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Past Event

Governing Ideas | Number 17

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A Governance Studies Event

Same-Sex Marriage and Religious Liberty: A Reconciliation

Marriage and Family Formation, Civil Liberties, Social Issues


Event Summary

In a recent New York Times op-ed, Brookings scholar Jonathan Rauch and co-author David Blankenhorn argue that linking federal civil unions to guarantees of religious freedom is a way to head off a long-term, scorched-earth debate over gay marriage and religious liberty.

Governing Ideas

Event Information

When

Friday, March 13, 2009
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Where

Saul/Zilkha Rooms
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Event Materials


Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

E-mail: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

On March 13, Rauch and Blankenhorn discussed their proposal at a forum moderated by Brookings Senior Fellow William Galston. Robin Wilson, editor of Same-Sex Marriage and Religious Liberty: Emerging Conflicts, discussed the church-state conflicts that same-sex unions may engender. Nathan Diament and Lara Schwarz offered thoughts from religious and gay rights perspectives.

This event is part of the Governing Ideas series intended to broaden the discussion of governance issues through forums on timely and relevant books on history, culture, legal norms and practices, values and religion.

After the program, panelists took audience questions.

Transcript

BILL GALSTON:  One dimension of increased polarization, of course, is around cultural issues. Compared to the 1950’s and the 1960’s, our political agenda is now crowded with cultural issues which have forced their way back into the public arena. 

And that raises a very important question. Everybody knows that when you’re talking about how Senate conferences, where the House says four billion for a particular line and the Senate says six, it’s not too hard to see where the compromise might come from. And if you’re talking about a big federal program, where the question is, how is the money to be distributed among the states, should it be done by population, should it be done by poverty rates, should it be done by a variety of other criteria, it’s usually possible to find a meeting of the minds, it’s not always split the difference, but there is a quantitative compromise that is in view, if not always within reach.

But when you get to these contested cultural issues, the following question emerges: is morally serious compromise possible, that is, can people who represent very different points of view, and who take those points of view seriously as a moral matter, is there a way that, consistent with moral reflection and moral integrity, people who disagree on such issues can come together? That is not a rhetorical question, it is one of the leading questions for American politics today.Well, I don’t need to tell you that one of the hottest and most widely and deeply contested of these issues is gay marriage, and more broadly, the relationship between public law and public regulation on the one hand, and the gay community on the other

Participants

Moderator

William A. Galston

Senior Fellow, Governance Studies

Panelists

Jonathan Rauch

Guest Scholar, Governance Studies

David Blankenhorn

President
Institute for American Values

Robin Wilson

Professor
Washington and Lee University School of Law

Nathan Diament

Director of Public Policy
Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America

Lara Schwartz

Legal Director & Chief Legislative Council
Human Rights Campaign


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