May 31st, 2016
One news source sounded really certain that the Chiapas congress did just that, but now it’s more evident that the Congress merely accepted a report by its Equity and Gender Commission recommending that Chiapas adopt marriage equality, and did not actually approve any changes to Chiapas’s civil code.
Here’s a press release from the National Commission of Human Rights (CNDH) urging the Chiapas congress to act quickly to “harmonize its legal framework of civil order in regard to equal marriage.” Chiapas and Puebla recently changed their marriage laws to restrict marriage to a man-woman relationship, which triggered a thirty-day window in which a new law can be challenged on Constitutional grounds. CNDH has filed suit challenging those two laws, and has been working to encourage those states to rectify their laws before Mexico’s Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation (SCJN) acts on the challenge. SCJN is widely expected to rule in favor of CNDH’s challenge, since it has already done so with a CNDH challenge in Jalisco. According to this press release, CNDH says that they have “established communications with the legislative and executive branches of the state of Chiapas.”
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