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Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010
When the Church of England’s bishops defeated a clarification of the Equality Bill’s clause on religious exemption last month it was possible to construct a principled defence of their position. But the campaign to block the celebration of civil partnerships from other denominations’ buildings was wholly indefensible. Last night it failed by a spectacular margin in the House of Lords – 95 to 21; although the bishops’ votes were evenly split: of the serving ones, Bradford voted to block, and Newcastle to permit; of the retired bishops, Lord Harries voted for permission, and Lord Eames, the former Archbishop of Armagh, voted against.
The case in favour as put by Lady Butler-Sloss, who had earlier that evening been accused of putting down homophobic amendments that would have protected Catholic adoption agencies against the law, an accusation she angrily disputed. In this context, she said:
“Same-sex couples can have strong and devoted relationships equal to, but different from, marriage and they may wish to have those relationships sanctified by a religious ceremony. If there are churches and synagogues prepared to do that, why should we stand in their way? They have rights to be loved and rights to have their ceremonies recognised.”
Full Story from The Guardian
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Posted in churches, civil partnerships, gay weddings, house of lords, lesbian weddings, uk, united kingdom, vote | No Responses »
Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010
What happens when Church of England bishops hold unelected seats in the House of Lords? Not surprisingly, they get criticized when they are seen to be protecting the interests of the Church over the interests of the country. This is what has happened during the ongoing debate over the Equality Bill. The Equality Bill is intended “to harmonise discrimination law, and to strengthen the law to support progress on equality.”
Recently in the Equality Bill debates, the bishops fought for and won their special right to retain the right to legally discriminate against gay employees. This has won their unelected presence in the House of Lords a fresh round of criticism, with words like “privileged” and “unaccountable” being frequently used.
Happily, several senior bishops are making an effort at compromise (and perhaps distract from the question of the wisdom of their unelected presence in the House of Lords).
Full Story from Pam’s House Blend
Click here for gay marriage resources in England.
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Posted in church of england, england, equality bill, gay church weddings, house of lords, uk, united kingdom | No Responses »
Wednesday, February 10th, 2010
There was a time when Britain’s conservative party was much like it’s American counterpart: harshly denunciatory and punitive toward gays, and prone to justifying its stance on dubious notions such as the claim that homosexuality is a “lifestyle choice” that might lead to gays trying to “corrupt children.” Indeed, for a quarter-century, a British law–Section 28–made it a criminal offense for schools to “promote” homosexuality or gay and lesbian families–what the law slammed as “pretend families.”
But David Cameron, the Tory politician who is viewed by many as the likely next Prime Minister of Britain, has made it his mission to reach out to gay and lesbian voters, reckoning that plenty of gays share his party’s conservative views–at least, the ones that are not flagrantly anti-gay.
But how sincere is Cameron about wanting what his U.S. counterparts would call a “big tent” that includes GLBT constituents? In an interview published in gay magazine Attitude, journalist Johann Hari asked the question, recalling that until its repeal a decade ago, Cameron was an ardent champion of Section 28. Indeed, in the interview with Cameron, which Hari posted at his own site, the journalist put the question directly to Cameron, who told Hari, “I think now looking back you can see the mistake of Section 28,” a measure that Cameron called “an insult” and “finger-pointing.” Added Cameron, “There’s only one thing worse than making a mistake and that’s not putting your hands up and admitting it.”
Full Story from Edge Boston
Click here for gay marriage resources in England.
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Posted in conservative party, david cameron, Gay Marriage, gay rights, marriage equality, same sex marriage, uk, united kingdom | No Responses »
Friday, February 5th, 2010
THE LAW covering church employment will stay as it is, the Minister for Women and Equality, Harriet Harman, said on Tuesday. She was speaking after the defeat in the Lords of an amendment to the Equality Bill (News, 29 January), which sought to clarify the exemption for religious bodies from the existing legislation, to ensure that it applied only to church ministers.
In a statement, Ms Harman said: “Employment and non-discrimination law applies to religious organisations when they employ people in non-religious jobs in the same way that it does to all other employers. We have never insisted on non-discrimination legislation applying to religious jobs such as being a vicar, a bishop, an imam, or a rabbi.”
She continued: “We thought that it would be helpful for everyone involved to clarify the law, and that is what the amendment that we brought forward aimed to do. That amend ment was rejected. So the law remains as it was.”
Full Story from the Church Times
Click here for gay marriage resources in England.
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Posted in churches, civil partnerships, equality bill, gay rights, uk, united kingdom | No Responses »
Monday, February 1st, 2010
A simultaneous legal challenge to the ban on same-sex marriage and opposite-sex civil partnerships is being prepared by gay human rights group OutRage!, this week.
It comes after heterosexual couple Tom Freeman and Katherine Doyle filed an application for a civil partnership at Islington registry office last November. They were rejected because, under UK law, civil partnerships are open to only same-sex couples. This legal exclusion mirrors the way civil marriage is available solely to heterosexual partners. They say the decision is “discriminatory and perpetuates legal inequality.”
Now, Outrage! has the support of legal expert, Professor Robert Wintemute, Professor of Human Rights Law at Kings College in London, who has agreed to take on the case.
Full Story from the Pink Paper
Click here for gay marriage resources in England.
