A randomly assigned three-judge panel of the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals appeared to be leaning heavily toward gay and lesbian couples Tuesday while weighing the constitutionality of twin same-sex marriage bans. The hearing marks the fifth time a federal appeals court has heard marriage equality arguments this year, and pushes the issue one step closer to being considered by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Two cases were before the Chicago-based 7th Circuit on Tuesday — one challenging Wisconsin’s same-sex marriage ban, and a consolidated set of three lawsuits against Indiana’s. Both bans were struck down by federal judges in June, allowing hundreds of same-sex couples to marry in each state.
Judges ultimately put those rulings on hold, however, pending appeals by state officials. The same federal judge who struck down Wisconsin’s ban stayed her decision after a week of legalized same-sex marriage. Indiana only allowed gay and lesbian couples to marry for a couple of days before the 7th Circuit court stepped in and issued a stay.
In what could be considered a legal jackpot for marriage equality advocates, Tuesday’s hearing drew arguably the most liberal three-judge panel imaginable from the Republican-dominated 7th Circuit court. Two of the judges, David Hamilton and Anne Claire Williams, were appointed by Democrats (Hamilton was actually the first judge nominated to the federal judiciary by President Obama.) And the third — Judge Richard Posner, a President Reagan appointee — has been an outspoken critic of the modern GOP.
All three judges peppered state attorneys with tough questions during Tuesday’s proceedings and appeared skeptical of their arguments in defense of same-sex marriage bans. Posner balked at Wisconsin Assistant Attorney General Timothy Samuelson’s repeated reference to “tradition” as grounds for denying same-sex couples equal marriage rights.
“It was tradition to not allow blacks and whites to marry — a tradition that got swept away,” Posner said, according to the Associated Press.
Judge WIlliams also gave Samuelson a hard time when he struggled to name a societal benefit derived from banning same-sex nuptials. As Samuelson pointed to a yellow courtroom light indicating his time was up, Williams joked: “It won’t save you.”
Like Posner, Judge Hamilton drew a connection between the case for marriage equality and the 1967 Supreme Court decision, Loving v. Virginia, which struck down interracial marriage bans. Hamilton said the right to equal protection arguments in both cases were “exactly the same,” placing the marriage rights of same-sex couples “in the realm of heightened scrutiny.”
Posner also appeared particularly sensitive to the psychological damage done to children whose parents are barred from marrying. To illustrate this point, Posner presented two contrasting scenarios:









