The Phnom Penh Post

Australian gay-marriage lobby to push for vote

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ADVOCATES of gay marriage in Australia vowed yesterday to keep fighting for a parliament­ary decision on legalising same-sex unions after a planned referendum was blocked.

Australia’s upper house Senate late Monday rejected a government proposal for a plebiscite of 15 million people on the issue, with the Labor opposition, Greens and crossbench MPs arguing it would be expensive and spark divisive debate.

Several gay senators, including Labor’s Penny Wong and Louise Pratt, made impassione­d pleas against the plan, saying it would denigrate their families and subject them to hate speech.

Many gay rights campaigner­s agree and instead favour a free vote in parliament.

“The plebiscite was a policy that noone will miss, yet wasting time dancing on its grave will not achieve marriage equality,” Australian Marriage Equality chair Alex Greenwich said.

“Now that the prospect of a plebiscite has been defeated, no-one need be distracted by a debate by politician­s on a public vote versus a parliament­ary vote. The path ahead is clear and direct and remains what it has always been, a vote in parliament by our elected representa­tives.”

Debate on gay marriage has gone on for more than a decade in Australia and conservati­ve Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who is a long-time supporter of equal rights, wanted to resolve the issue via a plebiscite on February 11.

He argued that a public vote, costing some A$170 million (US$130 million), would allow all Australian­s to express their view.

Turnbull has not spelled out what he plans to do now, but conservati­ve politician­s have previously warned that defeat for the plebiscite would push the issue off their agenda and delay samesex marriage for years.

Despite strong popular support for marriage equalit y, Australia is seen as lagging behind nations that allow homosexual couples the right to wed.

Same-sex couples can have civil unions or register their relationsh­ips in most states across Australia, but the government does not consider them married under national law.

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