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Posted in civil partnerships, england, Gay Marriage, lawsuit, marriage equality, same sex marriage, straight couple, uk, united kingdom | No Responses »
Monday, January 25th, 2010
The government is facing allegations of duplicity over changes to the equality bill after a leaked document showed conflicting statements about the position of churches and other religious organisations.
Churches say the government has assured them the equality bill will preserve their “special status”, which allows them to turn down candidates for jobs as ministers or priests if they are actively homosexual, transsexual or, in the Catholic church, if they are women.
Statements in parliament have also presented the government’s position as preserving the existing law for religious organisations. “[The equality bill] will not change the existing legal position regarding churches and employment,” the leader of the House of Lords, Lady Royall, told peers recently.
But the Guardian has learned the government told the European commission it would toughen the law on religious organisations, making it harder for them to avoid equal treatment laws. A “reasoned opinion”, kept secret by the government, threatened the UK with legal action unless the grounds on which religious groups could discriminate were narrowed.
Full Story from The Guardian
Click here for gay marriage resources.
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Posted in catholic, churches, discrimination, england, equality bill, gay, lesbian, special status, uk, united kingdom, women | No Responses »
Monday, January 11th, 2010
A British charity has witnessed a huge surge in gay Muslims fleeing arranged marriages, homophobia and family violence. The Albert Kennedy Trust, an organisation which houses homeless gay teens, has seen an increase in the number of Muslims coming to them for help over the past six months.
“They face threats of physical violence, actual violence and restriction of liberties,” said Trust support worker Annie Southerst, speaking to the BBC. “We’ve had people chased out of the house with knives and we have had issues around young people who had exorcisms planned to get rid of the gay demons, I suppose.
“They come to us because they’re homeless, or in danger of being homeless imminently. We sort out emergency accommodation for them.
Full Story from the Pink Paper: http://news.pinkpaper.com/NewsStory.aspx?id=2234
Click here for gay marriage resources in England.
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Posted in arranged marriages, gay, Gay Marriage, lesbian, marriage equality, muslims, same sex marriage, uk, united kingdom | No Responses »
Monday, January 11th, 2010
Conservative leader David Cameron promised on Monday to offer tax breaks to same-sex couples engaging in civil partnerships, one of a raft of family-friendly measures he hopes will soften his party’s image.
Cameron, who will become prime minister if the Conservatives win a general election due by June, was seeking to bounce back after admitting last week he had “messed up” by appearing to go back on a pledge to give married couples tax breaks.
“We will recognise marriage, whether between a man and a woman, a woman and a woman or a man and a man, in the tax system — and yes, that is a commitment,” he said during a speech at think-tank Demos.
Full Story from Reuters: http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE60A2QG20100111
Click here for gay marriage resources in England.
To subscribe to this blog, use the rss feed on the right, or use the form at right to join our email list. You can also email us at info@purpleunions.com. Or find us on Facebook – just search for Gay Marriage Watch (you’ll see our b/w wedding pic overlooking the Ferry Building and Bay Bridge in SF). We’re also tweeting daily at http://www.twitter.com/gaymarriagewatc.
Posted in civil partnerships, conservative, david cameron, gay couples, lesbian couples, promise, tax breaks, uk, united kingdom | No Responses »
Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009
Four years ago this week, Grainne Close and Shannon Sickles became the first same-sex couple in Great Britain to form a civil partnership, on December 19th 2005. Their union was made possible by the 2004 Civil Partnership Act, implemented to give gay couples the same rights and legal recognition as their straight, married counterparts. But, says human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell, “Civil partnerships are not equality.”
So, four years on, is civil partnership working out?
It was undoubtedly a step in the right direction for gay couples. Not only do civil partnerships grant homosexual couples legal rights, but, more widely, they celebrate gay relationships and validate them in the eyes of society. However, even after four years, there are still plenty of legislative inequalities to iron out.
Full Story from Se7en Magazine: http://se7enmagazine.com/the-issue/39-europe/813-can-we-make-civil-partnership-work-.html
Click here for gay marriage resources in England.
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Posted in civil partnerships, england, Gay Marriage, marriage equality, northern ireland, scotland, uk, united kingdom, wales | No Responses »
Monday, December 21st, 2009
Today marks the fourth anniversary of civil partnerships in England and Wales. Although Scotland celebrated its first civil partnership on December 20th 2005 due to a misunderstanding over the date, today marks the fourth anniversary for gay couples in England and Wales.
The very first to take place was on December 4th 2005, for a gay couple where one partner was terminally ill.
Four years ago today, three couples simultaneously tied the knot at 8am in Brighton – the exact time the legislation came into effect. The first three couples were Rev Debbie Gaston and Elaine Gaston, Gino Meriano and Mike Ullett and Roger Lewis and his partner Keith Willmott-Goodall.
Full Story from Pink News: http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2009/12/21/happy-fourth-anniversary-for-civil-partnerships/
Click here for gay marriage resources in England.
To subscribe to this blog, use the rss feed on the right, or use the form at right to join our email list. You can also email us at info@purpleunions.com. Or find us on Facebook – just search for Gay Marriage Watch (you’ll see our b/w wedding pic overlooking the Ferry Building and Bay Bridge in SF). We’re also tweeting daily at http://www.twitter.com/gaymarriagewatc.
Posted in civil partnerships, england, fourth anniversary, Gay Marriage, scotland, uk, united kingdom, wales | No Responses »