Don’t bend to feds on ‘gay’ marriage

Granade ruled the state’s definition of marriage as the union of one man and one woman was unconstitutional. Then she refused to extend a stay on the ruling, ordering the state to start imposing the social change on citizens soon, after the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals declined to intervene.

 

As the state attorney general submitted an emergency request for a stay to the U.S. Supreme Court, Moore was drafting instructions to judges on how to handle a federal judge’s decision that violates the state constitution.

 

A letter obtained by WND from Moore to his probate judges was resolute.

 

“Lower federal courts are without authority to impose their own interpretation of federal constitutional law upon the state courts,” it stated. “Furthermore, they have absolutely no legitimate authority to compel state courts to redefine marriage to include persons of the same sex. Not only is the Mobile federal court acting without constitutional authority, but it is doing so in a manner inconsistent with the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution.”

 

Read More: State chief justice: Don’t bend to feds on ‘gay’ marriage