Nevada’s top attorney and chief executive announced on Monday that they would not be defending their state’s constitutional ban on same-sex marriage before a federal appeals court, making them the latest in a string of state officials nationwide who have given up the fight to keep gay couples from joining in wedlock.
The decision from Democratic Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto and Republican Gov. Brian Sandoval marks a dramatic reversal. Just last month, Masto’s office filed a detailed brief in defense of the state’s ban, which voters approved by 67% in 2002.
But on the same day that brief was filed, a critical ruling out of Nevada’s 9th Circuit Court of Appeals threw a wrench in Masto’s defense of the gay marriage ban. In a seemingly unrelated jury exclusion suit, the court called for heightened scrutiny in discrimination cases based on sexual orientation.
The language used in the decision–which barred attorneys from striking potential jurors from the bench solely because of their sexual orientation–elevated gay and lesbian people to a protected class previously reserved for women and racial minorities. Under “heightened scrutiny,” any law that treats gay or lesbian people differently is presumed unconstitutional and requires the state to meet a higher standard for its legal justification.
Nevada’s gay marriage ban no longer meets those standards, the state’s attorney general decided.
“After thoughtful review and analysis, the state has determined that its arguments grounded upon equal protection and due process are no longer sustainable,” said Masto in a statement.
Her initial brief supporting the ban argued that it served a legitimate state interest, the “desire to protect and perpetuate traditional marriage.” Higher standards of review would require her to provide an important government interest, or compelling reason for the ban.
Sandoval agreed with Masto’s decision, saying in an email to the Associated Press, “It has become clear that this case is no longer defensible in court.”
Though their reasoning differs from that of others who have declined to defend same-sex marriage bans on personal grounds, Masto and Sandoval join a growing list of state officials to let such laws fall by the wayside. In July, less than a month after the U.S. Supreme Court cleared the way for the federal government to begin honoring same-sex marriages, Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane said it was her “ethical obligation” to withdraw her defense of a ban she found to be “wholly unconstitutional.” And just last month, Virginia’s newly-elected Democratic attorney general, Mark Herring, did the same. California Gov. Jerry Brown–then, the attorney general–was the first official to take a personal stand against his state’s same-sex marriage ban, refusing to defend the now defunct Proposition 8 in 2010.
Though Masto’s hand was forced in large part by the 9th Circuit’s earlier decision, gay rights advocates were still happy with the outcome.









