Constitutional Repeal of Art. XIV Sec. 6.
SB 459 would let voters repeal the NC constitutional ban on non–man–woman marriages, enabling future recognition or regulation of other domestic unions.
SB 459 would let voters repeal the NC constitutional ban on non–man–woman marriages, enabling future recognition or regulation of other domestic unions.
Status: Passed 1st Reading (introduced Feb 19, 2025)
Subjects: North Carolina Constitution; Elections; Marriage & civil unions; LGBTQ & gender issues; Public
SB 459 proposes to remove from the North Carolina Constitution the provision that defines marriage as only between “one man and one woman” and states that such a union is the only domestic legal union valid or recognized by the State. In short, the bill would repeal the constitution’s gender‑specific definition of marriage and submit that change to voters as a statewide constitutional amendment.
Primary sponsors listed in the bill: Senators Garrett, Grafstein, and Chitlik (per the version provided).
SB 459 seeks voter approval to remove a constitutional ban on recognizing any domestic legal union other than a man–woman marriage. If voters approve the amendment in November 2026, the constitutional restriction would be removed beginning January 1, 2027 — enabling the legislature and courts to recognize or regulate marriages and other domestic legal unions without that constitutional constraint.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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