The new Archbishop of Canterbury is ready to reveal he believes that marriage should be between a man and a woman.
Ahead of the first parliamentary vote on the reforms, the Rt Rev Justin
Welby is prepared to face questions about the highly divisive issue.
Tories have been plunged into deep unrest by the proposals, which David Cameron has personally championed.
The Prime Minister is facing the prospect of some 180 members of his
party, including a significant number of senior figures, opposing or
abstaining in a vote on the changes tomorrow. He is expected to attempt
to talk to his MPs today in the hope of winning their support.
Bishop Welby is being formally confirmed in his new role at a ceremony in St Paul's Cathedral today.
A source told the Daily Telegraph: "He will say that marriage is between a man and a woman, and always has been."
Lambeth Palace was keen to stress the view was standard Church of England policy and insisted the Archbishop was not planning to wade into the row by making any formal statements, but was simply ready to respond to any questions he was asked on the issue.
Tory activists claimed yesterday they felt "a sense of betrayal" over
the Prime Minister's "bulldozed-through" reforms and handed in a letter
to No 10 urging Mr Cameron to rethink the plans.
Geoffrey Vero, chairman of the Conservative association in Surrey Heath where Education Secretary Michael Gove is MP, warned the move "may seriously affect David's opportunity to get re-elected at 2015".
But human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell said Tory opponents did not represent most Conservative supporters.
He added: "Opposition to equal marriage by some Conservatives is
reviving the 'nasty party' image and turning off voters. It undermines
David Cameron's attempt to detoxify the Tory brand and present a more
caring, compassionate Conservatism. The Prime Minister's backing for marriage equality is making many voters more sympathetic to the Conservatives. The anti-gay marriage push
by backbench rebels is likely to drive crucial centre-ground swing
voters away. They will decide the next election, not anti-gay
Conservative MPs and constituency associations."
Former prime minister Gordon Brown said:
"I understand the strong feelings in the current debate but I take the
view that it is now timely to agree to end another source of
discrimination by legalising the right to marriage and I will support
the legislation in the UK Parliament and when it comes to the Scottish Parliament."
The Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill, which will also allow civil
partners to convert their partnership to a marriage and enable married
people to change their legal gender without having to end their union,
has its second reading tomorrow.
Mr Cameron is giving his MPs a free vote on the Bill, which will avoid a
technical rebellion, though the high numbers expected to oppose or
abstain from within his party will still prove an embarrassment for the
Prime Minister. Strong Liberal Democrat and Labour support means the
Bill, however, will comfortably reach its next stage.
Culture minister Ed Vaizey insisted the vote would not tear the Tory party apart, and claimed internal divisions over the issue were "good-natured".
Former children's minister Tim Loughton warned the Bill was "full of pitfalls" and would "set MP against MP".
Foreign Secretary William Hague said
he became a supporter of gay marriage "over the last couple of years"
and suggested the change would become quickly accepted by the public.
Tory MP Sir Peter Bottomley dismissed
the significance of a letter handed by a group of local party chiefs to
No 10 yesterday urging a rethink, and said arguments against gay
marriage "don't add up".
"Twenty-five past and present officers went to Downing Street.
Twenty-five out of 2,000, 3,000 does not strike me as being newsworthy,"
he told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme.
"When it was first proposed I was indifferent. Then a bunch of people
started arguments against it. I started looking at those arguments; they
don't add up. What the Conservative manifesto said is that we will consider the case
for allowing civil partnerships to turn to marriage. That is what we are
doing in Parliament tomorrow. Conservatives believe in fairness. We now understand that to move from a
civil partnership to a civil marriage is to allow the words 'I will' at
the ceremony. That is not going to be a big deal. Somehow, whether it is Conservative Members of Parliament, whether it
is some of the campaigners, whether it is some of the media, they have
said 'Oh, there's sex in this; let's give it more prominence than it
deserves'."
Before becoming prime minister, Margaret Thatcher had been among a
minority of Tory MPs who voted in favour of decriminalising
homosexuality, he told critics.