Same-sex marriage supporters disagreed with the procreation argument and proposed
Initiative 957 to challenge the court's assertion. The initiative was created by the Washington Defense of Marriage Alliance, an
LGBT rights group. The Washington Defense of Marriage Alliance hoped to use this to create a
test case to have a court strike down the measure and highlight what they perceived as the weakness of the
Andersen decision's logic. The initiative was filed on January 10, 2007, A bill to legalize same-sex marriage passed the legislature and was signed by Governor
Christine Gregoire on February 13, 2012, but opponents gathered enough signatures to force a
voter referendum on the legislation. Voters approved the proposed legislation in November 2012, making same-sex marriage legal as of December 6 of that year. Legal analysts noted the 2015 U.S. Supreme Court decision that legalized gay marriage everywhere closely tracked the arguments put forward in 2004 in the first trial court ruling in the country that a state defense of marriage act was unconstitutional, Judge Downing's 26-page opinion for the King County Superior Court issued August 4, 2004 -- and overturned on appeal -- that the government had no basis to argue that it banned gay marriage to benefit children. "All of this may sound obvious after the fact," wrote The Seattle Times columnist Danny Westneat, "But at the time Judge Downing's ruling marked a crucial shift in the debate on gay marriage. It’s when it started to be more about love and family, rather than a civil contract for tax or inheritance purposes." ==See also==