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Germany to vote on same-sex marriage after Merkel drops opposition Germany to vote on same-sex marriage after Merkel drops opposition
(about 5 hours later)
Germany’s parliament is due to vote on a bill to legalise same-sex marriage on Friday after the lower house legislative committee put it on the agenda, its chairwoman said. A lesbian couple who inspired Angela Merkel to soften her opposition to same-sex marriage have said they will invite the German chancellor to their wedding if a bill to legalise the ceremony is passed on Friday.
“The path to equality is open,” said Renate Kuenast, of the left-leaning ecologist Greens opposition party, in a tweet on Wednesday. A free vote is expected to take place in the Bundestag on Friday, a day before the summer recess after being hurriedly put on the parliamentary agenda on Wednesday by the Social Democrats (SPD), Merkel’s junior coalition partners. The SPD said last weekend that an agreement on same-sex marriage would be a central condition to any future coalition.
The bill is widely expected to pass as it is backed by most parties and the chancellor, Angela Merkel, has told lawmakers of her centre-right party that they can vote according to their conscience. The bill is widely expected to pass as it is backed by most parties and Merkel has told lawmakers of her centre-right party, the Christian Democrats (CDU), that they can vote according to their conscience.
The reform would grant full marital rights including the possibility to jointly adopt children to gay and lesbian couples, who in Germany are only able to enter civil unions. “The path to equality is open,” tweeted Renate Künast, head of the Greens in the Bundestag, on Wednesday.
The bill was hastily put on the parliamentary agenda on the last day before the summer break by the centre-left Social Democrats, Greens and far-left Linke party. The proposed legislation would grant full marital rights including the possibility to jointly adopt children to same-sex couples, who in Germany are now only able to enter civil partnerships.
They acted after Merkel dropped her opposition to the reform, sparking widespread calls for a speedy vote. The vote comes after Merkel softened her stance on gay marriage at a Berlin debate on Monday night.
Merkel had long voiced personal reservations about gay marriage with adoption rights, citing concern about “the wellbeing of the children”. In a live question and answer session organised by the magazine Brigitte, she said a personal encounter with Gundula Zilm and her partner in the chancellor’s Mecklenburg-Vorpommern constituency had helped change her mind after years of feeling conflicted over the issue.
Last Sunday, her junior coalition partners and election rivals, the Social Democrats, upped the ante by declaring they would insist on same-sex marriage in any future alliance. “I had a life-changing experience in my home constituency,” Merkel told the audience. She said she had confided in “a lesbian constituent” that her personal “sticking point” on gay marriage was the “welfare of children”.
All other political parties hold the same view, leaving Merkel’s party opposed, along with the hard-right Alternative for Germany. Merkel said Zilm, who had fostered children from troubled homes for years with her partner, had responded: “‘I tell you what, come and visit me in my home, where I live with my lesbian partner and eight foster children. The foster children have been with us for a long time, and I think they’re doing well.’” Merkel said she had not yet taken Zilm up on her invitation but hoped to do so.
Merkel signalled a shift in her position on Monday in an on-stage interview with the editor of women’s magazine Brigitte. The German chancellor told the Q&A session: “When the state has decided a child is much better off in a same sex partnership, than they are staying with a violent mother and father then I have to acknowledge that positively and include it in my judgment.”
She said her thinking had changed after a “memorable experience” when she recently met a lesbian couple who lovingly care for eight foster children in her Baltic coast constituency. Reacting to Merkel’s words, Zilm said she and her partner Christine were “happy to know that this decision might be down to us”.
Recalling her encounter with Merkel in the market place in the town of Barth, Christine Zilm told the newspaper Ostsee-Zeitung: “I told her I didn’t want us in this century to still be thinking in a medieval way.”
Zilm said she had appealed to Merkel to change the law, “because why shouldn’t same-sex couples bring up kids? To be gay or lesbian isn’t contagious, and the children grow up and go their own way.”
Zilm added: “It’s nice to know she remembered us.”
Merkel said she was in favour of “a decision of conscience” and preferred a free vote because the issue was “a really personal matter” and one over which she had battled with her own conscience for years.
Some conservatives from within the CDU and its Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union, have signalled they may try to block the vote.
Her comments sparked a heated debate on social media, and prompted the hashtag #Ehefüralle (marriage for all) to trend on Twitter.
Germany was one of the first European countries to legalise same-sex partnerships in 2001 under a SPD- Greens government. But since 2005 Merkel’s CDU-led government has refused repeatedly to legalise gay marriage owing to strong opposition from the conservative alliance’s right wing, despite granting same-sex couples full marital rights, including the right to adopt.
Other countries across Europe have already legalised gay marriage, including Belgium, France, the Netherlands, Spain and the UK, except for Northern Ireland.
Merkel said she did not want the question to be politicised, particularly before parliamentary elections in September. But if the bill is passed, her conservatives will be able to take credit for it, despite having opposed the motion for years while the opposition SPD, Greens and pro-business liberals have strongly pushed for it. About two-thirds of Germans are believed to support it.
Alread in a civil partnership, the Zilms, said they would marrywhen it was legal.
“And Angela Merkel will get an invitation to the wedding,” they told the Ostsee-Zeitung.