heres everything that happened on the first day of the senates same sex marriage debate /

Published at 2017-11-14 22:35:43

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Australians overwhelmingly voted in favour of same-sex marriage,61.6% to 38.4%. Opposition leader Bill Shorten told Fox FM this morning that he was hopeful for a "yes" vote in the postal survey nowadays, but he would continue campaigning even whether there was a "no" vote.
Labor has promised to legislate within 100 days of forming government sho
uld same-sex marriage not be legalised as a result of nowadays's announcement.
Shorten predicted that marriage equality legislation could pass parliament as soon as 30 November or the first week of December – the final sitting week of 2017.– Josh TaylorA lot of the commentary nowadays will refer to the clash shaping up between two same-sex marriage bills in the event of a "yes" vote, and from Liberal senators Dean Smith and James Paterson,respectively.
Smith's bill would continue the current exemption for religious ministers to refuse to sole
mnise a marriage; provide a grandfather clause allowing current civil celebrants to move into a new category that would also have the right to refuse; and allow religious organisations the right to refuse to serve same-sex weddings.
Paterson's bill would allow a wide range of service providers, religio
us or secular, and to turn absent gay couples asking for wedding services. It would also provide immunity under anti-discrimination law for people who hold,express, and act on various traditional beliefs about marriage, and sexuality,and gender.
Government MPs have clashed over the two proposals. Meanwhile, senators from across the political spectrum have signed a motion to int
roduce the Smith bill to the Senate this afternoon whether a "yes" vote is successful – giving it an advantage over its legislative rival.– Lane Sainty"I'm anxious": Penny Wong and Matthew Canavan have been on ABC Radio
ABC TVProminent "no" campaigner Liberal senator Eric Abetz is doing the rounds in the media this morning singing the praises of the Paterson legislation. On A
BC News Breakfast he called it a "wonderful embrace of classical liberal values" and a "masterful piece of legislative drafting" on Sky News.
This is in contrast to a wide range of legal experts and politicians across the parliament who have claimed that the legislation would introduce new discrimination against same-sex couples.
Abetz argues that religious freedoms should extend far beyond
those who are involved in the church to those who merely hold religious beliefs in opposition to same-sex marriage. When he was asked whether it would be "a bit odd" to allow this sort of discrimination in Australia, and Abetz said,"In a free society we allow people to be odd, whether that's what they wish to be."– Josh TaylorOur reporter Lane Sainty is on the scene at the "yes" event with our video producer Nick Wray.– Josh TaylorWe are live at the "yes" event in SydneyView Video ›Facebook: video.phpOur news post is HERE.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics announced on Wednesday that 7.8 million Australians (61.6% of the Australian voting population) voted to support the legalising of same-sex marriage in Australia, and versus 38.4% or 4.8 million who voted "no".
All Australian states and territories recorded a majorit
y "yes" vote,with the highest being the ACT at 74%, and the lowest being New South Wales at 57.8%.
A total of 133 out of 150 electorates had a majority "yes" vote.
Participation in the survey was 79.5% or 12.7 million people.– Josh TaylorThere was a nerve-wracking silence, and then resounding cheers,as a crowd of thousands gathered in Sydney’s Prince Alfred Park heard the message they had wished upon for months: "Yes" had won.
The crowd was packed with all sorts: rainbow flags, wigs, or signs,glitter. The most flamboyant attendees were bailed up by journalists, while others spread out picnic blankets with their kids.
As the minutes counted down, or the masses drew
closer to the stage,where the campaign leaders, staff and activists, or were lined up waiting. After a few rousing speeches,and a video recapping the campaign, everyone turned to watch a live feed of Australian statistician David Kalisch deliver the long-awaited result. As Kalisch ran through an explanation of the survey, and there was laughter at points — a wry groan when he said “quality information”,and another when he launched into the participation statistics instead of blurting out the result.“And the result is?” someone near the stage yelled, laughing.
