A MOTION to introduce same-sex marriage in the North was narrowly
defeated in the Northern Ireland Assembly yesterday when only three
unionist members supported it.
However, equality campaigners
hailed the closeness of the vote as evidence of changed times.
The
motion to extend the rights already available under civil partnership
was brought by Sinn Féin and the Green Party, but it was effectively
blocked by the DUP, which tabled a “petition of concern”, meaning it
needed cross-community support.
The vote was lost by a slim margin of 45 to 49.
Of the 45 MLAs in support of the motion, only three were unionists.
The
British government is consulting over whether to extend marriage rights
to the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community, while the SNP
government in Scotland has pledged to introduce legislation by 2015.
Gavin Boyd of the Equal Marriage NI campaign said he was “very happy” with the vote.
“A
vote this close couldn’t even have been considered some years back,” he
said. “There were quite a few MLAs missing from the Assembly for
various reasons, so there’s every reason to assume it might have passed."
“The
DUP’s tabling of the petition of concern was a cynical ploy and an
abuse of the petition. The petition exists as a mechanism to protect
minority interests, not as a veto. But at the end of the day, we
view their actions as an expression of their fear – it shows they
believe the motion could have passed.”
Prior to the debate, there
were lively exchanges in the Assembly. Jim Allister, of the Traditional
Unionist Voice party, said that just as civil partnership had been the
“slippery slope to same-sex marriage”, the legalisation of gay marriage
would be a “slippery slope to gay adoption”.
The DUP’s Sammy Wilson said
a change in the law would create conflicts between church and state –
“for example, church youth groups could be banned from using council
facilities” as a result of their religious beliefs.
Conall
McDevitt of the SDLP countered this “flawed logic” by posing the
question: “Are Catholic schools teaching children about divorce?”
Sinn
Féin MLA Caitríona Ruane sparred energetically with the DUP, scoffing at
the “1866 laws they are quoting at us”.