Bill defeated 98 to 42
Senator Bernadi quits after "Bestiality" commentsJULIA Gillard and Tony Abbott sat on the same side of Parliament today as they voted against a House of Representatives bill to allow same sex marriages.
The bill was defeated by 98 votes to 42, with Labor MPs allowed a conscience vote but Liberals ordered to oppose the legislation.
Looking at what Bernadi said; indeed, I see nothing wrong with polygamy, assuming it's between freely consenting adults. More power to them. However, gay marriage supporters would run a mile before talking about that, or accepting assistance from such groups. Their help would not be helpful in terms of public opinion.During a Senate debate last night Senator Bernardi said the push for same-sex marriage was coming from "radicals" who were determined to overturn the social fabric of Australian society.
And he questioned where the campaign would end, if society was prepared to redefine marriage based on the "latest criterion" that it should be allowed irrespective of gender.
"The next step, quite frankly, is having three people or four people that love each other being able to enter into a permanent union endorsed by society - or any other type of relationship," Senator Bernardi said.
"There are even some creepy people out there... [who] say it is OK to have consensual sexual relations between humans and animals.
"Will that be a future step? In the future will we say, 'These two creatures love each other and maybe they should be able to be joined in a union'.
"I think that these things are the next step."
Of course, any suggestion of marriage between humans and other animals is ridiculous, on the simple grounds that other animals cannot reach the benchmark understanding to be considered "consenting". Ignoring how icky and stupid I may personally find the concept.
How a couple of members on his own party reacted is interesting.
Malcolm Turnbull:
Tony Abbott:"Senator Bernardi is entitled to say what he likes, but the fact is that his views are extreme, they are hysterical, they're not the views of the mainstream Australian society - let alone of the Liberal Party," Liberal frontbencher Malcolm Turnbull told ABC News 24.
"[The argument that] if that gay couple that have been living together for 30 years are allowed to term their relationship a marriage, that will lead to people having sex with animals and wanting that to be described as a marriage - that is so bizarre.
"I want my constituents to know that I disassociate myself from those views."
Ill-disciplined? Really? That's the big issue here?Mr Abbott has described the comments as "ill-disciplined" and has accepted Senator Bernardi's resignation.
"They're views I don't share," the Opposition Leader told reporters in Canberra.
Obviously, marriage equality supporters plan to fight on. They'll get there in the end, the only question is how long it'll take.
And by the by, a similar senate bill for gay marriage was later also defeated by 41 to 26
New plans ready to go.The Australian Senate has joined the House of Representatives in voting down legislation aimed at allowing same-sex couples to marry.
The final vote on the bill introduced by Labor senators was 26 in favour and 41 against.
Labor senator Penny Wong, who is openly gay, described the result as disappointing and a failure of the Parliament to remove discrimination.
I would worry that a small placating step could rob the movement of the public pressure needed for full marriage rights; a large section of the public going "Well, they have civil unions now, so stop bugging me about it!".Liberal MP Warren Entsch says he has a private members bill ready to go and is now considering whether to introduce it.
"What I've drafted is actually a civil partnerships bill," Mr Entsch told ABC Radio.
"It's two persons who are in a relationship as a couple regardless of their sex and who meet the eligibility criteria."
Mr Entsch believes the legislation would have a better chance of success than changes to marriage laws.
He has the support of Liberal frontbencher Malcolm Turnbull, who has previously argued that supporters of same-sex marriage should not allow "the perfect to be the enemy of the good".
But other gay marriage advocates disagree, arguing the move would just entrench discrimination.
"I will not support continuing discrimination against same-sex couples in this country and I will not support a civil unions bill," Greens MP Adam Bandt said.
"To put in civil unions would in fact be a step backwards."
Conversely, the public could say "Well, we gave them civil unions and that didn't cause the general downfall of civilization, I hardly see how making it properly official will kill us all."