Three separate lawsuits have been filed with the state’s supreme court arguing that a simple majority of voters alone do not have the legal authority to change the constitution to restrict the rights of a minority group.
But if the lawsuits fail, Equality California executive director Geoffrey Kors said supporters of gay marriage would mount a signature drive in 2010 for a ballot initiative to overturn the ban.
"We will go back to the ballot only after we have exhausted our legal avenues and after we have a majority of voters with us," Kors told the AP. "We hope we don't have to go back to the ballot. These things shouldn't be decided by voters."
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