Weekend Herald

No more brides, grooms

‘ Do you, party A, take you, party B?’

- By Simon Collins simon.collins@nzherald.co.nz

The words ‘‘ bride’’ and ‘‘ bridegroom’’ will disappear from official marriage forms if Parliament votes, as expected, on Wednesday to legalise same- sex marriages.

A department­al briefing paper to the select committee that considered the bill said marriage forms would have to be changed if it passed.

‘‘ This includes, for example, changing the headings on the notice-of- intended- marriage form to allow for parties of the same sex ( i. e. removing headings of bride and bridegroom),’’ the paper said.

The bill would also replace the words ‘‘ husband’’ and ‘‘ wife’’ in 14 other acts with gender- neutral terms including ‘‘ spouse’’, ‘‘ married couple’’ and ‘‘ any two people ( of any sex) who are married’’.

Internal Affairs spokesman Michael Mead said the department was waiting ‘‘ for the outcome of the legislativ­e process’’ before deciding on revised wording for the forms.

Canada’s marriage applicatio­n form uses the terms ‘‘ applicant’’ and ‘‘ joint applicant’’.

California proposed the terms ‘‘ Party A’’ and ‘‘ Party B’’ when its state Supreme Court legalised samesex marriage in 2008, but the court’s decision was overturned by a referendum a few months later.

Mr Mead said the department would also have to change its computer systems to record the sex of the parties to a marriage, change its brochures and websites about marriage, and train registry office staff.

Gay people from as far afield as Auckland and Christchur­ch plan to be at Parliament for the historic moment, expected to be between 7.30pm and 8pm on Wednesday, when the same- sex marriage bill passes its final reading.

‘‘ We are expecting people perhaps to be spilling out to the venues around Parliament,’’ said Marriage Equality Campaign spokesman Conrad Reyners.

The bill’s opponents are making a concentrat­ed last- ditch effort to stop the change.

Family First director Bob McCoskrie said more than 15,000 people had signed a web- based pledge to vote against any electorate MP who supports the bill, and against any party whose leader supports it.

All party leaders except NZ First leader Winston Peters supported the bill at its second reading last month.

New Zealand would become the 13th country to legalise gay marriage if the legislatio­n passes.

Uruguay became the 12th this week.

Several states in the United States, Brazil and Mexico have legalised same- sex marriages, but no Australian state has done so, and a bill in the federal Parliament in Canberra was defeated 98- 42 last September.

The New Zealand bill, sponsored by Labour MP Louisa Wall, passed its second reading on March 13 by 77- 44 and Mr McCoskrie conceded that he faced ‘‘ an uphill battle’’ to get 17 MPs to change their minds and stop it.

A Herald- DigiPoll survey published on March 26 found a dramatic shift in public opinion on the bill.

Support dropped from 59 per cent in January to 49.6 per cent, and opposition rose from 38 to 48 per cent.

‘‘ We always hold out hope,’’ Mr McCoskrie said. ‘‘ I think we have turned the public debate, but the political debate is far harder because they just don’t want to listen.’’

Internal Affairs asked the select committee to delay implementi­ng the bill by six months so it could make changes to forms and procedures, but the committee decided it should come into force four months after it is signed by the Governor- General.

If the bill is signed next week, it would take effect in August. Mr Mead said Internal Affairs was confident new forms would be ready by then.

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