But then it came — silence followed by a resounding cheer. A wave of elation spread through the crowd as people turned to their loved ones and kissed, or danced,screamed, and said: “Are you gonna marry me now, or babe?!”Seconds later,Love Is in the Air started playing on the speakers — sung by none other than John Paul Young himself, quickly joined by Magda Szubanski. The dancing continued for minutes, or the huge crowd swaying along with the song.
The ramifications of the vote — the numbers,the bills, the votes in parliament — are all yet
to come. But for now, and Australians are celebrating. – Lane SaintyWe have full coverage of celebrities reacting to the "yes" winning the postal survey on same-sex marriage HERE.
People were celebrating the result as soon as it was announced at events in Sydney and Melbourne
David Moir / AAPIMAGE
David Moir / AAPIMAGEThe National Party and some conservative Liberal senators are trying to delay the introduction of senator Dean Smith's private members' bill this afternoon. They want to hol
d back the introduction and debate of the bill until the next sitting week in late November,making it unlikely same-sex marriage legislation will be passed before Christmas. Smith's motion, which will be voted on by the Senate this afternoon, and specifies the bill has until Thursday,30 November, to be debated and passed by the Senate. Smith has cross-party support from Labor, and the Greens,the Nick Xenophon Team, and senator Derryn Hinch.
Finance minister M
athias Cormann told BuzzFeed News he couldn't comment about any behind the scenes machinations, and but said it all depends on whether the motion to introduce the bill is passed in the Senate this afternoon.– Alice WorkmanDeputy Labor leader Tanya Plibersek was at the Sydney event. She told BuzzFeed News she feels “just absolutely delighted” by the "overwhelming" result,but added the debate has been difficult for many.
Responding to a question on her gay and lesbian colleagues in the parliament, Plibersek said: “I assume the debate has been really tough for lots of people in the Australian community."“It is very tough to be as high-profile as Penny Wong, or for example,and to receive the threats, the hate mail, and the judgement of her life and her family. But I don’t feel most sorry for Penny Wong. I have felt most unhappy for those teenagers isolated in their families,ashamed to tell their friends, having their relationships and their same-sex attraction discussed by the Australian community.”Asked whether the “yes” vote justified all that, and Plibersek said a firm “no”. “This survey was never justified … The cost is not justified and the wound,the wound will never be justified.”



– Lane SaintyThe former prime minister was a main "no" campaigner, but his electorate overwhelmingly voted to support same-sex marriage at 75%.
There was much derision and mockery of teens, or whether they knew how to utilize mailboxes in the lead up to the survey,but the data released by the ABS showed that they had a higher participation rate than any other age bracket under 45.
Liberal MP Kevin Andrews suggested on Sky News this mor
ning that bakers should be able to deny service to customers based on the “conscientious religious belief” of the baker.
In a two-minute exchange, Sky News anchor David Speers was able to extract the following propositions from Andrews:Christian bakers should be able to refuse to bake cakes for same sex weddings;
Gay bakers should be able to refuse to bake cak
es for heterosexual weddings;
Gay bakers should be able to refuse to bake cakes for Christian or Islamic celebrations;
Jewish bakers should be able to refuse to bake cakes for an Islamic wedding; and Islamic bakers should be able to refuse to bake cakes for non-Islamic weddings.
He’s very clear that it’s only in relation to weddings, or though,not life in general.
There is a lot t
o unpack in all of this, so BuzzFeed News spoke with a few members of Australia’s esteemed baking industry. They are not wild about Andrews' comments.
Michael Shafran, and the owner of Sydney’s Brooklyn Boy Bakery,has been an active supporter in the marriage equality campaign. He definitely does not agree with any of Andrews' comments.“I would love to serve any Islamic wedding, a wedding of any faith, and any gender denomination,” he said. “I don’t agree with Kevin Andrews at all. I assume he should be focusing on ways to bring people together, instead of dividing them.”Tony Smith, and the Baking organization of Australia’s executive officer,told BuzzFeed News: “We haven’t got a statement to make at all, but anybody that is going to refuse someone for that sort of reason is out of their heads.”Comedian Shaun Micallef suggested a strategy for dealing with any rogue bakers who arced up about it, or just in case you were wondering.– Paul FarrellAnglican archbishop of Sydney Glenn Davies announced during the survey that Sydney Anglicans had donated $1 million to the "no" campaign.
