annefan said:
Back to the original link posted, though, I'm not certain that federal government involvement is the answer either.
I was hoping to see if anybody picked up on the core problem that I sensed. However since no one has I will go ahead and bring it up.
Family law, is something that is reserved for the states under the US constitution. The federal government doesn't actually have the POWER to make laws in that area (the feds have very limited power under the constitution).
The feds have PROPOSED laws, like the UCCJEA, however in order for those laws to be enforceable in any state, the state has to agree to adopt them. The feds often use financial incentives to get states to adopted proposed legislation.
This case is based entirely on federal law. Every citation they are making to buttress the case comes from federal code, or the US constitution. There is no discussion of individual state constitutions or of state statutes.
Therefore, it would seem to me that the federal courts might not be able to hear this case...and if they can, then the individual states will fight it hard...not on its merits, but as an infringement on state's rights.
It seems to me, that if they were going to do this, that it should have been filed in the individual state courts, and should have been tailored to each state based on the state's constitution and statutes, using the bill of rights from the US constitution, but not using federal code.
What do others think about that issue?