The “new” marriage equality strategy is bound to be a failure
WHAT do you call it when the so-called conservative Catholic countries of Spain, Portugal, Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Ireland pass marriage equality legislation before the secular, and apparently more progressive Australia?
Some have called it a national embarrassment. Others a blight on our democratic leaders. But I give it a different name: the monumental failure of a movement that should have won years ago.
[showads ad=MREC]It is for this reason that I was stunned when released on Monday.
You may notice I put “new” in inverted commas. Reading the strategy I could not help but get a sense of déjà-vu. This “new” strategy seems very similar to the old one — lobbying politicians to get them to change their position. According to AME national director Rodney Croome we just need “another eight votes” and then same-sex marriage will become a reality.
After years of failure you would think it may be time for a rethink, but apparently not. In doing so I suspect we may not see marriage equality for a long time yet.
Previous marriage equality strategies have been based on two ideas: get a free vote in both parties and then convince enough MPs to vote yes when that happens. This strategy however, while seemingly solid, has failed for two reasons.
First, a free vote was always too weak an ask. Focusing on a conscience vote let the ALP largely of the hook, then squeezing out any room for the Coalition to manoeuvre. With their conservative base, the Coalition were never going to agree to all our demands. Fighting for a binding vote therefore would have let them have a conscience vote as a compromise — an opportunity we took off the table from day one.
These issues are particular pertinent when met with the second problem, the weak public pressure placed on our politicians. Most work has been done in the corridors of Parliament, and while marriage equality has remained an issue of public debate it has not become a vote-changing one. This is why Malcolm Turnbull was able to dump a conscience vote with little to no change in his popularity or electoral chances. There is simply not enough strength in the movement, resulting in little pressure on our political leaders.
It is these same issues I see with AME’s “new” strategy. The strategy sticks to the old plan — lobby politicians, change individual MP minds, and somehow hope that that leads to reform.
You have to ask, why will it be different this time? The strategy in particular misses any real plan for how to convert new MP support into an actual vote in Parliament — once again placing all bets on the slim chance the Coalition will opt for a free vote. With no real ground game to put pressure on Malcolm Turnbull in particular (who has largely received a free pass since his ascension to the Prime Ministership) to make that happen, this hope seems very faint indeed.
So what is the alternative? If we want marriage equality as soon as possible there are two options.
First is to defeat the Coalition at the next election. Parliamentary votes are now so close that the issue is no longer numbers, but who controls your vote. That means that, if marriage is your big issue, you are better off giving your preference to an anti-marriage Labor candidate than a pro-marriage Liberal one. Even if they vote against marriage (and I highly doubt any Labor MP would vote against their own Prime Minister’s first legislation) the mere existence of a vote is currently what is important. An anti-marriage equality Labor MP (or even better a pro-marriage Labor or Green one) is therefore better than a pro-marriage Liberal MP sitting on the back bench with no power to create the change.
However, I think there is an even better alternative. I know people don’t like this, and for good reason, but we still have time to push Malcolm Turnbull to make a plebiscite occur at the next election. This would not only force both parties to act straight after the election, but would also do one thing the current strategy has not — get us on to the street to engage voters one by one. This not only has the capacity to pass marriage equality but would also . That, to me, is far more valuable that spending thousands of dollars to change the minds of eight Parliamentarians.
Time to get out of the halls of Parliament and into the streets. That’s how marriage equality will happen.
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Australia will only have marriage equality, when the bigoted Liberal MPs and Senators cunts all fuck off to Iran or Russia! The Lower House keeps blocking marriage equality by just 5 fucking votes, when the Senate or Upper House has a majority support for marriage equality!
I wouldn’t vote for a Labor party led by Shorten and so waiting for people power and the tide of world opinion to change the Libs is the only option for me. The High Court was influenced by the legality of gay marriage in other jurisdictions when it decided the marriage power in the Constitution includes the power to make gay marriage legal and I am confident that the Parliament will be influenced in that way too. It’s sad we have to wait but until quite recently the Law institutionalised homophobia in our society, and in other societies, that are otherwise democratic and accepting of difference and multiculturalism.
Oh drear ‘queer’ … the writer ended up leaving me for dead once it inserted the ignobly termed ‘queer relationships’ into it, sad that fringe socialists think that we all wear appropriated historically old & disreputable heterosexual genocidal hate slurs as if a badge of honour, up till then I was quite happily absorbing it’s point of view
This article is absolutely correct in describing efforts thus far as ridiculously naïve and a complete failure. We can only hope that our international friends come to our rescue soon, as I fear we are unable to sort this mess out on our own.
It’s a refreshing change to see an article take a realistic political analysis into account when looking at this matter.
On a personal note I have to say if it comes to a choice between electing a Labor government now or waiting a bit longer for Marriage Equality I’m definitely prepared to wait a bit longer…. a lot longer in fact. :)