Opponents of the Iowa Supreme Court ruling last week allowing same-sex marriages said Friday that they would step up pressure on state lawmakers to block the marriages through a constitutional amendment and predicted political fallout for Democratic state leaders, including Gov. Chet Culver, if they did not join the opposition. In Iowa, State Representative Christopher C. Rants, back to camera, talked to fellow Republicans about their effort to put through a constitutional amendment blocking same-sex marriage. ‘This isn’t over, not even for this year, said Bryan English, a spokesman for the Iowa Family Policy Center, which encouraged hundreds of opponents of same-sex marriages to meet and pray outside the State Capitol in Des Moines this week, and plans a similar rally next week. ‘Everyday folks who get up and go to work were shocked at what happened here, and it’s really gotten people activated. Since the court ruled unanimously on April 3 that an Iowa law banning the marriages was unconstitutional, opponents have been searching for a way to begin the process of amending the state’s Constitution to define marriage as between a man and a woman. Because, under Iowa law, that process would take two […]

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