Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Aussie Vote

From the DW:
"Australian PM proposes same-sex marriage vote"

The Australian government has announced plans to hold a plebiscite early next year on whether to legalize same-sex marriage. Critics warn the vote is an expensive exercise that will only give a platform to homophobia. Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull announced he wound introduce legislation to Parliament later this week to hold the vote on February 11, 2017. "Our job is to ensure that the Australian people have the opportunity to express their view and to do so in a manner that is fair and impartial," Turnbull told a press conference in Canberra on Tuesday. The proposed poll would ask voters the question: "Should the law be changed to allow same-sex couples to marry?" Such a plebiscite is not legally binding, and it would ultimately be up to lawmakers to decide whether to change the law. Turnbull's conservative Liberal Party does not have a majority in the Senate, which means he will need the support of the opposition Labor party in order to pass the bill. Two minor parties that support same-sex marriage have already indicated they won't back the initiative, while Labor has said it will wait on the detail of the plebiscite legislation before taking a position. Labor leader Bill Shorten has previously hinted that he would block the proposal, which he has described as a "taxpayer-funded platform for homophobia." On Tuesday, he called instead for a parliamentary vote to make marriage equality a reality immediately without resorting to a plebiscite. Another Labor lawmaker Graham Perrett said the plebiscite had "a snowflake's chance in hell" of getting through the Senate. There have also been some questions raised from within Turnbull's own party. Liberal gay senator Dean Smith announced that he would not back the plebiscite because he wants Parliament to decide on a law change without the divisive public debate. The government has set aside AUD 170 million ($127 million; 113 million euros) for the proposed vote. Polls show that most Australians support gay marriage. But plebiscites and referendums in the past have rarely led to change in the country. Currently, same-sex couples in most Australian states can have civil unions or register their relationships, but they are not considered married under federal law.


^ I used to think that states and countries should hold votes on whether or not to allow gay people to marry. I have since come to see that to do so (ie. hold a vote) would be the same as to have held a vote during desegregation in the American South in the 1950s-1960s on whether black people should have the same civil rights as everyone else. Gay people around the world deserve the same civil rights (including marriage) as everyone else and to hold a vote to determine if they should be given that basic right is wrong. They should just be given the same rights without a vote or any hesitation. Right is right. Period. ^


http://www.dw.com/en/australian-pm-proposes-same-sex-marriage-vote/a-19548442

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