Dismissal of gay-marriage lawsuit urged

The Obama administration today urged a US court to dismiss a lawsuit by gay married couples from Massachusetts who say they were…

The Obama administration today urged a US court to dismiss a lawsuit by gay married couples from Massachusetts who say they were unlawfully denied federal marriage benefits.

President Barack Obama won strong support from gays during his presidential campaign and has pressed for repealing the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act that bars the federal government from recognising same-sex marriages.

But the gay community has been angered by the Obama administration's defence of the law in court proceedings. Justice Department officials say they are obligated to defend federal statutes when they are challenged.

"In making this filing, the department is bound by the only precedent that exists, which is that no court has found such a right to federal benefits based upon marital status to be constitutionally required," said Justice Department spokeswoman Tracy Schmaler.

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The filing in the US Court for the District of Massachusetts "points out the administration's position that Congress should extend federal benefits to spouses in same-sex marriages," she said.

Massachusetts was the first state to legalise same-sex marriages but those couples cannot access federal protections and programs granted to heterosexual married couples, prompting legal challenges.

The lawsuit, filed on behalf of seven same-sex couples and three survivors of same-sex spouses, says it is unconstitutional to bar them from enrolling in federal health care programmes, receiving certain retirement and survivor benefits and filing joint income tax returns.

"No court has found such a right to federal benefits to be fundamental - and the federal courts that have considered the question in the context of DOMA [Defense of Marriage Act] itself have rejected such a claim," the Justice Department said in the filing.

Reuters