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Presidential race may leave lasting imprint on Supreme Court

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The law on abortion could also switch with a change of one justice. With an extra vote on the right, the six Republican appointees would likely uphold strict regulation of abortion, and possibly, a criminal ban. With an extra vote on the left, however, the liberal bloc could strike down state or federal regulations that limit abortions or restrict abortion doctors.

This term, the court is being asked to rule for the first time on gay marriage, another issue likely to split the court on ideological lines.

Two separate questions are pending. The first concerns the rights of legally married gay couples. Several judges have struck down part of the Defense of Marriage Act, or DOMA, and ruled that the federal government may not deny equal benefits to same-sex couples who were married in states such as Massachusetts and Connecticut.

When the Obama administration refused to defend this provision, the House Republicans took up the cause. The justices have before them several appeals and are likely to decide in November which case to take up.

Also pending is California’s Proposition 8 and the question of whether the U.S. Constitution gives gay couples a right to marry. After the California Supreme Court ruled for gay marriage in 2008, opponents put on the ballot and won approval for Proposition 8, which amended the state’s Constitution and restricted marriage to the union of a man and a woman.

In February, however, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals struck down Proposition 8 in a 2-1 decision. The opinion by Judge Stephen Reinhardt did not say the U.S. Constitution gave gays and lesbians a right to marry in every state. Instead, he said California violated the Constitution by taking away a right to marry after it had been briefly granted.

The sponsors of Proposition 8 have an appeal pending before the high court (Hollingsworth vs. Perry). The justices have put off a vote on it and are likely to consider it in November in conjunction with the DOMA cases.

In the court’s private conference, it takes four votes to grant an appeal, but five votes for a majority ruling. The conservatives and liberals may be wary of granting the appeal in the Proposition 8 case because they may not be sure where Kennedy would come down.

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