Illinois Gay Marriage Bill Signed Into Law, State Becomes 16th To Legalize Same-Sex Marriage
CHICAGO (AP) — Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn signed legislation
Wednesday allowing same-sex weddings starting this summer, making
President Barack Obama's home state the 16th overall — and largest in
the nation's heartland — to legalize gay marriage.
Speaking in front of thousands at the University of Illinois at
Chicago, Quinn said the new law ensured that "Illinois does not have a
situation where individuals are discriminated against in any way when it
comes to love and marriage."
Illinois, where Democrats lead both legislative chambers and
the governor's office, legalized civil unions in 2011, but the road to
same-sex marriage was bumpy.
When 2013 began advocates hoped Illinois would've been the 10th
state, but watched as other states passed it. Gay marriage is allowed in
Washington D.C., and 15 other states; Hawaii's governor signed a
measure last week.
Even with support from top business leaders, Chicago Mayor Rahm
Emanuel, the state attorney general and even a few top Republicans,
several lawmakers were resistant to the idea. That included even
Democrats in more conservative downstate Illinois and some Chicago-area
lawmakers.
"We've realized that to have a forward-looking state, you cannot have
backward-looking laws that discriminate against good and talented
people, regardless of their sexual orientation," Emanuel said at
Wednesday's ceremony.
The measure was fought hard by some of the state's most
well-recognized religious figures, including Cardinal Francis George of
the Archdiocese of Chicago and the Rev. James Meeks, a former state
senator who runs a politically-influential mega church in Chicago.
Meeks was part of a coalition of black pastors who said marriage
should remain between a man and woman and sponsored robocalls in several
legislative districts and on the airwaves. The opposition placed black
lawmakers in the House in a spotlight and several evaded public
inquiries on the matter for months.
But proponents launched an equally aggressive campaign with help from
unions, the former head of the Illinois Republican Party and the ACLU.
They billed the measure as a matter of civil rights and equality for
families.
The measure passed the Illinois House earlier this month by a narrow margin 61-54; It needed 60 votes to pass.
Although Illinois once appeared poised to become the first Midwestern
state to approve gay marriage in the Legislature, Minnesota did it
sooner and started holding its first same-sex weddings over the summer.
Iowa allows gay marriages too because of a court ruling, not a
legislative vote.
When the law takes effect June 1, same-sex couples can begin applying
for marriage licenses. And Cook County —the state's most populous — has
even said it'll be open for business that day even though it's a
Sunday.
There's a small chance weddings could take place before then;
Legislation is pending that could change the effective date to
immediately. Lawmakers aren't expected to gather for regular session
until the end of January.
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário