Volume 17
Issue
1
Date
2019

Is This Any Way to Make Civil Rights Law? Judicial Extension of “Marital Status” Nondiscrimination to Protect Cohabitants

by Helen M. Alvaré

In recent years, civil rights legislation has been the subject of significant attention. This is due, in part, to the emergence of novel and contested interpretations of longstanding statutes offering protection against discrimination based upon sex and marital status. Courts and agencies are infusing new meanings into old laws in response to questions provoked by new behaviors. One new question concerns whether to interpret “marital status” nondiscrimination as protecting an unmarried couple’s cohabiting. Four state courts and one federal court have answered “yes.” But these cases work against uniting Americans behind civil rights laws—laws that ought to be a point of national pride. Because of their mistakes in the areas of statutory interpretation and separation of powers, they appear starkly ideological. They also do a poor job reflecting upon the proper balance with religious freedom. Americans may wish to protect cohabiting as a “marital status.” If so, this should be accomplished by a legislative process that can investigate the myriad social welfare questions cohabitation provokes, especially regarding possible effects on marriage and children’s stability. Cohabitation-protective cases cannot and do not accomplish this. Instead, they play word games and manipulate statutory canons. They tell religious citizens what they are really thinking no matter what the citizen believes in her own mind. They also insist, against settled law, that the state, and not the religious citizen, knows the nature of the burden on the free exercise of religion created by a particular civil right. And throughout, such cases fashion social policy, while ignoring the vast amount of data and public opinion necessary to make informed policy. In short, they do civil rights no favor.

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