Twenty years after he issued marriage licenses to same-sex couples in defiance of federal law as mayor of San Francisco, Gov. Gavin Newsom returned to the city Friday to remind voters that the fight for LGBTQ+ rights is ongoing.
Kicking off Pride Month, the Democratic governor is promoting a measure on the November ballot to remove language in the state Constitution that defines marriage as between a man and a woman.
Although courts have already deemed this outdated definition unenforceable and unconstitutional, the initiative comes as LGBTQ+ groups express concern about the potential return of Donald Trump to the presidency and possible rulings from a conservative Supreme Court majority he helped appoint.
“Why do we feel we need to do this? What more evidence do you need? Wake up to the world we’re living in,” Newsom said Friday at Manny’s, a café in the Mission District that is a popular venue for Democratic campaigns. “It’s profound and precious progress. You can’t take it for granted.”
Newsom and supporters of the measure at Friday’s event, including San Francisco Mayor London Breed and State Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco), pointed to the Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe vs. Wade as proof that rights—including the right to marriage—are not guaranteed.
After the Supreme Court in 2022 overturned Roe vs. Wade, ending the constitutional right to abortion, longtime conservative Justice Clarence Thomas said in a concurring opinion that the court should also reconsider rulings that rely on similar legal reasoning, such as those that protect same-sex marriage and access to contraception.
California and other states have since passed ballot measures to enshrine abortion rights in their constitutions. Newsom said the same needs to be done for LGBTQ+ rights.
California Governor Gavin Newsom joins Senator Scott Wiener, Congressman Evan Low, President pro Tempore Emeritus Toni Atkins, San Francisco Mayor London Breed, and other local officials for a rally in support of Freedom to Marry, a ballot measure to remove Proposition 8 from the state Constitution, held at Manny’s at 16th and Mission streets in San Francisco on Friday, June 7, 2024.
“Here we are in 2024, and we’re not experiencing a rights expansion; we’re experiencing a rights regression,” he said.
The definition in California’s current Constitution dates to 2008 when voters approved a ban on same-sex marriage with Proposition 8. Although this ban has since been overturned in court, the language of Proposition 8 remains in the Constitution.
The measure, if approved by voters, would replace that definition with a broader “fundamental right to marry.”
While there is no current threat to the legality of same-sex marriage, and President Biden signed a bill to safeguard it in 2022, supporters of the measure are taking no chances. They believe the outdated language in California’s Constitution must be permanently removed.
State Sen. Toni Atkins (D-San Diego), the former California Senate leader running for governor in 2026, thanked Newsom for allowing her to legally marry her wife in 2008, reflecting on the so-called summer of love when LGBTQ+ couples rushed to wed ahead of the vote on Proposition 8.
Atkins said she officiated at 18 weddings that year and remembered days when she attended multiple ceremonies—until the passage of Proposition 8 brought those joyful days to a “devastating end.” Since the initiative was ruled unconstitutional, the Supreme Court has ensured the right to same-sex marriage since 2015.
“In California today, we believe the ability to marry who you love is a fundamental right. And while we may feel a sense of security, we can’t become complacent in our fight to protect our rights,” Atkins said Friday.
The California Family Council, a conservative policy organization, opposes the November ballot measure. Spokesperson Greg Burt said in a statement that marriage between a man and a woman creates “the optimal family environment” for children and that the law shouldn’t “tamper” with what he called “the natural order.”
The organization said Friday that a broader definition of marriage could lead to the legalization of polygamy. In April, the Oakland City Council officially recognized polyamorous families in an effort to protect “diverse family structures” from discrimination.
Most Californians’ views have changed since Proposition 8.
Polling by the Public Policy Institute of California in 2021 showed that an overwhelming majority of Californians supported protections for the LGBTQ+ community. However, a recent nationwide poll conducted for The Times by NORC at the University of Chicago showed a clear political divide in how Americans view the influence of LGBTQ+ people in society, with 3 in 4 Democrats saying that impact is positive and nearly the same share of Republicans saying it has been negative.