WA Senator Joe Bullock quits politics over Labor’s support for marriage equality

WA Senator Joe Bullock quits politics over Labor’s support for marriage equality
Image: Former WA Labor Senator Joe Bullock (Image source: YouTube)

WEST Australian Labor Senator Joe Bullock, a vocal opponent to marriage equality and Safe Schools, has quit politics over his party’s impending binding vote policy in favour of marriage equality.

In a speech to Parliament last night, Bullock announced he was “morally obliged” to quit in light of Labor’s commitment to “homosexual marriage”, and said that staying in the job would require him to do something which he felt was wrong.

The Labor party will require a binding vote in favour of marriage equality from 2019. At present, its MPs and senators have a conscience vote, with the majority of them already publicly in favour.

“How can I in good conscience recommend to the people that they vote for a party which is determined to deny its parliamentarians a conscience vote on the homosexual marriage question?” Bullock said.

“The simple answer is that I can’t.”

In a statement released this morning, the Australian Christian Lobby (ACL) called Bullock’s resignation “a sad day for tolerance”.

“It is tragic that someone like Senator Bullock, who has given his life to the Labor cause, has effectively been driven out of the party he loves because it no longer tolerates support for the timeless definition of marriage,” ACL director Lyle Shelton said.

Former WA Senator Louise Pratt, nominated to re-take her Senate seat last night after Bullock replaced her in 2014, but she was overlooked by Labor leader Bill Shorten in favour of Pat Dodson — a prominent Indigenous leader and the former chairman of the Council for Aboriginal Reconciliation.

Pratt was the second out lesbian woman to be elected to Federal Parliament and the first to have a trans man as a partner. Bullock once questioned Pratt’s sexuality, but later apologised.

Dodson, a former Catholic priest, has also already confirmed his support for marriage equality.

The news comes after a tumultuous few days for LGBTI issues in Canberra.

The Safe Schools program has been the source of heated debate after Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull .

The announcement was followed by an incident in which Shorten called South Australian Liberal Senator Cory Bernardi .

Dawson federal Coalition MP George Christensen in an address to parliament last Thursday.  

Former Prime Minister Tony Abbott also entered the fray this week, the program to be “terminated”.

Speaking to , Abbott described the program as “social engineering”.

However his sister, out lesbian City of Sydney councillor Christine Forster, that Abbott lacked an understanding about the nature of gender and sexual identity.

“It’s my view that you cannot engineer a child into being transgender or homosexual,” she said.

“And it’s my experience. It’s not something that’s engineered. It’s something that’s inherent to a person.”

Abbott’s comments follow those of former PM John Howard, who told the Safe Schools program was “out of touch”.

“According to our culture and our society, those matters should be discussed by parents with their children”, he said.

Despite this, the former PM also gave his support for a free vote, rather than a plebiscite, on marriage equality.

“I would have preferred the matter dealt with by a free vote in parliament – I believe in representative democracy,” said Howard, who was PM at the time Federal Parliament amended the Marriage Act in 2004 so explicitly define marriage as one between a man and a woman.

Melbourne federal Greens MP Adam Bandt used Question Time last night to challenge the current PM over the issue.

“The Safe Schools program has been stopping bullying around the country and has helped many young people feel that they fit in,” he said.

“Prime Minister, is your commitment to socially progressive values so skin deep that you will put young people’s welfare at risk and throw a successful anti-bullying campaign under a bus just because the bigots in the conservative brotherhood tell you to?”

In his response, Malcolm Turnbull condemned bullying but defended his decision to review the program: “Members of this parliament on both sides of the parliament have raised concerns about some of the content in — that has been made available apparently or purportedly through — or in connection with this program.”

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4 responses to “WA Senator Joe Bullock quits politics over Labor’s support for marriage equality”

  1. Cory Benardi, Kevin Andrews, Bronwyn Bishop and Tony Abbott (all Liberal party MPs) are also yet to announce there retirement!

  2. I will be launching a massive data-matching program on all Senators and MPs who either support or oppose marriage equality just before the federal election. So far 24 Senators and MPs are retiring for good and I am personally hopefully we can get them to ALL retire within the next 3 years or by 2019! The campaign for marriage equality really begins NOW! We need brand-new blood in our federal parliament, and we really need to get rid of dead wood that seems to just linger there forever – like Cory Benardi, Kevin Andrews, Bronwyn Bishop and Tony Abbott!

  3. Good riddance, do not let the door hit you on the way out! The more anti-gay Senators and MPs retire the better!