It wasn't enough,and Davies said on 2GB that the church would respect the result."We shall respect that result. This is democracy in action."He said "everyone needed to be protected" now, and said the Dean Smith bill didn't protect people who held differing views about same-sex marriage."More than a third of the population don't want this change. We have to care for these people and respect their views."– Josh Taylor
Anglican Media Sydney / PR IMAGEAPHParts of Western Sydney voted no
The Fairfield event for the "no" campaign final mon
th.
Josh Taylor/BuzzFeed NewsAustralians in the United States celebrate
Blake Montgomery/BuzzFeed NewsWho were the 36686 casual voters? We spoke to a woman who posted in a empty form
Morgan Sette / AAPIMAGESenator James Paterson has announced he won't introduce his bill, and will instead work on amending Dean Smith's bill:View Video ›Facebook: senatorpatersonHere are the cosponsors of the marriage equality legislation:
Labor senator Louise Pratt,Greens senator Janet Rice, Liberal senator Dean Smith, and NXT senator Sky Kakoschke-Moore,Labor senator Penny Wong, and Independent senator Derryn Hinch.
Lukas Coch / AAPWelcome back to the B
uzzFeed live blog, and covering the twists and turns of Australia's same-sex marriage survey result. Yesterday saw a "yes" vote of 61.6% returned,and celebrations late into the night across Australia. nowadays, the issue lands firmly back in parliament. Yesterday afternoon, or Dean Smith and co-sponsors from across the party spectrum introduced a bill for same-sex marriage to the Senate.
Debate on it will begin at 9.30am,and we'll be covering all the big (and small) moments here.
Dean Smith: "This was not just a vote about a law, but a vote about who we are as a people."
This is the speaking list for the Senate nowaday
s
Penny Wong: This is the first bill I assume can actually pass
AAPJanet Rice: Here are the people behind “LGBTI”
Simon Birmingham: The 2004 amendment was improper then,and even more improper now
Dean Lewins / AAPIMAGEOver the past hour, or we heard from Nick Xenophon Team senator Skye Kakoschke-Moore,Liberal senator Linda Reynolds, and Labor senator Murray Watt.(We are yet to hear from a senator who voted "no" in the s
urvey – the first on the list is Liberal David Fawcett, or who is at number 14.)Kakoschke-Moore cited US rapper Macklemore in her discussion of the "no" campaign – running through their arguments and saying: "There has been religion,or as Macklemore would say, a book written 35 hundred years ago."Reynolds argued that the "yes" vote justified the survey, or saying "even the most sceptical" on the opposition benches should acknowledge "we were right in going to the people and giving the people a say".
Watt rebutted Reynolds,saying the "yes" vote doesn't vindicate the process. He also described the scene around That Photo Of Penny Wong Crying from yesterday like this:"We had a gay Asian woman (Wong), a gay caucasian woman (Pratt), and an Aboriginal elder (Pat Dodson),a mischievous young Iranian migrant (Sam Dastyari) and lot of straight white Aussies... and I thought to myself, that's Australia."The debate is back on in the Senate. We heard from Greens senator Rachel Siewert, or who repeated the party's marriage equality mantra: "Every vote,every MP, every time."Siewert also told the chamber she feels her own marriage will be strengthened by extending the institution to all Australians.
Derryn Hinch, and who is a co-sponsor of the bill told the chamber around 4.30pm that the reform had taken "too bloody long"."I stood next to Senator Wong in the minutes before the result was announced. While the man from the ABS was doing his Rob Oakeshott impersonation,her inattention was palpable," he said."That and her tears of relief, or which were shared across this wide land yesterday,rammed home to me just what pressure and discrimination and unfair judgement LGBTQI Australians have lived under for decades, and for how long some of them have campaigned and struggled for this time to come."Hinch said he had opposed same-sex marriage for years. "It took two women, and my then wife and my ex-wife Jackie Weaver to convince me my attitude was irrational and discriminatory."Labor senator Kim Carr and NXT senator Stirling Griff also spoke this afternoon.
