Posted on Jun 8, 2022
Pride Month 2022: Advocates for LGBTQ Veterans seek to update VA’s governing statute to recognize same-sex couples
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It’s been nine years since the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which among other expansions of gay rights, enabled same-sex spouses of military Veterans to obtain the federal benefits they’d earned. And it’s been seven years since the high court ruled in Obergefell v. Hodges that same-sex marriage is a fundamental right in the United States.
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) abided by those rulings in granting benefits and services to eligible Veterans and their spouses in same-sex marriages, including surviving spouses. However, VA law to this day defines a Veteran spouse as “a person of the opposite sex who is a wife or a husband.”
That needs to change so that VA’s guiding statute reflects the current law of the land, according to a group of House lawmakers and Veterans’ service and advocacy organizations representing families of the fallen and minority members of the military.
The Supporting All Veteran Families Act (H.R. 6849), a bill introduced in the House this spring by Democratic Reps. Marie Newman of Illinois, Mondaire Jones of New York and Kaialiʻi Kahele of Hawaii, would do exactly that. The measure would formally recognize lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and/or questioning Americans and same-sex couples under VA’s marriage law for spouses or surviving spouses of Veterans.
“As public leaders in our nation, each of us has a moral obligation to ensure that all LGBTQ+ Veterans and their families receive the hard-earned benefits they deserve for protecting us and serving our country honorably,” Newman said in the March 3 news release. “The time to remove this discriminatory language is long overdue, which is why I am proud to partner with my colleagues on this critical legislation that will clarify that supporting LGBTQ+ Veterans and their families is the official, written policy of the VA.”
New uncertainty about the security of constitutional rights
Since Obergefell, VA has made clear in policy directives that same-sex Veteran couples and their children are eligible to receive spousal benefits. On forms, references to “husband” and “wife” now refer to a “spouse” instead. VA encourages the roughly 1 million LGBT Veterans in the United States to apply for benefits and services, and to tap into LGBT Veteran Care Coordinators positioned at every VA health care facility (https://news.va.gov/89602/vba-celebrates-veterans-pride-month).
Nevertheless, the lawmakers said in the statement, Congress should still pass legislation to make sure VA’s statute fully recognizes same-sex Veteran spouses in law.
As Pride Month celebrations take place this month, some also worry about percolating legal threats to marriage equality rights and to other constitutional protections many Americans may have considered secure. That’s due to a recently leaked Supreme Court draft opinion indicating that a majority of the justices could vote this summer to overturn Roe v. Wade, the nearly 50-year-old precedent holding that the U.S. Constitution protects a woman’s right to an abortion.
Even though opinion polls matter little in swaying the way the Supreme Court rules, a Gallup poll released on June 1 found that an all-time-high of 71% of Americans support same-sex marriage. (Just 27% of Americans supported this right when Gallup asked this question in 1996, according to the pollster.) Similarly, a Gallup poll from June 2 found that 63% of Americans said they thought overturning Roe and allowing each state to decide whether to allow, restrict or ban abortion would be a “bad thing,” the pollster said.
TAPS president and founder: VA marriage language is “archaic”
Among the groups joining the House lawmakers’ statement in support of H.R. 6849, which would expand VA’s definition of marriage to recognize all same-sex couples, is the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors (TAPS), a nonprofit VSO. TAPS has since 1994 operated programs here and abroad for adult and youth survivors of the death of a military or Veteran loved one. Last year the group made supportive connections with more than 9,000 newly bereaved family members.
Bonnie Carroll, the organization’s president and founder, said in the news release that the “hold yourself out to be married” clause in the VA law is “archaic,” and it can wind up causing “many surviving spouses to live in fear of losing their survivor benefits when moving forward in their lives.”
That’s because so many VA benefits and services — education, health care, home loans, pensions and more — are tied to a Veteran’s marital status, including a Veteran’s “spouse” or “surviving spouse.”
Carroll said TAPS appreciated that “this bill ensures same-sex surviving spouses are always treated equally, the same as opposite-sex surviving spouses, and in the event of a Veteran’s death the surviving spouse is entitled to the same VA benefits.”
Lindsay Church, executive director of Minority Veterans of American, added in the statement that it is “beyond time” that the law is updated, noting that “LGBTQ Americans have been serving in our military throughout history, often sacrificing their rights and identities to do so.”
H.R. 6849 is pending before the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs.
Learn more
Read more about VA benefits and services for LGBT Veterans at https://news.va.gov/89602/vba-celebrates-veterans-pride-month
Read VA’s policy guidance and frequently asked questions related to same-sex marriages at https://www.va.gov/opa/marriage
Read the news release on H.R. 6849 at https://newman.house.gov/posts/reps-newman-jones-kahele-introduce-bill-to-recognize-same-sex-marriages-under-veteran-affairs-marriage-laws
View the recent Gallup polls at https://news.gallup.com/poll/393197/same-sex-marriage-support-inches-new-high.aspx and at https://news.gallup.com/poll/393275/steady-americans-not-roe-wade-overturned.aspx
The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) abided by those rulings in granting benefits and services to eligible Veterans and their spouses in same-sex marriages, including surviving spouses. However, VA law to this day defines a Veteran spouse as “a person of the opposite sex who is a wife or a husband.”
