Turns out same-sex marriage isn’t just bringing couples together.
The liberal Constitutional Accountability Center and the libertarian Cato Institute don’t agree on much. The two organizations have disagreed on legal battles over the Affordable Care Act, environmental regulations, labor laws, voting rights, and campaign finance.
“Pick the case, we’re usually on the opposite side,” said Ilya Shapiro, a senior fellow with the Cato Institute. “But every few years there’s something we agree on.”
Where the two organizations stand on common ground: Same-sex marriage bans are unconstitutional.
Last year, the groups teamed up to file legal briefs in the challenges to California’s ban on same-sex marriage and the Defense of Marriage Act, which barred federal recognition of same-sex marriages performed in states where such couples are allowed to marry. Since gay and lesbian rights supporters prevailed at the Supreme Court last summer, federal courts across the country have been striking down same-sex marriage bans based on the legal reasoning in those rulings. The liberal Constitutional Accountability Center and the libertarian Cato Institute are joining forces again, seeking to urge federal courts to recognize a constitutional right to same-sex marriage. They’ve filed a brief together in the Utah and Oklahoma same-sex marriage cases, and plan to do so in other pending same-sex marriage cases.
Both groups are in complete agreement about bans on same-sex marriage, which they write violate the 14th Amendment’s “guarantee of the “equal protection of the laws” is sweeping and universal.” This isn’t the first left-right collaboration on same-sex marriage, of course. Democrat David Boies and Republican Ted Olson, who were on opposite sides of Bush v. Gore, famously worked together in their successful challenge to California’s Proposition 8, and are now working to strike down same-sex marriage bans in the states.









