Gay and lesbian couples began receiving marriage licenses in Alabama Monday, following the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to deny the state’s request for a stay of a federal ruling that struck down the state’s ban on same-sex nuptials. The action cleared the final hurdle for Alabama to become the 37th state — and second in the Deep South after South Carolina — where gay and lesbian couples can legally wed.
Or at least, it should have been the final hurdle.
Late Sunday, Alabama’s top judicial official, Chief Justice Roy Moore, sent a letter to probate judges ordering them to turn away same-sex couples seeking marriage licenses. The directive went one step further than a letter he had sent earlier in the week advising probate judges to continue acting in accordance with Alabama’s ban.
In a phone interview with NBC News Monday, Moore doubled down on his view that federal courts have overstepped their authority by ordering judges to grant same-sex couples marriage licenses.
“The U.S. district courts have no power or authority to redefine marriage,” said Moore. “Once you start redefining marriage, that’s the ultimate power. Would it overturn the laws of incest? Bigamy? Polygamy? How far do they go?”
Moore also rejected comparisons to former Alabama Gov. George Wallace, who in 1963 famously stood in the schoolhouse door at the University of Alabama to block federally-mandated integration.
“I disagree with standing in the schoolhouse door to prevent blacks from getting equal education,” Moore said. “We’re talking about a constitutional amendment to preserve the recognition that marriage is one man and one woman, as it has been for centuries.”
Related: Alabama heading for ‘constitutional crisis’ over marriage equality
Based off Moore’s order, some probate judges said they would not be issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples on Monday. Others said they wouldn’t issue marriage licenses to any couple, gay or straight, due to their religious objections to same-sex marriage. But most of the judges msnbc was able to contact last Friday said they were planning on complying with the federal ruling that overturned Alabama’s ban.
A majority of lawyers believe that any judge who listens to Moore and not the federal orders in favor of marriage equality would be in violation of the U.S. Constitution.








