A key proposal from the Australia 2020 Summit that civil unions be offered to same-sex couples has been officially rejected by the Rudd Government. The Government’s response equated the proposal with same-sex marriage equality, saying the no gay unions policy “reflects the widely held view in the community that marriage is between a man and a woman”. But the Government confirmed it still intends to recognise and support same-sex families through its community and social inclusion strategies, and convince NSW, QLD, SA, WA and NT to implement relationship registers. “One step towards eliminating discrimination against same-sex couples is for their relationships to be legally recognised,” the response states. “As part of the Government’s same-sex law reforms, registered relationships will also be recognised in many Commonwealth laws to provide a more consistent approach to the recognition of relationships.” National PFLAG spokeswoman Shelley Argent was a part of the summit branch that recommended civil unions.
“Regardless of what type of relationship recognition it is, we need uniformity across the country so the confusion is taken away when a couple go from one state to another,” Argent told SSO. “But we’re being totally ignored by the [Queensland] Bligh Government.” Australian Marriage Equality advocates disputed the Government’s claim that marriage discrimination was strongly supported. “Opinion polls consistently show that a majority of Australians support same-sex marriage, making a nonsense of the Government’s stated belief that its policy ‘reflects a widely held view in the community’”, AME spokesman Peter Furness said. “The Rudd Government has shown that its vision for the future is blinkered by prejudices from the past.” Coalition for Equality spokesman Corey Irlam said there were some positive aspects to the Government’s response, such as support for gay and lesbian families. Full Story at: http://www.starobserver.com.au |