WELLINGTON,
New Zealand — New Zealand lawmakers on Wednesday overwhelmingly cast a first
vote in favor of a gay marriage law that was given impetus by President Barack
Obama's public support of the issue.
The 80 to
40 vote in front of a packed and cheering public gallery was the first of three
votes Parliament must take before the bill can become law, a process that typically
takes several months and allows the public to weigh in. Only a simple majority
was needed to ensure a second vote, and the margin is a strong indication that
the law will be passed.
Should New
Zealand pass the measure into law, it would become the 12th country since 2001
to recognize same-sex marriages. Some states in the U.S. also recognize such
marriages, but the federal government does not.
Polls
indicate about two-thirds of New Zealanders support gay marriage. It also has
the support of most of the country's political leaders.
New Zealand
already has in place same-sex civil union laws that confer many legal rights to
gay couples, although activists argue those laws don't give them equal social
status. One important change under the proposed legislation, however, is that
same-sex married couples could jointly adopt a child, something they can't do
under current laws.
The
proposed changes here can be directly traced back to Obama's declaration in May
in support of gay marriage. That prompted center-right Prime Minister John Key
to break his long silence on the issue by saying he was "not personally
opposed" to the idea. Then lawmaker Louisa Wall, from the opposition Labour
Party, put forward a bill she had previously drafted.
"If
I'm really honest, I think the catalyst was around Obama's announcement, and
then obviously our prime minister came out very early in support, as did the
leader of my party, David Shearer," Wall told The Associated Press.
"The timing was right."
Wall, 40,
is openly gay. She represented the country in both netball and rugby before
turning to politics, a background she said helps give her focus. She said she's
gotten thousands of emails both supporting and opposing her stance on gay
marriage, including her fair share of hate mail.
This week,
opponents of the bill presented a petition to lawmakers signed by 50,000
people. Bob McCoskrie, founder of the conservative lobby group Family First,
which helped organize the petition, said civil unions go far enough in
providing legal rights to same-sex couples and there's no need to redefine
marriage.
"Equality
doesn't mean sameness," he said. "Marriage has always been about the
relationship of a man and a woman because of their natural potential to have
children."
Despite
sponsoring the bill, Wall said that if it passes, she has no plans to marry her
partner of five years, lawyer Prue Tamatekapua. She said that for them, the
civil union celebration they enjoyed two years ago was enough.
"I'm
happy. Other people aren't," she said. "I'm not driven by
self-interest, if I can say that. For me, this is fundamentally about living in
a fair and just society."
Same-sex
marriage is currently recognized in the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, Canada,
South Africa, Norway, Sweden, Portugal, Iceland, Argentina and Denmark. Several
other countries, including France, are considering making it legal.

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