Mildred Jeter, a black woman (though she also had a Native American heritage and may have preferred to think of herself as Indian), married Richard Loving, a white man, in the District of Columbia in 1958. When they returned to their home in Caroline County, Virginia, they were arrested under Virginia’s anti-miscegenation statute, which dated to Colonial times and had been reaffirmed in the Racial Integrity Act of 1924.
Interracial Marriage as a Precedent for a Gay Marriage Decision
As we await a Supreme Court decision on gay marriage, we take note that 48 years ago on June 12 the court struck down Virginia’s ban on interracial marriage.
The Lovings were indicted and pleaded guilty. They were sentenced to a year in jail: The state’s law didn’t just ban interracial marriage; it made such marriage a criminal offense. However, the trial judge suspended the sentence on the condition that they leave Virginia and not return together for 25 years. In his opinion, the judge stated:
Almighty God created the races white, black, yellow, malay and red, and he placed them on separate continents. And but for the interference with his arrangement there would be no cause for such marriages. The fact that he separated the races shows that he did not intend for the races to mix.
Five years later, the couple filed suit to have their conviction overturned. The case eventually reached the Supreme Court, which struck down Virginia’s law unanimously. Chief Justice Earl Warren wrote for the court:
The freedom to marry has long been recognized as one of the vital personal rights essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men. Marriage is one of the “basic civil rights of man,” fundamental to our very existence and survival.
Here’s how ABC News reported the case on June 12, 1967:
David Boies and Ted Olson, the two lawyers who led the challenge to California’s Proposition 8, which outlawed same-sex marriage in 2008, connected the Loving case to the case of Perry v. Schwarzenegger here:
In 2011, as their case proceeded through the federal courts, Boies and Olson spoke at the Cato Institute, joined by John Podesta, then president of the Center for American Progress, and Robert A. Levy, chairman of Cato. Podesta and Levy served as co-chairs of the advisory committee of the American Foundation for Equal Rights, the nonprofit group that brought the Perry case. They wrote in The Washington Post in 2010:
Now, 43 years after Loving, the courts are once again grappling with denial of equal marriage rights—this time to gay couples. We believe that a society respectful of individual liberty must end this unequal treatment under the law.…
Over more than two centuries, minorities in America have gradually experienced greater freedom and been subjected to fewer discriminatory laws. But that process unfolded with great difficulty.
As the country evolved, the meaning of one small word— all”—has evolved as well. Our nation’s Founders reaffirmed in the Declaration of Independence the self-evident truth that “all Men are created equal,” and our Pledge of Allegiance concludes with the simple and definitive words “liberty and justice for all.” Still, we have struggled mightily since our independence, often through our courts, to ensure that liberty and justice is truly available to all Americans.
Thanks to the genius of our Framers, who separated power among three branches of government, our courts have been able to take the lead—standing up to enforce equal protection, as demanded by the Constitution—even when the executive and legislative branches, and often the public as well, were unwilling to confront wrongful discrimination.
In his remarks at Cato, and in this newspaper column, Levy argued that it would be best to get the government out of marriage entirely—let marriage be a private contract and a religious ceremony but not a government institution, a point that I have also made. For some, that’s a libertarian argument against laws and court decisions that would extend marriage to gay couples: It would be better to privatize marriage. But Levy goes on to say:
Whenever government imposes obligations or dispenses benefits, it may not “deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” That provision is explicit in the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, applicable to the states, and implicit in the Fifth Amendment, applicable to the federal government.
When it comes to the current marriage case of Obergefell v. Hodges—and if only the court had made the parallel case of Love v. Beshear the main case, so that the Loving decision could be followed by the Love decision—there are legitimate federalist and democratic objections.
One might say that marriage law has always been a matter for the states, and it should stay that way. Let the people of each state decide what marriage will be in their state. Leave the federal courts out of it. Federalism is an important basis for liberty, and that’s a strong argument.
There’s also the discomfiting argument that a Supreme Court decision striking down bans on gay marriage is undemocratic, that it would be better to let the political process work through the issue. Some people, even supporters of gay marriage, warn that a court decision could be another Roe v. Wade, with decades of cultural war over an imposed decision.
Those are valid objections. Not all issues have an obvious right side. In this case, I always ask critics of the federal court decisions striking down gay marriage bans, and the possibility of a Supreme Court decision confirming those decisions: How do you feel about the Loving case?
Do you think the court should have declined to strike down state bans on interracial marriage (which were still highly popular in 1967, according to a Gallup poll)? And if you do support the Loving decision, then how are these cases different? The Cato Institute has urged the court, in an amicus brief, to find that bans on same-sex marriage violate the equal protection clause of the Constitution.
Here is one more video, featuring the speakers from the Cato forum on Perry v. Schwarzenegger (plus me):
Controversial Supreme Court decisions are often handed down at the end of the court’s term, in June. A decade from now, will we celebrate the joint anniversary of the Loving and Obergefell decisions, both of which extended liberty and justice—and the freedom to marry—to all? Or will we have to explain how the court managed not to find that the principles of Loving applied to Obergefell?