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U.S. Attorney General: Federal Government Will Recognize Michigan's Same-Sex Marriages

UPDATED: 6:00pm

The federal government will recognize the marriages of 300 gay and lesbian couples performed last weekend in Michigan before more weddings were blocked by an appeals court. That means they will be able file joint federal tax returns and share federal government benefits.

“I have determined that the same-sex marriages performed last Saturday in Michigan will be recognized by the federal government,” Holder said in a written statement.  “These families will be eligible for all relevant federal benefits on the same terms as other same-sex marriages.”

Holder noted that he made the same decision when roughly 1,000 gay and lesbian couples were wed in Utah over 17 days before the US Supreme Court issued a stay.

In Michigan, the couples were married over several hours on Saturday in four counties where clerks opened their doors. The US Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals put a stop to it with a stay issued late in the day. Briefs in the appeal are due in May and June with oral arguments sometime after that.

Despite Holder’s decision, Michigan will not follow suit.

“This is not something where it’s necessarily discretionary,” said Gov. Rick Snyder (R).

“The issue is in Michigan, they were legally married on that Saturday. But given the fact the stay came, there was no other real option but to say we have to suspend the benefits.”

But he says the disconnect between the state and federal positions is a problem.

“I appreciate it can be difficult on people, though, because it does raise confusion and challenges,” he said.

For one thing, couples that file joint federal tax returns won’t be able to file corresponding state returns.

The American Civil Liberties Union and other advocates for same-sex marriage say otherwise. They say the 300-plus marriages were legal when they occurred, and the state cannot effectively rescind that.

“The law at the time these people got married was they’re permitted to marry,” said Jay Kaplan of the ACLU.  “The governor’s hands are not tied behind his back.”

Kaplan says the ACLU is ready to go to court to get the state to grant those couples all the rights and privileges of being married while the case is on appeal. That case could be filed in the next week or two.  

BREAKING: 11:00am

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder says the federal government will recognize same-sex marriages performed in Michigan last weekend.

It means those couples will be eligible to file joint federal tax returns and share Social Security benefits. 

More than 300 couples were married Saturday, in the window between a judge’s decision to strike down Michigan’s same-sex marriage ban and an appeals court order that put a stop to more weddings. 

The marriages are still not recognized by the state.

Rick Pluta is Senior Capitol Correspondent for the Michigan Public Radio Network. He has been covering Michigan’s Capitol, government, and politics since 1987. His journalism background includes stints with UPI, The Elizabeth (NJ) Daily Journal, The (Pontiac, MI) Oakland Press, and WJR. He is also a lifelong public radio listener.