After the state’s ban on homosexual marriage was lifted in 2014, advocates took a breath. However greater than a decade later, with Obergefell now in danger, there’s nonetheless extra work to be accomplished.
The Portland Delight Parade and Pageant in June 2019.
(Diego Diaz / Getty)
In 2014, one 12 months earlier than Obergefell v. Hodges, a US district court docket choice in Geiger v. Kitzhaber lastly lifted the ban on homosexual marriage in Oregon. Advocates had been gathering signatures for a statewide poll measure, however dropped the campaign as county officers started issuing marriage licenses to same-sex {couples}. “We’re assured that the liberty to marry is safe in Oregon and that we don’t want to maneuver ahead with the poll measure,” stated Oregon United for Marriage after the ruling. “It’s time to have a good time this victory.”
The advocates who had labored tirelessly on the difficulty took a breath. Marriage equality was lastly protected throughout Oregon—or in order that they thought.
Greater than a decade later, in mild of a federal frenzy of funds cuts and worrying Supreme Courtroom rulings, advocates concern what would possibly come subsequent, together with the prospect that Obergefell may quickly be overturned. Though the Geiger choice allowed homosexual marriage within the state, the Oregon structure nonetheless maintains that “solely a wedding between one man and one lady shall be legitimate or legally acknowledged as a wedding” in Article 15 Part 5A.
“Now we’re seeing there’s extra work to be accomplished,” stated Gaby Gardiner of Fundamental Rights Oregon. “The struggle isn’t over. We nonetheless have marriage outlined as a person and our ladies in [the state] Structure.”
The statewide “Equal Rights for All” marketing campaign goals to amend the nondiscrimination clause within the Oregon structure with extra inclusive, particular language, guaranteeing reproductive entry, gender-affirming care, and marriage equality. “It’s not fully clear what would occur with marriage equality in Oregon if [Obergefell] had been overturned,” stated Blair Stenvick, communications supervisor at Fundamental Rights Oregon. “However we do know that marriage equality right here can be in danger, and the query would probably need to be found out within the courts. Our modification would offer readability.”
Since a poll measure should be submitted as one concern, the by means of line for these subjects is equal rights. “Till our rights to non-public freedom and bodily autonomy are protected within the Oregon structure,” the marketing campaign writes on its website, “we’re at all times only one election or one unhealthy US Supreme Courtroom choice away from dropping the appropriate to abortion, gender-affirming care, and marriage equality in Oregon.”
To get onto the November 2026 poll, the initiative—launched by Fundamental Rights Oregon, the American Civil Liberties Union, and Deliberate Parenthood—wants round 156,000 signatures from voters by summer time 2026. (As a precaution, the marketing campaign is aiming for greater than 200,000.) To this point, in keeping with Gardiner, 40,000 signatures have been gathered as dozens of organizations throughout Oregon have endorsed the marketing campaign. “We’re feeling actually good about the place we’re at, particularly as a result of these [signatures] had been all collected by volunteers,” stated Stenvick.
The marketing campaign has served as each a authorized and symbolic assertion for the various queer individuals who dwell in Portland, typically searching for refuge from social persecution. “Lots of people come [to Portland] from different states, as a result of it’s a little bit bit extra open right here,” stated Haydyn Davila, an organizing intern for Fundamental Rights Oregon. However the Equal Rights for All marketing campaign takes a broader method than simply marriage equality. “The wedding marketing campaign was very singularly targeted on some members of our communities and never all members,” Gardiner stated. “We’re not one-dimensional. There’s a large scope of intersectionality inside our communities, of parents who’re immigrants, who’re transgender, who’ve disabilities. Giving everybody their proper to non-public autonomy and selection is absolutely essential.”
At first, after the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the group tried to get the “Equal Rights for All” modification handed by means of legislative referral. In 2023, Senate majority chief Kate Lieber launched the modification to the Structure beneath the identical premise of defending same-sex marriage, abortion, and gender-affirming care. “We actually thought that, on the time, we had a slam-dunk concern,” Gardiner stated. The modification made it by means of the preliminary Committee on Guidelines voting, however finally died to finish a six-week Republican walkout over measures surrounding abortion, gender-affirming care, and gun regulation.
As an alternative, Fundamental Rights Oregon, the ACLU, and Deliberate Parenthood collaboratively took the measure straight to the constituents, saying the marketing campaign as a proposed poll measure in June 2024. “What we need to do is have a marketing campaign that builds momentum,” stated Gardiner, “to get individuals to know the significance of bodily autonomy and proper to privateness.”
Since then, signature assortment materialized and has created a grassroots community of volunteers throughout the state—from Portland Delight occasions and No Kings demonstrations to small-town gala’s—together with Olivia Han, a 16-year-old highschool pupil, who has been amassing signatures at her native farmers market along with her schoolwork. Though advocacy organizations in Portland haven’t any scarcity of labor—particularly with Trump’s risk to deploy the Nationwide Guard—the marketing campaign continues to be a central focus. “It’s true, tangible change,” Han stated. “It’s actually pushing for the rights and for the equality of all individuals.”

