MADISON, Wis. — Gay rights advocates hailed a pair of U.S. Supreme Court rulings Wednesday supporting same-sex couples as groundbreaking victories, but the decisions don't affect Wisconsin's gay marriage ban or require the state to recognize gay couples who wed in other states.
The high court ruled that legally married gay Americans are eligible for federal tax, health and pension benefits. The court also let stand a lower court finding that California's gay marriage ban is unconstitutional.
But the court didn't address the merits of California's ban and didn't issue any sweeping conclusions for or against same-sex marriage. The court also left alone a provision of federal law that allows states to ignore a same-sex union from elsewhere. Thirty-five states, including Wisconsin, prohibit gay marriage, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
Still, gay rights advocates praised the rulings.
"As we celebrate this momentous occasion, we must continue to move forward and ensure all loving couples are treated as equals," said U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan, a Madison Democrat who is gay and married his partner in Canada in 2006. "I am now more confident than ever that full marriage equality is a question not of if, but when."
Wisconsin conservatives, though, say the rulings leave states free to address gay marriage as they see fit and the decisions don't change things here.
"Our marriage protection amendment in this state is still valid and will continue to be," said Julaine Appling, president of the conservative group Wisconsin Family Action. "Wisconsin voters adopted it. Nothing in (the rulings) said we can't do that."
Republicans pushed through an amendment to the Wisconsin Constitution in 2006 banning same-sex marriage. Three years later Democratic lawmakers created a domestic partner registry that affords same-sex couples who sign on a host of legal rights. About 1,800 couples were on the registry at the end of 2011, according to the latest data from the state Department of Health Services.