Rep. Markwayne Mullin
(R-Oklahoma), a member of the
Cherokee Nation, is criticizing a federal judge who invalidated Oklahoma's ban on same-sex marriage.
Mullin claims the judge's decision violated the "sovereignty" of the state. "Oklahomans overwhelming voted nearly a decade ago to define in our state’s constitution that marriage is between one man and one woman," he said in a
press release.
Section 2 of the
Defense
of Marriage Act, a federal law, allows states and tribes to ignore marriages that may not be legal in their jurisdictions. The Cherokee Nation, the largest tribe in the U.S., has banned same-sex marriages but the judge's decision doesn't appear to have an immediate affect on the tribe's law.
The
U.S. Supreme Court, in
US
v. Windsor, held that Section 3 of the law, which purported to define marriage as a union between "one man" and "one woman," was unconstitutional.
Get the Story:
American Indian Congressman Statement on Marriage Being Declared ‘Unconstitutional
(Native News Online 1/15)
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