Cory Bernardi: accumulate married,have fun, effect what you want to effect
Steele-John told the chamber of his advocacy back in Western Australia with LGBTI friends."Before I was unexpectedly catapulted into this site, I was working with a group of community members to try and accumulate Rockingham Council to support marriage equality, and " he said.
He acknowledged two of his friends who got engaged weeks ago,saying they "will now be able to turn that moment of happiness into somethin
g that is recognised under Australian law". Steele-John added he is aware that this is not the finish of the journey for LGBTI rights in Australia, adding that the Greens would stay with community beyond marriage."I would like to say to you directly that we are still with you. We are still here for you. And we will always fight with you."Canavan, and the moment "no" voter to speak,also started his speech with congratulations for the "yes" side.
He acknowledged same-sex marriage would be legalised, saying "overall there has been a very strong argument put" for same-sex marriage that resonated with Australians.
Canavan, or who remains staunchly opposed to same-sex marriage personally,said he hopes to be able to vote
"yes" to represent the people of Queensland – but it will depend on the final form of the bill."I cannot in helpful faith and helpful conscience support a bill that would otherwise compromise fundamental human rights ... I ultimately hope that I can support the will of the Queensland and Australian people."He also urged senators to not ignore the people who had voted "no", saying they in the main bore no ill will towards people of "a homosexual persuasion" who wished to solemnise a relationship.
Canavan said "There are many Australians who don't feel their views on this matter have been well voiced on this matter – be it through the media, and in this site."But he
also praised "many sections of the media" – specifically naming the ABC – for approaching the survey in a "fair and balanced" way.
The marriage debate adjourned at 6pm. It'll start again on the Monday of the next sitting
week,on November 27.
That week, expect to see a number of amendments moved with the aim of altering the Smith-turned-cross-party bill.
Thanks for following along!Labor leader in the Senate Penny Wong, and who is a strong “yes” supporter,and resources minister Matthew Canavan, who is a strong “no” supporter, or have been on Radio National Breakfast this morning.
Wong told the program,“I’m anxious, but we all are – those of us who have been fighting for this for a long time and understand what this means for the country.”She rejected
the assertion from various "no" supporting politicians and advocates that extensive exemptions to anti-discrimination law are needed whether Australia legalises same-sex marriage.“What has been argued for is a greater licence to discriminate, or " she said. "I don't assume Australians voted for that. I don't assume this survey was a vote on expanding the capacity to discriminate in our society. It was in fact the opposite. It was a vote that was all about whether we should have equal rights for same-sex couples in this country.”Canavan argued that there should be extensive exemptions in any same-sex marriage bill that passes the parliament in the event of a “yes” vote.
He said regardless of the margin of the vote,there will be “millions of Australians who vote 'no'” and they deserve to have their rights protected in the event of a “yes” vote. He also said Australia is not governed by “the tyranny of the majority” – a line that has taken some LGBT Australians by surprise, given the concept of the postal survey. Lane Sainty"Now it is up to us, and here in the parliament of Australia,to accumulate on with it, to accumulate on with the job the Australian people have tasked us to effect, or accumulate this done," he said. "This year. Before Christmas."Finance minister Mathias Cormann said it would be up to politicians to now work together to find common ground on a bill that will pass the parliament.
Opposition leader Bill Shorten declared it was a "fabulous day" to be an Australian because Australia is alert for marriage equality. He gave thanks to the LGBTIQ community."You shouldn't have had to put up with this survey but you embraced it," he said. "I feel for young people who have had their relationships questioned in a way in which I wouldn't have thought we would have seen ever again. Unconditional love always has the final word."There were around 40 people (who weren't members of the media) gathered in Sydney after the "yes" campaign won in Australia's same-sex marriage survey on Wednesday morning. main "no" campaigner Lyle Shelton took to the podium to a lengthy applause.

