May 7, 2008
LANSING − Attorney General Mike Cox today said the Michigan Supreme
Court's 5 to 2 ruling on the marriage amendment upheld not only the amendment,
but also the rights of Michigan's voters who approved the marriage amendment.
"In 2004, 2,698,077 citizens voted to affirm marriage as between one man and one
woman," Cox observed. "As the Supreme Court noted in their majority opinion, '[T]he
people of this state could hardly have made their intentions clearer.'"
"Today's Supreme Court ruling also affirms our original analysis of the marriage
amendment, the process we use and the work of our lawyers − the finest in the
state," Cox observed.
In March, 2005 the Attorney General issued an opinion stating that the marriage
amendment prohibited governmental entities from conferring health benefits on
their employees based on domestic partnership agreements that are characterized
by references to the attributes of marriage. Today's Supreme Court's decision
confirmed the Attorney General's legal analysis of the amendment.
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