within a set time, usually seven years.
Its a tedious process to amend the Constitution, and Republican
Rep. Roger Wicker of Mississippi thinks thats exactly how
it should be. But, he says, this is a case where an amendment is
needed.
The number one issue, in my opinion, for 2004, is the Federal
Marriage Amendment, Wicker said. Conservatives are generally
reluctant to alter our basic document, the framework of our government.
I think we ought to have a compelling reason before we amend the
Constitution of the United States. But as it becomes more and more
evident that there is an assault by some courts on the American
family, its clear the time has come to amend the Constitution
to make certain everyone knows that marriage is still an institution
between one man and one woman.
Wicker said if the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruling were
carried to its logical conclusion, it would not be a far-fetched
leap for polygamy to be reinstated as legal.
The Massachusetts ruling followed the June 2003 Lawrence v. Texas
ruling. In that case the high court ruled states cannot legally
ban homosexual sex. Many pro-family activists said that decision
would lead to the destruction of marriage and the family, and would
lead to all kinds of definitions of marriage. In prophetic fashion,
just days after Wicker made his statement to AFA Journal,
a Utah man filed suit to have his bigamy convictions thrown out,
using the Lawrence case as his defense.
Such actions give further credence to pro-family activists
calls for the marriage protection amendment. As of December 3, H.J.
Res 56 had 107 co-sponsors. For a status update on the measure,
go online to http://www.congress.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d108:H.J.Res.56:
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AFA urges everyone to call or E-mail his or her U.S. representative
and U.S. senators and voice support for the Federal Marriage Amendment.
Protecting
the unborn
Wicker said two other important measures facing Congress in 2004
focus on the rights of the unborn and on abortion. The Unborn Victims
of Violence Act (UVVA) seeks to give protection to the unborn in
the event an unborn child is killed during the commission of a federal
crime, while the Child Custody Protection Act seeks to make it a
crime for an adult to assist a minor in getting an abortion without
the minors parental involvement.
According to the National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the
Unborn Victims of Violence Act recognizes that when a criminal attacks
a pregnant woman, and injures or kills her unborn child, he has
claimed two human victims.
The bill would establish that if an unborn child is injured or killed
during the commission of an already-defined federal crime of violence,
then the assailant may be charged with a second offense on behalf
of the second victim, the unborn child the exact charge depending
on the degree of harm done to the child and other factors. The bill
would apply this two-victim principle to 68 existing federal laws
dealing with acts of violence. These laws affect federal geographical
jurisdictions, the military justice system, protection of federal
officials, and specific acts defined by law as federal crimes (such
as certain terrorist bombings).
The UVVA is sponsored in the House (H.R. 1997) by Rep. Melissa Hart
(R-PA), and in the Senate (S. 1019, previously S. 146) by Sen. Mike
Dewine (R-OH). The same legislation was approved by the House in
1999 and again in 2001, but was not acted upon by the Senate. President
Bush, in April 2003, urged passage of the bill.
The bills opponents argue against the child in utero
verbiage in the bill. Opinions on the Web sites of the National
Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL Pro-Choice America), National
Organization for Women (NOW), and the American Civil Liberties Union
argue the measure is another attempt to end abortion by recognizing
the unborn as living human beings with rights.
It passed the House before, Wicker said. We hope
to bring it up next year, and perhaps this time the Senate will
take it up.
Parental
rights
Another measure Wicker and others hope to see become law in 2004
is the Child Custody Protection Act (H.R. 1755). Introduced by Rep.
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL), the measure would move to prevent any
adult other than a parent, except in the case of judicial authorization,
from taking a minor across state lines to circumvent laws requiring
the involvement of parents in abortion decisions.
According to the NRLC, one case that helped spur the effort to launch
this law happened in 1995, when a 12-year-old Pennsylvania
girl became pregnant after sexual involvement with an 18-year-old
man. Pennsylvania law requires parental consent (or judicial bypass)
for an abortion to be performed on a minor. However, the mans
mother took the pregnant girl for an abortion in New York, which
has no parental involvement law. (The girls mother did not
even know that she was pregnant.) When Pennsylvania authorities
prosecuted the woman for interfering with the custody of a child,
she was defended by attorneys for the Center for Reproductive Law
and Policy, the major national pro-abortion litigating organization.
They argued that the womans actions were like those of thousands
of adults who each year aid young women in exercising their constitutional
right to an abortion, and that such aid is protected
by Roe v. Wade.
In a time when a parent must consent to his or her child taking
an Advil at school, it is unconscionable that a minor could receive
assistance in getting an abortion and not involve the parents of
that pregnant minor, Wicker said. I would hope that
I would never face that situation, but in trying to imagine such
a thing, I would be fit to be tied if another adult assisted my
daughter in getting an abortion without allowing me to be involved
in that decision.
Like UVVA, this measure is opposed by NARAL, NOW, and the Center
for Reproductive Rights. Will it pass legislative hurdles this second
go-around?
[We tried this same measure in the House] in 2002, but it
died in the Senate, Wicker said. We hope to take it
up again in 2004.
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