Same-sex marriage will never be introduced under Tony Abbott’s
government in Australia, the country’s Labor party has warned after a
free vote on the issue was blocked.
The ruling coalition voted by 66 to 33 yesterday to order government MPs
to follow the party line and vote against equal marriage, meaning that
the law cannot be passed unless a significant number of politicians
break ranks.
The Prime Minister has warned that under his Liberal Party’s policies,
any frontbenchers who defy the agreed position will be sacked.
Mr Abbott, who personally opposes gay marriage and trained as a Roman
Catholic priest, has offered a referendum on the issue if his government
remains in power after the next election, but the outcome would not be
binding.
“Obviously the fact that we are disposed to put it to the people in the
next term of parliament shows that we are open to change, but please
let's not underestimate the magnitude of this as a cultural shift,” he
said.
Bill Shorten, leader of the opposition Labor party, called on all
coalition MPs to keep lobbying for a free vote but seemed sceptical.
“The choice in this country is you either have Mr Abbott or you have marriage equality but you can't have both,” he said.
Members of Mr Shorten’s party will not be whipped for any vote on
same-sex marriage and he has pledged to introduce legislation making it
legal within 100 days of the next election, in the event of a Labor
victory.
But it is a conservative MP, Warren Entsch, who is due to introduce a
new bill to Parliament on Monday to allow same-sex marriage throughout
Australia.
The backbench politician is a member of the Liberal National Party, part
of Abbott’s right-wing coalition, but has cross-party support for the
legislation.
“I think there will be a handful of people on my side that will vote for this,” Mr Entsch told News Corp Australia.
“Absolutely I will be crossing the floor. But even with some support I don’t think the support is there to see it succeed.”
Opinion polls suggest that the majority of Australians support equal
marriage and supporters were enraged by the latest development in the
long-running debate.
Many people had hoped that success in the US and Ireland, despite
well-publicised opposition, would bring Australia closer to taking the
same step.
Some television network have refused to carry anti-same-sex marriage
advertising and the owners of Canberra’s airport made their feelings
known as MPs returned to the capital after a six-week recess on Monday.
They arrived to see it illuminated in rainbow colours symbolising LGBT
pride as owners joined hundreds of Australian businesses declaring their
support for marriage equality.
Members of the Australian Marriage Equality campaign group said that
people would support equality in a referendum, known as a plebiscite,
even if politicians refused to.
“The Abbott Government has disappointed and angered millions of
Australians by deciding to remain on the wrong side of history, but
momentum will only build and love will win out,” the group’s national
director, Rodney Croome, said.
“Tony Abbott can gag his party room, but he can’t gag the Australian
people who will vote strongly in favour of marriage equality at a
plebiscite.”
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