That needs to change so that VA’s guiding statute reflects the current law of the land, according to a group of House lawmakers and Veterans’ service and advocacy organizations representing families of the fallen and minority members of the military.
The Supporting All Veteran Families Act (H.R. 6849), a bill introduced in the House this spring by Democratic Reps. Marie Newman of Illinois, Mondaire Jones of New York and Kaialiʻi Kahele of Hawaii, would do exactly that. The measure would formally recognize lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and/or questioning Americans and same-sex couples under VA’s marriage law for spouses or surviving spouses of Veterans.
“As public leaders in our nation, each of us has a moral obligation to ensure that all LGBTQ+ Veterans and their families receive the hard-earned benefits they deserve for protecting us and serving our country honorably,” Newman said in the March 3 news release. “The time to remove this discriminatory language is long overdue, which is why I am proud to partner with my colleagues on this critical legislation that will clarify that supporting LGBTQ+ Veterans and their families is the official, written policy of the VA.”
New uncertainty about the security of constitutional rights
Since Obergefell, VA has made clear in policy directives that same-sex Veteran couples and their children are eligible to receive spousal benefits. On forms, references to “husband” and “wife” now refer to a “spouse” instead. VA encourages the roughly 1 million LGBT Veterans in the United States to apply for benefits and services, and to tap into LGBT Veteran Care Coordinators positioned at every VA health care facility (https://news.va.gov/89602/vba-celebrates-veterans-pride-month).
Nevertheless, the lawmakers said in the statement, Congress should still pass legislation to make sure VA’s statute fully recognizes same-sex Veteran spouses in law.
As Pride Month celebrations take place this month, some also worry about percolating legal threats to marriage equality rights and to other constitutional protections many Americans may have considered secure. That’s due to a recently leaked Supreme Court draft opinion indicating that a majority of the justices could vote this summer to overturn Roe v. Wade, the nearly 50-year-old precedent holding that the U.S. Constitution protects a woman’s right to an abortion.
Even though opinion polls matter little in swaying the way the Supreme Court rules, a Gallup poll released on June 1 found that an all-time-high of 71% of Americans support same-sex marriage. (Just 27% of Americans supported this right when Gallup asked this question in 1996, according to the pollster.) Similarly, a Gallup poll from June 2 found that 63% of Americans said they thought overturning Roe and allowing each state to decide whether to allow, restrict or ban abortion would be a “bad thing,” the pollster said.
TAPS president and founder: VA marriage language is “archaic”
Among the groups joining the House lawmakers’ statement in support of H.R. 6849, which would expand VA’s definition of marriage to recognize all same-sex couples, is the Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors (TAPS), a nonprofit VSO. TAPS has since 1994 operated programs here and abroad for adult and youth survivors of the death of a military or Veteran loved one. Last year the group made supportive connections with more than 9,000 newly bereaved family members.
Bonnie Carroll, the organization’s president and founder, said in the news release that the “hold yourself out to be married” clause in the VA law is “archaic,” and it can wind up causing “many surviving spouses to live in fear of losing their survivor benefits when moving forward in their lives.”
That’s because so many VA benefits and services — education, health care, home loans, pensions and more — are tied to a Veteran’s marital status, including a Veteran’s “spouse” or “surviving spouse.”
Carroll said TAPS appreciated that “this bill ensures same-sex surviving spouses are always treated equally, the same as opposite-sex surviving spouses, and in the event of a Veteran’s death the surviving spouse is entitled to the same VA benefits.”
Lindsay Church, executive director of Minority Veterans of American, added in the statement that it is “beyond time” that the law is updated, noting that “LGBTQ Americans have been serving in our military throughout history, often sacrificing their rights and identities to do so.”
H.R. 6849 is pending before the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs.
Learn more
Read more about VA benefits and services for LGBT Veterans at https://news.va.gov/89602/vba-celebrates-veterans-pride-month
Read VA’s policy guidance and frequently asked questions related to same-sex marriages at https://www.va.gov/opa/marriage
Read the news release on H.R. 6849 at https://newman.house.gov/posts/reps-newman-jones-kahele-introduce-bill-to-recognize-same-sex-marriages-under-veteran-affairs-marriage-laws
View the recent Gallup polls at https://news.gallup.com/poll/393197/same-sex-marriage-support-inches-new-high.aspx and at https://news.gallup.com/poll/393275/steady-americans-not-roe-wade-overturned.aspx
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