Their voices may be political but their arguments are deeply constitutional.
Over 200 members of Congress — including House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid — chimed in Friday on the marriage equality cases scheduled to be heard by the high court in April. The lawmakers filed a “friend of the court” brief based on their “strong interest” in “ensuring that state definitions comply with constitutional guarantees and do not discriminate against classes of citizens.”
RELATED: Democrats push SCOTUS on marriage equality
Relying heavily on U.S. v. Windsor — in which the high court struck down the Defense of Marriage Act — the Democratic leaders argue that state laws governing marriage must answer to the Constitution. Moreover, the lawmakers say, under Windsor, courts must apply an elevated level of scrutiny to determine the constitutionality of marriage-related laws. That is, instead of simply having to show that a rational relationship exists between a marriage-related law and a legitimate governmental interest, the lawmakers claim that states defending gay marriage bans should have to meet a higher judicial bar.