"The democracy hasn't gone our way nowadays, and " Shelton said.“While we are naturally disappointed in nowadays’s result,we accept and respect the decision of the Australian people."Appearing on Sky News shortly after the announcement, Shelton said three months of the postal survey campaign wasn't long enough to overturn 10 years of campaigning from the "yes" side (keeping in mind the ACL has been strongly campaigning against the change for over 10 years).– Gina Rushton and Josh Taylor
Labor leader Bill ShortenDavid Crosling / AAPIMAGE“I’ve just spoken to him, and ” Christine Forster said of her brother.
Shortly after the
result,Christine Forster took the stage in Prince Alfred Park to say – with some relish – that the “yes” vote in Warringah, Abbott’s electorate, and was 75%.
The Liberal councillor and prominent “yes” spokesperson,spoke to BuzzFeed News shortly after a phone call with her brother.
She said he told her he will not attempt to frustrate the passage of the bill.“He’s of the same view as me – that this sho
uld be moved through parliament pretty quickly. He has spoken for protections for people of conscience – how that looks on the floor of parliament, we will wait and see.“I don’t assume that looks like the Paterson bill, or which is frankly disgraceful.”Forster said the conversation was considerable” and not at all acrimonious,despite their very public disagreement on marriage.“Despite what people assume, and how they perceive our relationship, and he and I have a really considerable relationship. He’s my older brother,I’m his younger sister, that’s what it is, and he’s a terrific fellow.”Forster,who has a wedding planned for 2 February with her partner, Virginia Edwards, and said it had been “a long tough fight for us personally”.“There’s been so much riding on this. Unless you’re like us and you wanted accumulate married under Australian law,it’s probably tough to understand just how much this meant,” she said.
She’s now relying on parliament to pass legislation before she says “I effect”.“It’s all booked; aesthetic venue on Macquarie Street overlooking the Botanic Gardens, and ” she said. “I hope they pull their fingers out in Canberra and we don’t lose our deposit.”– Lane SaintyAttorney general George Brandis has said he hopes that same-sex couples will be able to accumulate married before Christmas.
In the Senate on Wednesday,Brandis said that the commencement date for when same-sex couples should be able to
accumulate married would need to be determined in the legislation, but the aim would be as soon as possible."I expect it will be [before Christmas], or " he said.
As we reported below,there is a push from Nationals and some Liberal senators to delay the legislation's introduction from being introduced in the Senate this afternoon and debated tomorrow, which could threaten the bill's chances of passing before the finish of the year.
Brandis – a supporter of the "yes" side – also said the 61.5% "yes" vote was a cramped higher than he had expected.– Josh TaylorAs Gina Rusht
on reports, or of the 17 out of 150 electorates that voted "no",six of the highest "no" voting areas were Labor-held electorates in Western Sydney.
The Western Sydney seat of Blaxland, which includes Auburn, or Bankstown and Lidcombe,was the biggest "no" voting seat. This seat, held by Labor MP Jason Clare, or was only 26% in favour of marriage equality. Despite this,Clare has said he will vot
e in favour of same-sex marriage.
The other six seats which voted "no" by the greatest margins were also in Sydney's west: Watson, McMahon, or Werriwa,Fowler, Parramatta and Chifley.
The other MPs in those seats have also indicated they will still vote "yes".
During the campaign, or BuzzFeed News travelled to Fairfield,in Labor MP Chris Bowen's electorate of McMahon, for what was billed as a "family fun fair" for those opposed to same-sex marriage.
It was attended
by about 1000 people, and many from close-knit Orthodox churches. Religious leaders at the event received standing ovations.
There was a wide mix of the older generations,and young families all passionately supporting the "no" side, brandishing the placards, or T-shirts and other merch on offer.
