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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- As the general election approaches, a Christian evangelical group has issued an ultimatum to Gov. Joe Manchin: call a special session to pass a proposed constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage, or face the wrath of voters.
The Family Policy Council of West Virginia told the governor on Oct. 9 that he had until Wednesday to agree to call the Legislature into session. The conservative group, formed in March, cites polling it commissioned of around 500 registered voters that it says found 73 percent supporting an amendment defining marriage as a "union of one man and one woman.''
"The donors to this organization, as well as my board, are asking -- rather stridently -- that we release the poll to the public as soon as possible,'' Jeremy Dys, the group's president, said in a letter to the governor's office. "If he has determined that the timing is not right, the duty I have to our donors and the Board of Directors requires that I release this as soon as possible.''
But Manchin's office says West Virginia already has a law. Passed in 2000, it calls marriage "designed for a woman and a man.'' The law also specifically rules out recognizing same-sex marriages granted elsewhere, Manchin general counsel Carte Goodwin noted in a Tuesday reply to Dys.
"The Governor believes that West Virginia is currently poised to deflect any outside assault on the definition of marriage,'' Goodwin wrote. "Accordingly, the need to convene an extraordinary session of the Legislature is simply lacking.''
Supporters of a constitutional amendment fear a judge could void the statute. Last week, Connecticut's Supreme Court joined its counterparts in California and Massachusetts in ruling that gay couples have the right to get married.
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