Colorado gay marriage legal
The Freedom to Marry is on the November Ballot
One Colorado, in partnership with Freedom to Marry Colorado Coalition, worked closely with legislators to successfully move through resolution SCR24-003 during the 2024 Legislative Session that refers a measure to the 2024 ballot to repeal the constitutional exclude on same-sex marriage (Amendment 43).
The question will be, “Shall there be an amendment to the Colorado constitution to delete the ban on identical sex marriage?”
Why it matters:
- We cannot rest on the assumption that Obergefell is assured.
- We call for to take action to #RemoveTheBan - Amendment 43 - and protect the freedom to marry in Colorado.
The historical context:
Colorado boasts some of the strongest protections for the LGBTQ+ community in the country. From Jude’s Regulation to (2019) to Marlo’s Law (2022), One Colorado is proud of the work we’ve done over the past decade to advance Colorado’s LGBTQ+ protective policies. While we are no longer the “hate state”, Colorado is one of 30 states that still has a statewide ban on same-sex marriage in the constitution.
The stakes:
Colorado voters narrowly passed Amendment 43 in 2006, and the constitutional language currently
Protecting the Freedom to Marry
Protecting the Freedom to Marry
One Colorado Celebrates Passage of SCR24-003 to Repeal CO Constitutional Ban on Homosexual Marriage
By
Gillian Ford, Communications Director
Denver, CO – Today, One Colorado celebrates the passage of SCR24-003, “Protecting The Freedom to Marry,” a referred measure to repeal the ban on same-sex marriage (Amendment 43) that Colorado currently has in the State Constitution. One Colorado will sustain to work with supporters and coalition members to prioritize protecting the independence to marry in 2024 as SCR24-003 now goes to the voters for the November 2024 ballot.
Passed narrowly in 2006, voters defined marriage as between one man and one woman. If the landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling Obergefell v. Hodges is overturned, Coloradans have no state protections for any same-sex couple who wants to get married in the future. If passed, the measure would show up on the 2024 General Election ballot.
The bill was sponsored by Senator Joann Ginal (SD-14), and Representatives Brianna Titone (HD-27) and Alex Valdez (HD-5).
“Coloradans overwhelmingly support the freedom to marry,”saidNadine Bridges, MSW (she, her, hers), One Colorado’s Executive Director. “.