Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

NJ Dems ID gay marriage bill as top priority

AP  By ANGELA DELLI SANTITRENTON, N.J. -- New Jersey Democrats have identified legalizing gay marriage as their top priority for the legislative session that starts Tuesday.

The bill failed in the Senate two years ago. But Senate President Steve Sweeney, who didn't vote for it then and has regretted it since, is sponsoring the measure.

Democratic leaders in the Senate and Assembly will announce the bill's reintroduction Monday.

Gov. Chris Christie, a Republican, has said he's no fan of same-sex marriage. But gay rights activist Steven Goldstein says he wants to see the bill approved and sent to the governor, even if Christie's unlikely to sign it.

Democrats don't enjoy veto-proof majorities in either house. So Christie could ignore the bill if it reaches his desk, which would allow it to become law without his signature.

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Sunday, January 8, 2012

NJ Legislature to take up gay marriage bill

  By ANGELA DELLI SANTITRENTON, N.J. (WABC) -- Democrats in the New Jersey Legislature will reintroduce a gay marriage bill this week and have vowed to make same-sex unions a top priority two years after similar legislation was voted down.

Four people with direct knowledge of the draft bill told The Associated Press that Democrats' priority for the new legislative session is to move the bill quickly through both houses of the Legislature and forward it to the governor, perhaps as early as next month.

Gov. Chris Christie has said previously that he doesn't support gay marriage.

The people, who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the bill is still being drafted, said denying gay couples the ability to marry violates their civil rights. They say they hope that's how the governor will see it, too.

Six other states and Washington, D.C., permit gay marriage.

New Jersey recognizes civil unions, but marriage equality advocates insist the law is flawed. They said it does not offer the legal protections of marriage as intended. The state's main gay rights group and same-sex couples have sued.

Democrats tried but failed to shepherd a gay marriage bill through the Senate in the waning days of the Corzine administration in 2010 after Gov. Jon Corzine, a Democrat, said he would sign it.

Fourteen senators voted for the bill. The measure needed 21 votes to pass.

Senate President Steve Sweeney, a Democrat who abstained, has regretted not voting ever since. He has called his inaction on the bill "the biggest mistake" of his legislative career.

To indicate the importance he has since attached to the bill, Sweeney will be among its prime sponsors in the Senate along with incoming Majority Leader Loretta Weinberg and Sen. Ray Lesniak. It is being assigned the symbolic number S1, as the first bill of the new two-year session.

"The world has changed since 2009 when the bill last came up," said Steven Goldstein, who heads the gay rights group Garden State Equality. "I don't think anyone has seen a civil rights movement accelerate so quickly."

Democrats said they are confident they have enough votes to advance the bill but can't do it by veto-proof majorities without some Republican support. It's likely to die with the Republican governor. However, Christie also could ignore the bill if it reaches his desk, and it would become law in 45 days without his signature.

Goldstein said he doesn't believe there are any circumstances under which Christie, a national GOP figure who is often talked about as a future presidential prospect, would sign a gay marriage bill.

Christie was campaigning with Mitt Romney on Sunday in New Hampshire, where the Legislature is expected to vote soon on whether to repeal a 2009 gay marriage law. Romney, the former Massachusetts governor who is seeking the GOP presidential nomination, recently told a voter there that he supports the repeal effort.

"I believe marriage is between a man and a woman," he told the voter, who turned out to be a gay veteran.

The New Jersey bill allows religious institutions and personnel to opt out. In other words, no clergy member would be compelled to perform a gay marriage ceremony and no place of worship would be required to allow same-sex weddings at their facilities.

The gay rights group's lawsuit is proceeding on a parallel track.

A Superior Court judge ruled in November that a suit filed by gay couples to force the state to recognize same-sex marriage can go forward, setting up a trial on the issue five years after the state Supreme court stopped short of allowing same-sex nuptials.

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Saturday, July 2, 2011

7 NJ couples file suit demanding gay marriage

AP  Eyewitness NewsTRENTON -- Seven gay couples and many of their children filed a lawsuit Wednesday to demand New Jersey recognize gay marriage, saying it's the only way to solve inequities created by the state's four-year-old civil union law.

New Jersey lawmakers created that law to try to fulfill a 2006 state Supreme Court order that committed gay couples be given the same legal protections and benefits as married couples. The couples say that in places like insurance offices and hospital emergency rooms where marriage rights come into play, the civil union doesn't cut it.

The suit offers several examples: lesbians who had to pay thousands of dollars for the non-birth mother to adopt their child; couples who have found they have to carry binders of legal documents to prove their relationships in case of emergency. Not being married, they say, makes their children wonder why society doesn't value their families as much as others.

