
They've been talking about it for weeks and today Prop 8's backers officially 
filed to vacate  Judge Vaughn Walker's ruling overturning the ban of same-sex marriage  in California.   Because a gay judge cannot possibly be impartial about  gay issues. 
The sponsors of  California's same-sex marriage ban said Monday that the recent  disclosure by the federal judge who struck down Proposition 8 that he is  in a long-term relationship with another man has given them new grounds  to have his historic ruling overturned. Lawyers for the ban's backers  filed a motion in San Francisco's U.S. District Court, arguing that  Chief U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker should have removed himself from  the case or at least disclosed his relationship status because his  "impartiality might reasonably be questioned." "Only if Chief Judge  Walker had unequivocally disavowed any interest in marrying his partner  could the parties and the public be confident that he did not have a  direct personal interest in the outcome of the case," attorneys for the  coalition of religious and conservative groups that put Proposition 8 on  the November 2008 ballot wrote.
Lambda Legal's Jon Davidson reacts: 
To  say that Judge Walker's should have disclosed his ten-year relationship  with another man or that it made him unfit to rule on Proposition 8 is  like saying that a married heterosexual judge deciding an issue in a  divorce proceeding has to disclose if he or she is having marital  problems and might someday be affected by legal rulings in the case.  Or  that any judge who professes any religious faith is unable to rule on  any question of religious liberty or, at a minimum, must disclose what  his faith teaches. Much like a suggestion that a female judge could not  preside over a case involving sexual harassment or an African American  judge could not preside over a case involving race discrimination,  Proposition 8's supporters improperly are suggesting that a judge will  rule in favor of any litigant with whom he shares a personal  characteristic.
American Foundation for Equal Rights reacts: 
"This  motion is yet another in a string of desperate and absurd motions by  Prop 8 Proponents who refuse to accept the fact that the freedom to  marry is a constitutional right.  They're attempting to keep secret the  video of the public trial and they're attacking the judge because they  disagree with his decision.  Clearly, the Proponents are grasping at  straws because they have
NCLR's Shannon Minter reacts:
"This  is a desperate and ill-advised move that underscores their inability to  defend Prop 8 on the merits. This is not likely to win them any points  with the courts, who understandably do not appreciate having the  integrity of judges called into question based on such outrageous  grounds. This is part and parcel of the underhanded way the Prop 8  campaign itself was run-based on lies, insinuations, and unsupported  innuendo."
 
 
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