Two days before a federal appeals court is set to hear oral arguments in a case that could topple Utah’s ban on same-sex marriage — and potentially every other state ban on such unions — a group is out with two new ads that aim to show the wide array of support for marriage equality across the ultra-conservative state.
The 30-second spots, released Tuesday by the organization Utah Unites for Marriage, feature real families with a stake in the court’s decision. In one ad, former TV news anchor Terry Wood argues that extending marriage rights to same-sex couples would strengthen the state, and he talks about what’s he’s learned from his gay son.
“I’ve come to realize that marriage is for all people,” says Wood. “If gay and lesbian couples are allowed the right of marriage, it’s not going to hurt the state one bit.”
In the other ad, William and Marge Bradshaw — both Mormons — make a similar case for same-sex marriage.
“When Brett told us he was gay, both of us put our arms around our son and said, ‘We love you, and that’s never going to change,’” says William.
“All gay and lesbian people deserve to have the rights and the privileges that we’ve had,” says his wife.
Utah briefly joined more than a dozen states, plus the District of Columbia, in allowing gay couples to legally wed late last year, when a federal judge overturned the state’s 10-year-old amendment defining marriage as between one man and one woman. Because U.S. District Judge Robert Shelby did not issue a stay on the effects of his ruling, approximately 1,300 same-sex couples were able to marry in the state. Seventeen days later, the nation’s highest court halted further same-sex marriages from taking place in Utah while litigation continued.
Attorney General Eric Holder announced shortly after that the federal government would honor those same-sex marriages that took place in the state, even if Utah’s government would not.









