National Post

U. K. UPSET AFTER ISLAND TERRITORY REVERSES SAME-SEX MARRIAGE LAW

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LONDON The U. K. government expressed disappoint­ment Thursday that Bermuda has abolished same- sex marriage, but said it would have been wrong to overturn the decision by the British island territory.

Bermuda’s Senate and House of Assembly passed legislatio­n replacing same- sex marriage with domestic partnershi­ps in December, and the island’s U.K.-appointed governor, John Rankin, signed it into law Wednesday.

British Prime Minister Theresa May’s spokesman, James Slack, said Britain was “seriously disappoint­ed” by the decision, which reverses a 2017 court ruling legalizing gay marriage. But he said it would not have been right for Britain to block the move.

He said the bill “has been democratic­ally passed by the Parliament of Bermuda, and our relationsh­ip with the overseas territorie­s is based on partnershi­p and respect for their right to democratic self-government.”

Some opposition politician­s criticized the government, saying Britain should have intervened to prevent the change, which they called discrimina­tory.

Labour Party foreign affairs spokeswoma­n Helen Goodman said the legislatio­n was “shameful” and “turns same- sex couples into second-class citizens.”

Foreign Office Minister Harriett Baldwin said “after full and careful considerat­ion” the government had decided not to block the legislatio­n.

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