Politics & Government

Key Group Wades into Marriage Amendment Battle

Major blow struck against anti-gay groups, say amendment opponents.

Tuesday morning, activists pushing to stop a proposed constitutional amendment that would write a ban on same-sex marriage into the state constitution received what could prove to be a vital shot in the arm.

Minnesotans United for All Families announced that the Minnesota chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics would be joining their coalition of groups opposing the marriage amendment. Current state law already bans same-sex marriage in Minnesota.

"As an advocate for children and their families, MN-AAP believes this amendment would be harmful to children and adolescents in Minnesota," read a statement from the group, saying it would also harm the stability of same-sex families, thus hurting children.

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The move is potentially significant as pro-amendment group Minnesota for Marriage and its allies have long maintained that children fare poorly when raised by same-sex couples

In an interview with Patch, the head of the doctors' group said the decision to oppose the marriage amendment was made after a process he called "rich, deliberate, done over a long period of time, and with input from variety of experts."

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25 years of research, Dr. Robert Jacobson said, showed children of same-sex couples in committed relationships were just as physically, emotionally, and intellectually healthy as their counterparts in committed, heterosexual relationships.

Minnesota for Marriage did not return repeated requests for comment on this story in time for publication, but the group's spokesperson Autumn Leva argued to Minnesota Public Radio that the research Jacobson cited was "flawed."

"Most Minnesotans understand in their heart of hearts that marriage really is between one man and one woman and that kids do need a mom and a dad," Leva told MPR. "And I think for far too long, politics has really played in to the research that's been done on parenting."

In an interview with Patch, Jacobson called the battery of studies behind his group's decision "robust."

"There have been many specific studies over the years, and they have reaffirmed earlier studies showing this. Really, in the medical literature, there is not a controversy about this," he said.

Johnson added that the doctors' group also decided to take a stand for their patients. 

"We take to heart the work we've done with same-sex families, and recognize that this amendment would demean their commitments and relationships. It would hurt them," their children, and LGBT children, he said. 

Amendment opponents greeted the announcement with excitement.

"We're very proud of the endorsement," said Kate Brickman, spokesperson for Minnesotans United. "The research shows kids do better in all stable, two-parent households and says nothing about the sexual orientation of the parents."

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