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Who's next? (He answers his own question.)
These Are the Next Gay-Marriage Battlegrounds
Read more: Next Battlegrounds: Where Gay Marriage Is and Is Not Legal in U.S. | TIME.com http://nation.time.com/2013/11/10/these-are-the-next-gay-marriage-battlegrounds/#ixzz2kZkMqj5o
A synopsis:
New Mexico: Possibly in Time for a New Year’s Eve Kiss
Oregon: Wait Until Next Election
Ohio, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Colorado, Nevada, Utah: Targeting 2016
Virginia: Tell It to the Judge
North Carolina: Pressing the Issue
Mississippi, Texas, Tennessee: Not Anytime Soon
The others: When Hell freezes over
Mississippi, Texas, Tennessee: Not Anytime Soon
So the Republican governor of North Carolina would be unable/unwilling to appeal the case?
The constitutional independence of these offices, and their differing functions and duties, create clear potential for conflict between their respective holders. In the event of such conflict, power in the Attorney General to resolve, without their consent, controversies involving agencies or departments under the supervision of the Governor, could be abused by exercise in a manner effectively derogative of the Governor's constitutional duties to exercise executive power and to supervise the official conduct of all executive officers. We do not believe the General Assembly, in the enactment of G.S. 114-2(2), intended to create such potential.
...
This practice [of hiring additional counsel] would, however, cause additional expense to the State. It would also undermine, and perhaps ultimately destroy, the customary role of the Attorney General's office in representing the agencies and departments of the State, a role which historically has served the State well.
Thus, to avoid additional expense to the State, and to preserve for the Attorney General's office a well-established role of proven utility, we believe the better rule to be that an agency or department of the State should have the right possessed by other litigants to determine whether its counsel, whether the Attorney General or otherwise, can enter a consent judgment on its behalf. Such a right is also consonant with fulfillment by the respective agencies and departments of the State of their statutorily assigned duties.
It took some digging on Lexis, but yes the Attorney General of North Carolina is independent.
Dice v. Dep't of Transp., No. 831SC63, 1984 N.C. App. LEXIS 2989, at *12-14, 312 S.E.2d 241, 245-246 (N.C. Ct. App. 1984)
So while the governor probably cannot overrule the attorney general's discretion, a separate agency would have the right to independent counsel. So it remains to be seen whether by this rule the case can proceed...
But would they have standing in federal court?
I'll say this about the NOrth Carolina ban,the people pushing for it didn't even bother to hide what they think of us. There is no way they can say animus didn't play a part in it.
Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn plans to sign the state's marriage equality bill into law November 20. That same day, Bishop Thomas Paprocki of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield says he will perform “prayers of supplication and exorcism” at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in the state's capital.
“It is scandalous that so many Catholic politicians are responsible for enabling the passage of this legislation and even twisting the words of the pope to rationalize their actions despite the clear teaching of the church,” Paprocki said in a statement issued Thursday.