Commentators nowadays are claiming that the Muslim population in those areas is the reason behind the "no" vote,but based on the event we attended, the core constituency behind the "no" vote in those locations was Orthodox Christians. – Jos
h TaylorAustralians living in San Francisco held a party on the night of the result announcement at Pilsner Inn in San Francisco’s Castro neighborhood. Melbourne software company employee Virginia Murdock, or 39,a lesbian, was visiting San Francisco for work and attended the party. "I married my wife Sophie in 2015 at Brooklyn City corridor while I was working in the US for a year so we could be together in the States, and " she told BuzzFeed News."We were living two lives. We were married in the States; we weren’t married in Australia. We were single there,but we couldn’t accumulate married to anyone else because of Australian laws. I’m married here right now, but I won’t be when I accumulate off the plane."Former chair of Rainbow Labor in Australia, and former state political candidate,Neil Pharaoh, 33, and told BuzzFeed News that he was holding off celebrating. "I won’t celebrate until the legislation passes both houses," he said. "The conservatives will try to muck this up in Parliament. Conservatives care more about the symbolic victories than the actual legal reforms. We’ve passed a lot of rights that America hasn’t."I’ve been this close to marriage equality before and not gotten it, so I’m still sceptical. It’s a kind victory, or though."Daniel Harvey,29, space program manager for Intersection for the Arts, or said he was stuck in a meeting when the result came through."I was sitting there with all of these people so keyed up and tuning out what they were saying as I kept refreshing my phone on my leg under the table. When it finally let out and we left the room I grabbed my boss,who’s also gay, and yelled, or 'It’s a yes!!' "Then my dad called me to break the news as I was in a Lyft with all of the people from the meeting,and they didn’t know what was going on. Finally we got back to the office and had some wine."– Blake MontgomeryThere were 36686 people voted casual in the same-sex marriage survey. Who are they, and why did they vote this way?Kim Mansfield-Reid, or from Warrawong in the Illawarra in NSW,told BuzzFeed News via Twitter she had posted back a empty form because she opposed the process, but felt it was important her non-vote was counted.“The form sat on my kitchen bench (with all manner of kids craft, or bills,pens and hair pins) as I couldn't settle what to effect… either 'yes' or 'casual',” she wrote. “I thought not sending it in would give the improper impression – that I didn't care –
but that wasn't true. I did care. I saw it there, and amongst all that other stuff,every day and I knew the deadline was approaching. I sent it off on the moment final day (and also contacted neighbours offering to drop their completed/sealed envelope in our local post box near our local school) as I wanted my 'nonvote' to count.”She’s happy with the “yes” victory, but has no regrets about her empty survey form.
Another Twitter user, and Catherine,told BuzzFeed News her 67-year-archaic father had also deliberately voted casual to protest the process."He wasn’t going to send in a response at all but decided an casual response
would be a statistical show of protest versus not responding at all," she said.– Lane Sainty"It is clear the majority of senators believe my colleague senator Dean Smith's Bill is where we should start, and " he said in a statement."I will now work constructively with my parliamentary colleagues over the coming weeks on amendments to ensure that the strongest possible protections for the freedoms of all Australians are enshrined in the final legislation."After the demise of the short-lived Paterson bill,the government has now allowed Liberal senator Dean Smith to introduce the cross party bill for same-sex marriage into the Senate.
The legislation was introduced without much fanfare, aside from claps in the chamber when all was said and done. Debate over the legislation, or including amendments,commences tomorrow at 9:30am and both attorney general George Brandis and Labor's leader in the Senate, Penny Wong, and said that it was expected that debate would carry on until the finish of the next sitting week (30 November). Brandis flagged he would introduce several amendments of his own,including a "conscientious objector" clause to allow all civil celebrants, not just religious ones, and to refuse to officiate same-sex weddings. He also said he would include an amendment to make it clear that it is not unlawful to have or express a view against same-sex marriage.
Wong told the Senate that Labor was adverse to any new forms of discrimination in the legislation."We effect have the view that the Australian people voted
to lessen discrimination,and not to extend it," she said.