One plaintiff, Louise Walpin, said she had to explain to a judge - and everyone in the courtroom - when she was called for jury duty recently that she is in a civil union, not married. "I had to out myself in front of strangers," she said at a news conference Wednesday to announce the suit. She wonders whether she was left off the jury or been denied jobs because she's a lesbian.

And there was the story of John Grant, who was struck by a car in New York City. The Asbury Park man's civil union partner, Danny Weiss, says he was told he wasn't entitled to make urgent medical decisions for Grant. Instead, Grant's sister was summoned to the hospital in the middle of the night. New York lawmakers voted last week to recognize gay marriage. But before that, the state recognized unions from other states.

"Nobody should have to endure the indignity that we did," Weiss said Wednesday.

The lawsuit, filed in state court by the national gay rights law firm Lambda Legal and the New Jersey gay rights group Garden State Equality, came less than a week after New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed a law allowing gay marriage in that neighboring state. But it's the latest step in a nine-year legal battle in New Jersey.

States afford gay couples a hodgepodge of rights. New Jersey is one of seven states that offer the same legal protections of marriage, but call it either civil unions or domestic partnerships.

Once New York's new law takes effect next month, six states and Washington, D.C., will make full marriage available to gays.

Another state recognizes gay marriages entered into elsewhere and three offer some legal protections for gay couples. But 41 have laws or constitutional amendments barring gay marriage.

Advocates made a serious push in 2009 to persuade the Legislature to legalize same-sex matrimony before Republican Gov.

Chris Christie took office in January 2010. The measure, opposed by the social conservative groups, fell short. Stephen Sweeney, the Democratic State Senate President, recently apologized for abstaining on the vote.

Christie's arrival forced advocates to shift strategies. Instead of pushing for marriage rights through the Legislature, they headed back to the court.

Steven Goldstein, chairman of Garden State Equality, said Wednesday that he expects Christie would veto a bill to allow gay marriage.

On Tuesday, Christie said on Millennium Radio's "Ask the Governor" show that the state will defend the civil union law.

"I don't want same-sex couples to be deprived of legal rights," he said, adding, "Marriage is an institution that has centuries-old implications in both religious and cultural institutions. I believe it should remain between one man and one woman."

He also said he is open to improving civil unions, which some 5,400 couples have entered into.

But Goldstein said Wednesday that the only way to make civil unions work would be to replace them with marriage. He and other advocates for gay marriage say the problem isn't in the details of the civil union law, but rather comes because it's separate classification from marriage that most people don't understand.

"We'll accept civil unions," Goldstein said, "if he will change his marriage" to a civil union.

(Copyright ©2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.) Get more New Jersey News »


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Christie: I won't OK bill allowing NJ gay marriage

Chris Christie (FILE) New Jersey Gov. elect Chris Christie announces Thursday, Dec. 16, 2009, in Trenton, N.J., that he is appointing Kim Guadagno, right, who will be New Jersey's first lieutenant governor, to pull double duty in the new administration by also serving as secretary of state. (AP Photo / Mel Evans)

AP  Eyewitness NewsWASHINGTON -- Gov. Chris Christie says he won't sign a bill allowing gay marriage in New Jersey like Gov. Andrew Cuomo did in neighboring New York.

Christie appeared on NBC's /*"Meet the Press"*/ on Sunday, days after Cuomo signed a bill legalizing same-sex marriage in New York. Christie told host David Gregory that New Jersey will "continue to pursue civil unions."

The Republican governor also discussed /*President Barack Obama/*'s plan to pull troops from Afghanistan and his decision to release 30 million barrels of oil from U.S. emergency reserves.

Christie declined to comment on the troop withdrawal, noting that Obama had more knowledge on the situation.

But he expressed concern about the oil release, saying it could be viewed as a political move.

Meanwhile, one of the most outspoken opponents of same-sex marriage is New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan.

The Catholic leader celebrated mass Sunday morning at St. Patrick's Cathedral with what he says was a tinge of sadness.

The archbishop said he's disappointed, but not surprised, the objections of numerous religious leaders weren't enough to stop the legislation from passing.

"I'm just sad because I think it's, uh, not good, it's not good for the common good and that's what we've been arguing for so long. It's just that, I, I think as society, a culture, is that it's peril if we, if we presume to tamper with what has been settled and given and already taught us and cherished for the history of civilization," Dolan said.

Dolan says he loves the gay community very much, but does not believe the definition of marriage can be altered.

(Copyright ©2011 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.) Get more New Jersey News »


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