Biden: "Today is a good day": Gay marriage is now safe before the Supreme Court

Even if the Supreme Court were to overturn its earlier verdict, same-sex couples can marry in the United States, that's current law now.

Biden: "Today is a good day": Gay marriage is now safe before the Supreme Court

Even if the Supreme Court were to overturn its earlier verdict, same-sex couples can marry in the United States, that's current law now. Things might never have gotten this far if then-Vice President Biden hadn't rushed forward in an interview in 2012.

US President Joe Biden signed into law a law protecting gay marriage. "Today is a good day," Biden said at a ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House in front of a crowd of invited guests. "Today America is taking a most important step toward equality, liberty and justice, not just for some but for all."

The US would become a nation in which "decency, dignity and love are recognized, honored and protected," the US Democrat said before signing the law called "Respect for Marriage Act". - about: law for the respect of marriage - set. The ceremony was attended by numerous politicians as well as representatives of the LGBTQ community. Cyndi Lauper and Sam Smith provided the music.

The US Congress finally passed the same-sex marriage law last week. It requires all states to recognize marriages that have been entered into and are valid in another state. However, this does not mean that all states must allow same-sex marriages in the future. A law already classified as unconstitutional, which defines marriage as a bond between a man and a woman, will also be deleted.

In 2015, the US Supreme Court ruled that same-sex couples have the right to marry. However, after the Supreme Court, which had increasingly moved to the right in recent years, abolished the nationwide basic right to abortions that had been in force for almost 50 years in June, fears grew that same-sex marriage could also be in danger. The arch-conservative constitutional judge Clarence Thomas had already questioned the fundamental judgment on same-sex marriage in a commentary on the abolition of the fundamental right to abortion.

The House of Representatives therefore voted in July to enshrine gay marriage in law in order to secure it independently of a possible future decision by the Supreme Court. The bill then passed the Senate in November before being passed by a final vote in the House of Representatives last week. A large majority of the US population -- more than 70 percent, according to a summer poll -- supports same-sex marriage. The religious right, however, is firmly opposed to gay marriage.

Ten years ago, Biden had already caused a stir when he - then still as Vice President - openly spoke out in favor of gay marriage as the highest-ranking US government official up to that point. He has absolutely no problem with "the fact that men who marry men, women who marry women and heterosexual men who marry women have exactly the same rights," said the devout Catholic in a 2012 television interview. The only question is, "Who do you love and will you be loyal to the person you love?"

Biden's comments hit like a bomb at the time, because President Barack Obama, who was preparing to run for a second term at the time, had not yet publicly spoken out in favor of gay marriage and was still looking for the best strategy on the politically sensitive issue. Biden's apparently spontaneous interview statements put pressure on Obama to show his colors. A short time later, the President spoke out in favor of gay marriage in an interview.

Biden jokingly addressed his interview at the time on Tuesday. He once got into "difficulties" with his statements, the president said with a laugh. Biden made history after entering the White House when, in Pete Buttigieg, who was responsible for transport, he made his first ministerial position as an openly gay man.