Tasmania to vote on marriage equality
The Tasmanian House of Assembly will vote on a Greens motion that make the Tasmanian Parliament the first in Australia to express in-principle support for marriage equality.
Tasmanian Greens leader Nick McKim will introduce a notice of motion, which will also call on the Federal Parliament to reform the Marriage Act, on Tuesday 鈥 with debate and a vote on the motion expected on the Wednesday.
鈥淚f this motion is passed, it will be a historic milestone for marriage equality in Australia,鈥 McKim said, 鈥淭asmania could lead the way from being the last Australian state to decriminalise homosexuality to the first to endorse marriage equality, with all the social and economic benefits that would follow.鈥
鈥淭he Greens believe the law needs to be changed to make same sex marriage legal, and it鈥檚 clear from the polls that most Australians agree. While the Greens鈥 motion would not legalise same sex marriage in Tasmania, it would send a strong signal to Federal Parliamentarians that they must get in step with community opinion on this issue.
鈥淚f we want to send a message that sexuality-based discrimination in our community is unacceptable, we need to remove the discrimination that remains entrenched in our laws. Marriage equality is something the majority of Tasmanians and Australians support. The passage of our motion this week would send a strong message that politicians are catching up to community opinion.
鈥淭he Greens have already tabled a package of cognate Bills in Parliament, and we will bring them on for debate should the Federal Parliament fail to act by the end of the year.鈥
The Tasmanian Greens have previously tabled bills which would legalise same-sex marriage under state law should the Federal Government fail to act, and did not rule out doing so again.
In the event that Tasmania did legalise same-sex marriage under state law, the Federal Government would have no power to veto it.
鈥淚t is clear from the legal advice of leading Australian constitutional law expert Professor George Williams that Tasmania can legislate on marriage equality. If the Federal Parliament fails to end this discrimination, Tasmania has the constitutional capacity to go it alone,鈥 McKim said.
Professor George Williams, an expert in Constitutional law, claims it is possible for the states to pass their own marriage laws. This article was a year ago. If the link doesn’t work you can look up all the Professor’s columns in the opinion section of the Sydney Morning Herald.
@Joh .. under the Australian Constituion it is the Federal Government that had legislative powers around marriage, not the States.
The States may well vote in favour of marriage equality, but it has no effect in law because the Federal legislation overrides the States.
I think we should stop expecting the federal government to legislate marriage equality. They simply won’t. While it would be great to pass it in one fell swoop, its not going to happen in a long time. All of the states labor parties endorsed a motion to support marriage equality, and they have the power to make it law under state law. So why not just do it? All the states legislating separately does the same as the federal doing it. I think it would happen faster if we did it state by state. And besides, if one state makes it legal, it is MUCH easier for people from other states to go there, get marriage and return home (as opposed to going overseas to do it). I am not certain, but I think this would dodge the CNI issue also!