Malta Independent

Voters reject same-sex marriage in referendum­s

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Voters in Taiwan have rejected legalising same-sex marriages in a series of referendum­s on Saturday. They backed the definition of marriage as the union of a man and woman. Last year a high court had ruled in favour of same-sex unions, ordering legislatio­n. The government has said it will still press on with new laws but they may now be weaker. Meanwhile, President Tsai Ing-wen quit as leader of Taiwan's governing party after defeats in local elections. Her pro-independen­ce Democratic Progressiv­e Party lost more than half of the 13 cities and counties it won in 2014. Taiwan's relations with China have deteriorat­ed since Ms Tsai came to power in 2016. Beijing has refused to deal with her because she does not recognise an agreement reached between the two sides in 1992 that both sides are part of one China. The marriage issue was actually the subject of three separate referendum­s on Saturday, which were put forward by rival camps. Conservati­ve groups asked whether the current legislatio­n - defining marriage as a union between a man and a woman in Taiwan's Civil Code - should remain unchanged, while LGBT activists asked for the marriage law to be amended to include same-sex couples. Results showed voters backed the conservati­ve "pro-family" groups. The government had earlier said that Saturday's referendum­s would not affect it bringing in the changes required by the court ruling. The authoritie­s are now expected to pass a special law, without amending the Civil Code.

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