Australia will soon become the 26th nation to formalise same-sex
marriage if the postal survey conducted for the citizens is anything to
go by.
The survey is expected to pave the way for Australian Parliament to take up the matter next month.
Around 62 per cent of registered voters in Australia expressed
support for same-sex marriage, the Australian Bureau of Statistics said
Wednesday.
The country’s Conservative government said that in the event of a
successful non-binding voluntary postal survey, a bill legislating
marriage equality would be considered in the final two-week session of
the Parliament, set to end its current session Dec. 7.
Had voters rejected the plan, the issue would have been kept off Parliament’s agenda, possibly for years to come.
Conservative Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who supported the
proposal, called upon lawmakers to do the same, citing the public’s
“overwhelming” support.
“They voted ‘yes’ for fairness, they voted ‘yes’ for commitment, they voted ‘yes’ for love,” Turnbull told reporters.
“Now it is up to us here in the Parliament of Australia to get on
with it, to get on with the job the Australian people have tasked us to
do and get this done this year before Christmas — that must be our
commitment.”
Some lawmakers have promised to try to stop the gay marriage bill
despite the survey’s results, saying they would vote down the bill once
it reaches Parliament’s floor.
Amid talks of potential boycotts and refusals to provide services to
gay couples trying to get married, a group of Conservative lawmakers
proposed a bill Monday that would strengthen religious freedoms.
“I don’t think anyone who voted in this postal survey wants to see
their fellow Australians put up on hate-speech charges,” said Lyle
Shelton, a spokesman for Coalition for Marriage.
“We need to protect freedom of speech, freedom of conscience and also freedom of religion.”
Most lawmakers, however, were expected to back the legalization. One
senator, Dean Smith, has proposed a bill – favoured by the prime
minister – that would rule out any compromise that could result in
anti-LGBT discrimination.
“If there are amendments, let’s see them. But let’s be clear about
this: Australians did not participate in a survey to have one
discrimination plank removed, to have other planks of discrimination
piled upon them,” the senator told reporters.
Source: Fox News
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