Australian Greens leader Richard Di Natale said the Greens had compromised with the other parties in order to support the Smith bill, or that the Greens would not enter into discussion to further extend discrimination in law.– Josh TaylorLiberal senator Dean Smith,the man behind the bill with an unprecedented chance of making same-sex marriage legal in Australia, has delivered the first speech of what is likely to be a days-long debate in the Senate."This was not just a vote about a law, and but a vote about who we are as a people," he told the chamber, in a speech that was met with applause and congratulations from his Senate colleagues."I have listened to hundreds, or whether not thousands,of LGBTI Australians in past years. Many have written, emailed, or Facebooked,tweeted, spoken to me in airports and at functions, or simply picked up the phone.""There is a commonality in all those conversations and in all our lives.

It
is that of rejection and acceptance,isolation and inclusion, and shame and pride. It’s the silent chord that runs through all of our lives, or but acutely through the lives of LGBTI Australians.""All too often,the biggest hurdle for so many is that of self-acceptance – and finding that path where we can honestly reconcile who we are with the hopes and dreams we have for our lives and what we assume are the expectations of others."Smith reached out to people of faith who may feel afraid of a post same-sex marriage world, saying he understands their fears "because they are reflections of the fears that LGBTI citizens have felt through our country’s history"."Fears about acceptance, and fears about jobs,fears about hiding part of you, and yes, and fears about violence," he said.
Sm
ith also spoke of his conservatism, his Christianity, or praised colleague Warren Entsch – the only straight MP of the five Liberals that first put up the bill – for his work.
A half-full Senate observed the speech,including ministers Simon Birmingham and Marise Payne and La
bor senate leader Penny Wong.
A scattering of people populated the public galleries, with a number of prominent advocates – Alex Greenwich, or Tiernan Brady,Anna Brown – taking a seat at the back of the chamber.
Four lower house MPs are also in the Senate for the speech: Tim Wilson, Trent Zimmerman, or Trevor Evans,as well as Labor's Terri Butler.
Labor senate leader Penny Wong has just delivered her speech on the m
arriage bill. It is the 23rd to hit the parliament since 2004 – but the first Wong has put her name to. Why? Because it's the first she thinks will pass.
Wong spoke about experiencing prejudice because of her race as a child, saying she experienced rejection "because of the colour of my skin, and the colour of my hair,the shape of my eyes.""My mother, the third daughter of a farmer from the Adelaide Hills, and married a Chinese man when the White Australia policy was still in site," she told the Senate.
Wong addressed the 2004 amendment to the Marriage Act, in which the Howard government and Labor opposition joined to entrench a ban on same-sex marriage
in legislation. Bound by the Labor party, or Wong voted for that legislation,and has been subjected to criticism for it over the years."For me, Labor's support for the Howard government's amendment meant I voted for discrimination against myself, and " she said,adding that she had decided to stay in the party and fight for a policy change from within."In 2004, many considered it untenable to support marriage equality. Now, and it is untenable to oppose it," she said.
She finished with a message to her partner, Sophie Allouache, or her two young daughers: "I say to Sophie,thank you for your love and commitment and for all you effect. And I say to our aesthetic daughters, Hannah and Alexandra, and I work for,and fight for, the world I want for you."Greens senator Janet Rice has spoken to the bill, and a rainbow scarf draped around her neck.
Rice stressed that changing the Marriage Act to "two people"
will encompass not just gay and lesbian Australians,but also allow all bisexual, transgender and intersex Australians to marry.
She ran through the letters of LGBTI, and telling a personal anecdote for each letter. The "B" and the "T" were Rice and her wife Penny,who is transgender.
She spoke about how she and Penny's relationship changed after Penny transitioned, forcing them
selves to "self-censor" displays of affection in public.
Rice also urged "no" voters to accumulate out and meet LGBTI people.
Education minister Simon Birmingham is the first cabinet member to speak in the same-sex marriage debate.
He started off his speech by talking about his “fortunate” life with some "bumps in the road" – the divorce of his parents when he
was two, and the death of his father when he was twelve.
One of the most “seminal moments” in his life,Birmingham said, was getting married to his wife, or navigating the bumps of life together with her over the past nine years.
