A federal judge ruled on Thursday that gay marriages could resume next week in California while his landmark ruling last week that overturned a ban on same-sex matrimony is appealed.
The order to allow gay marriage will take effect at 5pm on Wednesday.
That will give an appeals court time to consider “in an orderly manner” whether the voter-approved ban, known as Proposition 8 (Prop 8), should be left intact while appellate judges weigh the merits of the overall case, US District Court Chief Judge Vaughn Walker ruled.
Late on Thursday, defenders of Prop 8 filed papers asking the appellate court to block same-sex marriages for the duration of the broader appeal.
Both sides expect the case eventually to be appealed right up to the US Supreme Court, giving the California legal battle national importance. The case against Prop 8 marks the first major challenge in federal court to a state law barring marriage between same-sex couples.
Gay rights advocates and civil libertarians have cast the legal battle as a fight for equal rights, while opponents, including many religious conservatives, see same-sex marriage as a threat to the traditional family.
Thirty-nine US states have laws explicitly prohibiting gay marriage. Only five states — Massachusetts, Connecticut, Iowa, Vermont, New Hampshire — and the District of Columbia — allow same-sex unions.
Thursday’s ruling left neither side completely happy.
San Francisco City Hall’s steps were lined with gay couples hoping for a green light from Walker to wed and their supporters.
“I think they should have lifted the stay today,” said James Olivera, 58, a gay marriage supporter.
“God’s holy law has been trampled on by one person,” responded Viktor Choban, 27, a supporter of the ban.
Walker ruled last week that Prop 8 violated due-process and equal-protection rights under the US Constitution.
On Thursday, he wrote that proponents of the ban had failed to show any irreparable harm that could arise from allowing gay weddings to go forward while the matter is under appeal.
Walker’s decision to delay his ruling did not come as a surprise, said Kate Kendell, an official at the National Center for Legal Rights.
“There’s both a political dimension here and there’s a human dimension,” Kendell said. “Walker certainly wants to avoid any sort of stutter step when it comes to the ability of people to marry and to do so with some certainty.”
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