Posted by James V. Lacy at 12:00 am on Aug 05, 2010 7 Comments
As I mentioned in an earlier post, lawyer Ted Olson, who mapped
the legal strategy, got exactly what he aimed to get out of the
U.S. District Court in San Francisco. Yesterday Judge Vaughn
Walker issued an opinion declaring gay marriage to be a fundamental
right under the U.S. Constitution. Many gay activists
were skeptical of even filing such a lawsuit, fearful of the legal
repercussions if the case was lost.
Analysis of Judge Walker’s decision is
ongoing today, and I’ve offered mine. However, I want to
offer a slightly different analysis here, because I think the
probabilities are that the Proposition 8 decision had as much to do
with "inside baseball" and relationships between people as it did
with the facts and law.
Let’s examine what Ted Olson, the
architect of the legal victory, and Judge Walker have in common: 1)
the both were born in Illinois in the early 1940s; 2) they both
went to law school in the San Francisco Bay Area (Walker, Stanford;
Olson, Berkeley); 3) after law school they both went to work for
major California law firms (Walker: Pillsbury,… Read More