NCLR press release here.
Since the vote's not been certified yet, it's unclear to me when the state would stop granting same-sex marriage licenses. There's an estimated 1.8 million ballots remaining to be counted, which could swing the results the other way. Or not.
However, the fact that the California Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case about the legality of prop 8 is encouraging, especially the part where they are going to rule on the marriages performed after the Court's ruling earlier this year and before prop 8 passed.
Also, "Campaign for California Families," a pro-8 group applied to be a party and they were denied. (They were not an official committee for or against prop 8; other official proponents were granted party status.)
Since the vote's not been certified yet, it's unclear to me when the state would stop granting same-sex marriage licenses. There's an estimated 1.8 million ballots remaining to be counted, which could swing the results the other way. Or not.
However, the fact that the California Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case about the legality of prop 8 is encouraging, especially the part where they are going to rule on the marriages performed after the Court's ruling earlier this year and before prop 8 passed.
Also, "Campaign for California Families," a pro-8 group applied to be a party and they were denied. (They were not an official committee for or against prop 8; other official proponents were granted party status.)