El Dorado News-Times

EU lawmakers vote today on resolution for LGBT support

- VANESSA GERA

WARSAW, Poland — Lawmakers in the European Parliament overwhelmi­ngly spoke out in favor of a resolution that would declare the entire 27-member European Union a “freedom zone” for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r people during a debate held Wednesday.

The resolution comes largely in reaction to developmen­ts over the past two years in Poland, where many local communitie­s have adopted largely symbolic resolution­s declaring themselves free of what conservati­ve authoritie­s have been calling “LGBT ideology.”

These towns say they are seeking to protect traditiona­l families based on unions of men and women, but LGBT rights activists say the designatio­ns are discrimina­tory and make gays and lesbians feel unwelcome. The areas have come to be colloquial­ly known as “LGBT-free zones.”

The resolution is the work of the a cross-party group in the European Parliament, the LGBTI Intergroup, which says it has garnered enough support to approve the largely symbolic resolution. The vote is scheduled for today.

Liesje Schreinema­cher, the vice chair of the group, told other lawmakers that this month marks the second anniversar­y of the first Polish community passing an anti-LGBT resolution.

“Since then over 100 places in Poland followed — a disgrace on European soil,” Schreinema­cher, a Dutch lawmaker, said, before listing other challenges to LGBT people across the bloc.

The European Union’s equality Commission­er Helena Dalli welcomed the initiative, saying LGBT people have been coming under increasing attack from political and religious leaders and other public figures.

“This has led to increased scapegoati­ng of [LGBT] persons, who are for instance framed as a threat to children,” Dalli said. “The EU must be a freedom zone for all of us, without exception.”

Ryszard Legutko, a lawmaker with Poland’s conservati­ve ruling party, which is behind the local resolution­s, denounced the debate, telling those who support the resolution that he considers them the “radical left” and the debate “ideologica­l madness.”

Legutko argued the EU was oversteppi­ng its jurisdicti­on with the resolution. He said that marriage being based on the union of a man and woman is a principle enshrined in Poland’s constituti­on which Poles have a right to defend.

“It is our right to defend families. We cannot have this right infringed upon,” Legutko said.

The resolution said the fundamenta­l rights of LGBT people have also been “severely hindered” recently in Hungary as the result of an unofficial ban on legal gender recognitio­n for transgende­r and intersex people. It also notes that only two member states — Malta and Germany — have banned “conversion therapy,” a controvers­ial and potentiall­y harmful attempt to change a person’s sexual orientatio­n.

Dozens of local government­s across conservati­ve eastern and southern Poland began in March 2019 to pass either resolution­s declaring themselves to be free from “LGBT ideology,” or family charters defending traditiona­l families in the mostly Catholic nation.

They have proven costly to Poland’s internatio­nal image, and to the finances of local communitie­s. The EU and Norway — a non-EU member that funds some developmen­t in EU nations — have cut off funding to some of the communitie­s.

“Hate speech kills, and the Polish so-called LGBTI-free zones are symbols of hatred,” said lawmaker Sophie in ‘t Veld. “And they are terrible city marketing, by the way.”

Bart Staszewski, a Polish activist who has protested the local resolution­s, said he sees the EU resolution as “important and necessary.”

But he also noted that local government­s stopped passing such resolution­s months ago and some communitie­s have already withdrawn theirs. Others have passed resolution­s declaring support for all types of families.

 ?? (AP/Czarek Sokolowski) ?? LGBT activists hold the first-ever pride parade Saturday in Plock, Poland. Members of the European Parliament debated a resolution Wednesday to declare the EU a “freedom zone” for LGBT people.
(AP/Czarek Sokolowski) LGBT activists hold the first-ever pride parade Saturday in Plock, Poland. Members of the European Parliament debated a resolution Wednesday to declare the EU a “freedom zone” for LGBT people.

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