Thank You & Goodbye To Australian Marriage Equality (AME)
Having achieved our goal to change the law so every Australian can marry the person they love in the country they love, Australian Marriage Equality (AME) has now officially wrapped up as an organisation.
Along the way we magnified the visibility of LGBTQI Australians in every part of Australian life and encouraged hundreds of thousands to take their first political action, whether it was signing a petition, writing a submission, meeting their MP or attending a rally.
This journey was not easy, at the beginning, or at the end. We could not have lasted without so many community supporters and the generosity of our volunteers and donors.
Australian Marriage Equality was originally created as a standalone, single issue organisation at a time when many within the LGBTQI community thought marriage equality was in the too hard basket. However in 2004, a courageous group of individuals, from across the country, refused to accept this and formed the grassroots and trailblazing volunteer organisation, Australian Marriage Equality.
Throughout our organisation’s history we marched on the streets, into boardrooms and, through the halls of federal parliament. Gaining support every step of the way. We weren’t the only ones campaigning for reform and we are grateful to have worked with many amazing advocacy organisations, community groups and people from across Australia.
Despite the length of the marriage equality campaign, meeting countless grassroots campaigners and hearing their personal stories encouraged us to continue our work and gave us hope. We continue to be inspired and motivated by their resilience, courage and persistence in pursuit of equality.
In 2017, when the postal survey was forced upon us all, our movement achieved the largest electoral victory in Australia’s history, achieving a YES result in 133 out of 150 electorates. While we celebrated Australia saying “Yes”, this painful and legislatively unnecessary process and the nature of our opponent’s campaign was gruelling and harmful to many.
On the one year anniversary of the historic passage of marriage equality legislation through parliament, our partners in the Equality Campaign, formed Equality Australia to lead ongoing national campaigns and legal advocacy for the LGBTQI community. AME went on to share our learnings and our passion for marriage equality with other countries in need. When neighbouring Taiwan reached out for help, we were delighted to assist their campaign with fundraising and sharing lessons from our decades plus campaign.
Taiwan’s marriage equality advocates were experiencing an all too familiar pain: a lack of courage from political leaders, on-going legal battles and a national public vote. Along with others from the Equality Campaign team, we joined our friends at Freedom To Marry in the USA, an organisation that helped us greatly throughout our campaign, and supported and encouraged Taiwanese campaigners to their recent victory.
In Australia, this year has been particularly devastating for many within our community. It began with bush fires that ravaged communities and the health and economic toll of COVID-19 is still not fully known. In wrapping up our organisation, our board agreed to disburse our limited remaining funds to organisations assisting in the provision of mental health support, youth support, domestic violence support services and homelessness support programmes for LGBTQI people as well as support for rural and regional prides who play such an important role in community building. We have ensured our funds will be spread across all states and territories and support the most vulnerable in our community – LGBTQI Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, and the trans and gender diverse community who were targeted by the NO campaign.
Of course, we still face many challenges and we will keep our social media pages alive to promote the vital work of leading community organisations and to reflect on the marriage equality movement. This includes promoting the valuable work of groups like Equality Australia, and at a time when LGBTQI health is under increased pressure, the work of organisations such as the Queensland Council for LGBTI Health, Thorne Harbour Health and ACON is particularly critical. We will also support community celebrations including the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras, especially in the lead up to WorldPride in 2023 which will draw attention to our regions LGBTQI issues on a global scale.
In addition, AME has partnered with The Pinnacle Foundation to establish the “Australian Marriage Equality Scholarship”, which will focus on supporting LGBTQI students who are Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islanders or from rural, regional or remote Australia. We hope this supports and inspires the next generation of LGBTQI leaders to continue making Australia an equal and fairer place for all. We acknowledge and thank the Pinnacle Foundation for working with AME on this enduring scholarship.
On behalf of our board and, as the longest serving person in Australian Marriage Equality, I want to thank those who established our organisation, all those who worked or volunteered alongside us, those who donated to us, and everyone who supported us through a challenging but ultimately successful existence.
We hope that our journey sends a message of hope to all campaigns for social justice and equality that you should never give up and with persistence through adversity you can make Australia a fairer and more equal place for all.
Alex Greenwich MP (Co-Chair), on behalf of the final board of Australian Marriage Equality: Janine Middleton AM (Co-Chair), Dr Shirleene Robinson, Peter Black, Dr Sarah Midgley OAM, Jay Allen, Tim Peppard, Liam Ryan, and treasurer Cam Hogan
Alastair Lawrie’s 2018 discussion is well worth a read:
I note this from him in particular:
“Perhaps the most disappointing part about the Marriage Amendment (Definition and Religious Freedoms) Act 2017 is that, despite being one of the worst marriage amendment Bills ever introduced into Commonwealth Parliament,[v] it was signed-off on by Australian Marriage Equality (AME), and the Equality Campaign, supposedly on behalf of the LGBTI community.
In the days after the announcement of the postal survey results, they presented Senator Dean Smith’s Bill as a fait accompli, arguing for its passage without calling for the removal of its unnecessary provisions regarding existing civil celebrants or wedding-related services, effectively making them accomplices to this new discrimination.
In my opinion, AME/The Equality Campaign were wrong to do so.
They were wrong on principle. As an organisation purporting to advocate for marriage equality, they should have been calling for genuine equality, not defending the inclusion of provisions that were never needed for anyone else, but were only introduced to target LGBTI Australians. Their acquiescence makes it harder to push for the removal of these provisions in the future.
They were wrong on strategy. The religious fundamentalists inside the Coalition Government were the ones who had pushed for the unnecessary, wasteful, harmful and divisive postal survey – and they lost, with the majority of Australians showing they supported the equal treatment of all couples, irrespective of sexual orientation, gender identity or sex characteristics.
That is what the LGBTI community should have been demanding: full equality and nothing less. If the Coalition Government refused to pass it because it did not include new rights to discriminate against LGBTI couples, even after imposing an unprecedented $80.5 million three-month national opinion poll, then they would have experienced the biggest of backlashes. It was not up to the LGBTI community to save the Government from itself.
And they were wrong on process, because they never secured the informed consent of the LGBTI community to these changes. They never explained, in detail, what had been given up and why, and they never asked lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) people whether it was a price they were prepared to pay.
Indeed, when other organisations like just.equal and PFLAG Australia did ask the community what they thought, the response was generally unequivocal – there must be no new discrimination.[vi] In the absence of other evidence, that is the position I think AME/The Equality Campaign should have adopted.[vii]”