Last week, as you are probably aware, both houses of the New Jersey Legislature passed the Marriage Equality Act, although Governor Christie swiftly vetoed the legislation. (Commentators indicate that Governor Christie himself is not anti-gay or anti- marriage equality, but is catering to prospective Republican primary voters in South Carolina in 2016.) The Act passed by 42 to 33 in the Assembly and 24 to 16 in the Senate. To override the veto, 50 votes are needed in the Assembly and 27 in the Senate. Proponents have until January 2014, the end of the current legislative term, to gather enough votes to override.
In the meantime, in an unpublished decision in Garden State Equality v. Dow, Mercer County Assignment Judge Linda Feinberg granted plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration of the two equal protection counts of the complaint. The case will now proceed to trial on those two counts, with the intention of making the record for the unequal treatment of civil union partners which the New Jersey Supreme Court indicated would be needed to overturn the civil union law.
It will be interesting to see which pathway is completed first. Will NJ join the ranks of states legislating marriage equality, or will equality be mandated by the Courts? One way or another, passage of marriage equality seems assured in the next few years.
C. Megan Oltman, Esq.
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