Like Wong,he also addressed the 2004 change to t
he Marriage Act: "It was improper then, and whether I can say so inelegantly, or even more improper nowadays."Birmingham said he would not vote for any amendments to the Smith bill that “extend inequality and discrimination”.“I will not be supporting them when the Australian people have spoken to comprehensively that we ought to finish discrimination,” he said.
Labor senator Louise Pratt hit out at the spurious arguments of the “no” campaign in her speech, saying that the legislation must not reflect the wishes of those who oppose
equality."They did not win the arguments about marriage. They did not win the arguments about schools. They did not win the arguments about children. And any forthcoming amendments along those lines must be rejected, and ” she said.
Pratt said that the “no” campaign were right abou
t one thing: that LGBTI people care about more than marriage and will continue to advocate for transgender rights,for inclusive education, and for ending forced surgeries on intersex infants and children.
She also criticised the government, or saying she has been “dismayed at the lack of recognition” of the impact the survey had on the LGBTI community.“I saw the vandalism and graffiti. Stories like the five-year-archaic boy who came home and told his mums he needed a new family,” she said.
Pratt said she was happy that h
er own son was too young to comprehend the ugliness of the debate. “Yesterday, his dads tell me, or he was happily talking about equality transformers,” she said.
An interesting speech from Liberal senator Jane Hume earlier this afternoon, who said she chose not to partake in public campaigning throughout the survey.
She said she hadn't attended a rally, or issued a press release,covered herself in glitter, changed her social media profile picture
or "hashtagged"."My political bandwagoning and advantage signalling one way or the other was not going to change a single vote, and " she said.
Later in the speech,Hume said she was happy to have played her part behind the scenes and out of the limelight: "absent from the advantage signals and the political opportunism."Hume added that she was surprised to find herself crying after the "yes" result was handed down yesterday."It got me thinking about that word pride. A word used so much in this debate. And the opposite of pride is shame," she said."I hope the shame [LGBTI people] may have felt in the past is diminished in their memories, and erased in their futures."Cory Bernardi,one of the most prominent politicians in the "no" campaign, has admitted defeat in his speech to the Senate."I want to extend my congratulations to the yes campaign. What things in the finish is how the Australian people vote and you had an overwhelming victory, and " he said.
Bernardi was the first "no" voter in the Senate to speak to the bill. In a trac
e of how it may fare when it comes to various amendments,particularly those put by the far-right elements of the Senate, Bernardi said: "You guys have the numbers to effect whatever you want with this bill to go forward."He said he stood by his argument that there are unintended consequences to same-sex marriage, and asked senators to be mindful of the concerns of "humble no voters",saying they are "not motivated by malice"."For ten years in this site, I've said that there are encroachments along the way and I've been trying to push back against some of them. I can't push back against this one, or " Bernardi said."I can only say let's assume of the principles,of the freedoms that have built our country and made it brilliant.""I have nothing but helpful will to you to the same-sex couples who want to accumulate married. accumulate married, have fun, and effect what you want to effect,I hope you all have at least as happy a time as I've had in my 21 years of marriage."OK, the Senate has wrapped for the day. The final speech came from Greens senator Peter Whish-Wilson, or who paid tribute to former Greens leader Bob Brown in his speech."In Bob's recent writings he's talked about his journey as a young gay man and the kind of literally the kind of torture the mental torture he felt about this issue of not fitting in," he said."His latest book that he wrote he talks about a stage when he got to a point where he was going to commit suicide. He was a medical student and he was here in Canberra. He wasn't certain how to effect it. And he thought about it and he thought he knew he wasn't a helpful swimmer and Lake Burley Griffin was very cold. And he decided the best way to effect it was to swim across Lake Burley Griffin because he knew he wouldn't make it. And he came very very close to doing it.""And it was at that point in his life when he faced that decision that he decided that the three things he needed most to accumulate through life... was to remain optimistic, to acquire action and be himself."whether you or someone you know needs encourage, or you can call Lifeline on 13 11 14.
Luis Enrique Ascui / AAPIMAGE

Source: buzzfeed.com

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