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New York state lawmakers reject gay marriage bill

By MICHAEL GORMLEY
,
AP
posted: 25 DAYS 2 HOURS AGO
comments: 12
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ALBANY, N.Y. -New York lawmakers on Wednesday rejected a bill that would have made their state the sixth to allow gay marriage, stunning advocates who suffered a similar decision by Maine voters just last month.
The New York measure needed 32 votes to pass and failed by a wider-than-expected margin, falling eight votes short in a 24-38 decision by the state Senate. The Assembly had earlier approved the bill, and Gov. David Paterson, perhaps the bill's strongest advocate, had pledged to sign it.
After the vote, Paterson called Wednesday one of his saddest days in 20 years of public service and he criticized senators who he said support gay marriage but "didn't have the intestinal fortitude to vote for it.
Senate sponsor Thomas Duane, a Manhattan Democrat and the Legislature's first openly gay member, expressed anger and disappointment. "I wasn't expecting betrayal," he said.
During debate, Sen. Ruben Diaz, a conservative minister from the Bronx, led the mostly Republican opposition.
"If you put this issue before the voters, the voters will reject it," Diaz said. "Let the people decide."
But Sen. Eric Adams, D-Brooklyn, challenged lawmakers to set aside their religious beliefs and vote for the bill. He asked them to remember that once even slavery was legal.
"When I walk through these doors, my Bible stays out," Adams said.
"That's the wrong statement," Diaz countered later. "You should carry your Bible all the time."
Others told personal stories of friends and relatives who are gay and unable to marry. Many also spoke of grandparents who survived the Holocaust and racism and said they wouldn't want to see gays subjected to such treatment.
Supporters had been hopeful they could eke out a narrow win, or a much closer vote. But afterward, they said private assurances were broken. In the end, a half-dozen Democrats opposed the measure when it was expected only two or three would vote no. While no Republicans supported the bill, most advocates expected it would attract as many as four or five GOP senators.
"This is a loss for every family in New York," said New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn. "This is a loss for every lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender New Yorker."
Others tried to put a positive light on it.
Immediately following the vote, gay rights advocates chanted: "Equal rights now!"
"We have a road map for 2010," said Alan Van Capelle, executive director of the Empire Pride Agenda, a leading proponent of the bill. "We certainly know who are friends. We certainly go to bed tonight knowing more about where our support is, and that's a victory."
But a fight in the election year next year might be more difficult.
Gay marriage is legal in Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts and Vermont. A New Hampshire law takes effect Jan. 1.
New York also doesn't allow civil unions, but has several laws, executive orders and court decisions that grant many of the rights to gays long enjoyed by married couples.
Karen Taylor of Queens stayed home to watch the legislative debate with her partner Laura Antoniou. The women, both 46, were legally married in Toronto, but hope to be able to marry in New York someday.
"It would have more meaning to both of us to be able to marry in New York," said Taylor, the national advocacy director for Services and Advocacy for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Elders in New York City. "This is something that should be available to us as New Yorkers."
A Marist College poll released Wednesday showed 51 percent of New Yorkers support legalizing gay marriage, while 42 percent opposed the measure. The poll questioned 805 registered voters November 12-16, and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 points.
AP writers Marcus Franklin in New York and Valerie Bauman in Albany contributed to this report.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
2009-12-03 03:35:57

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COMMENTS ( 12 )
Page 1 of 2 1 2 Next >>
Dhayescharlotte
8:27AM Dec 14 2009 
THANK YOU JESUS.......This country hasn't yet been given over to increased immorality.......GOD, send us some moral individuals who want to put YOU back in everything!!!!
REPLY RATING
(1 RATINGS)
 
Bobsayshello1990
12:51AM Dec 11 2009 
WHY CAN'T WE ALL JUST GET ALONG?

http://www.ihatestacy.com/index.php?id=a6a364188475c97df5fafed71bd9bd92
REPLY RATING
(0 RATINGS)
 
vcponsardin1
5:24PM Dec 8 2009 
In the conservatives' thoughtless lust to deprive others of their civil rights, they claim they are defending the sacred institution of marriage by banning gays from marrying. Yet these same hypocritical conservatives won't ban divorce as a means to defend the sacred institution of marriage. Gee... why is that, do you suppose? Hmmm?
REPLY RATING
(2 RATINGS)
 
JPMeville
10:08AM Dec 3 2009 
Boycott New York!
REPLY RATING
(1 RATINGS)
 
Tre Duce 3232
9:08AM Dec 3 2009 
if marrage is so sacred that gays are outlawed from participating, why not outlaw divorce in the same notion??? I'm pretty sure the latter is a more serious issue in the bible anyway as the whole issue with gays stems from an arbitrary line of text that homophobes have been embracing before the basic tennants of the ten commandments for generations
REPLY RATING
(2 RATINGS)
 
GoddessAlmyt
8:57AM Dec 3 2009 
civil unions are not 'just as good' any more than segregated schools were 'just as good'. How is it that someone can run off to Vegas, be married for 24 hours, divorce, and that's ok. But two people who have been together for years and want to make the commitment to be together for the rest of their lives is not? And don't quote a Bible at me, not everyone in this country is christian and, like it or not, you're living in a country founded on the principle of religious freedom. Pick up your constitution and start reading. Jefferson, author of the Declaration of Independence and former president is quoted as saying 'this country was not founded on the Bible and will not blindly follow the principles of suck'. Our basic granted rights are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, and if it makes someone happy to love someone of the same gender they should be free to do so, if it makes them happy to make the public pledge of that love then they should be afforded the same rights as those who choose to love someone of the opposite gender.
REPLY RATING
(1 RATINGS)
 
Fluffyd12
3:58AM Dec 3 2009 
"Two mother's or two father's do not exist, they are untruth's" CharleeDell I agree with you 100%. It makes me absolutely sick that the world has come to a point where people are considering this. I say, pick up a Bible and start reading! Seriously now that's just plain disgusting.
REPLY RATING
(5 RATINGS)
 
Trthjustamerway
11:46PM Dec 2 2009 
http://therightwayforward.wordpress.com/2009/12/02/
REPLY RATING
(0 RATINGS)
 
Trthjustamerway
11:46PM Dec 2 2009 
Kudos to the New York State Senate who today voted 38 to 24 against same sex marriage. Finally, politicians get it right.

While I fully support an individuals right to live in whatever “legal” relationship he or she chooses, the sanctity of marriage should continue to be that between a man and a woman.

Gay couples should be afforded the same rights and privileges of married couples, it just shouldn’t be called a marriage.

Majority rule, minority rights.
REPLY RATING
(3 RATINGS)
 
JPMeville
8:14PM Dec 2 2009 
Boycott New York!
REPLY RATING
(4 RATINGS)
 
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New York lawmakers on Wednesday rejected a bill that would have made their state the sixth to allow gay marriage, stunning advocates who suffered a similar decision by Maine voters just last month.