Canada's Highest Court Approves Same-Sex Marriage
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, Dec. 9, 2004
TORONTO – In a landmark opinion, Canada's Supreme Court
said Thursday the government could redefine marriage to include
same-sex couples.
However, the court added that religious officials could not be
forced to perform unions against their beliefs, and the legislation
to allow gay marriage must still pass with a majority of the House
of Commons.
Canada would join Belgium and the Netherlands in allowing gay
marriage if the government rules that it is legal nationwide.
The court's decision brings to the final stages a long, bitter
fight over whether gays and lesbians should be allowed to marry in
Canada. Public opinion is evenly divided, and
advocates for both sides are preparing for the final phase of the
battle.
In the United States, gay marriage is opposed by a majority of
Americans, according to an Associated Press-Ipsos poll taken in
November, shortly after constitutional amendments in 11 states to
ban same-sex marriage were approved.
Judges in six Canadian provinces and one territory have already
overturned the traditional definition, allowing thousands of
same-sex weddings.
'Canadian Values'
"This is a victory for Canadian values," said Alexander
Munster of Canadians for Equal Marriage.
To pass in the House of Commons, the legislation needs the
approval of about 44 of the 95 Liberal backbench members of
Parliament to obtain a 155-vote majority in the 308-seat House.
One top Liberal predicted the legislation should pass easily
after its introduction, likely early next year. It already has the
support of the 38-member Liberal cabinet and virtually all the 54
Bloc Quebecois and 19 New Democrat MPs.
However, some Liberal members of Parliament are opposed.
"I do personally have a problem with redefining marriage, and
I'm sure some of my colleagues do as well," said Roy Cullen of the
Liberal Party.
'God Is in the DNA'
Gordon Young, pastor of the First Assembly of God Church in St.
John's, Newfoundland, was highly disappointed by the ruling.
"It's a sad day for our country," Young told CBC television
news. "God is in the DNA of this nation. We believe that changing
the definition of marriage is changing the divine institution that
God put in place for the order of our society."
Court of Public Opinion
The ruling by the court in Ottawa, the federal capital, said the
legal definition of marriage should change with public opinion over
time.
"Several centuries ago, it would have been understood that
marriage be available only to opposite-sex couples," the court
said in its advisory opinion. "The recognition of same-sex
marriage in several Canadian jurisdictions as well as two European
countries belies the assertion that the same is true today."
The opinion is not legally binding, and it is now up to the
federal government to make gay marriage protected by law
nationwide.
The high court's opinion comes 18 months after former Prime
Minister Jean Chretien abandoned his government's fight against
same-sex marriage by refusing to appeal provincial court rulings in
Ontario, British Columbia and Quebec, which declared traditional
marriage laws were unconstitutional.
His government then drafted legislation that would allow gay and
lesbian weddings in city halls, courthouses and in religious
institutions that choose to perform them. To ensure the bill would
be passed, the Liberal government asked the Supreme Court three
questions:
Does the federal government have exclusive authority to define
marriage?
Does the charter protect religious groups from having to
perform gay weddings against their beliefs?
Is the proposed same-sex marriage law constitutional?
Prime Minister Paul Martin expanded the reference after he was
sworn in a year ago, adding a fourth question: Is the traditional
definition of marriage, between one man and one woman, also
constitutional? This was aimed at clarifying once and for all
whether the century-old definition of marriage is flawed.
The federal Conservatives and several Liberal MPs are expected
to fight to preserve marriage for heterosexuals.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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