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Maryland Gay Marriage Bill Dies Without Final Vote

By TOM LoBIANCO   03/11/11 07:37 PM ET   AP

ANNAPOLIS, Md. -- A bill to legalize gay marriage in Maryland fell short Friday after supporters failed to find enough votes to overcome Republican opposition and misgivings by some Democrats in the deeply Catholic state.

A final vote had been expected in the House, but the overwhelmingly Democratic chamber's leaders instead withdrew it. A confluence of factors helped fracture Democtatic support, including a split among black lawmakers, the opposition of churches and trouble by some freshman lawmakers in determining what their constituents wanted.

"The vote would have been very close, make no mistake about it," said Busch, D-Anne Arundel, minutes after lawmakers returned the bill to a House committee on a voice vote, effectively killing it for the year.

The unexpected move came after two weeks of intense lobbying that included Busch meeting with delegates over the past several days to try and secure votes. He said Democrats would try again next year.

The bill to make Maryland the sixth state to allow gay marriage had already passed the Senate, and the governor said he would have signed it. Before this year, measures to extend full marriage rights to same-sex couples had never made it as far.

The Senate narrowly approved the measure two weeks ago, voting 25-21 to send the bill to the House after adding language to keep religious groups from being forced to serve gay weddings.

But the bill hit trouble in the House two weeks ago after a committee had to delay a series of votes on the issue. It ended with Busch and his lieutenants deciding it was better to save a final vote for next year, rather than put delegates on the record with a failed vote this year.

Some predicted that, if passed, the measure would have been pretitioned to referendum in the deeply Catholic state.

"I would have hoped that we could have resolved this issue and then let the people decide," said Gov. Martin O'Malley, a Democrat, after the House killed the measure. "I think an issue like this was bound to go before the people in a referendum, and I would have hoped that we would have been able to have accomplished that today."

Senate President Thomas V. Mike Miller had said he believes citizens would have rejected gay marriage in such a referendum.

Delegate Curt Anderson, D-Baltimore, said House leaders failed to do a good job of keeping track of where each of the party's members stood, hampering efforts to rally support. Democrats hold 98 seats of the 141-seat House.

"That system was not in place for this bill, and I think that there just wasn't enough time to get a good count," Anderson said.

The pickup of six seats by Republicans in the last election also helped erode support, said House Environmental Matters Chairwoman Maggie McIntosh, one of the chamber's openly gay members.

"If in the general election we had retained all of the Democratic seats I think we would be declaring victory today," a tearful McIntosh said.

House Democratic leaders also said they failed to secure the votes they needed from black lawmakers.

"They took the black votes for granted because they're so used to having it," said Delegate Jill Carter, D-Balitmore. "This issue was too big, people's connection to church and religion were too deep."

Several of the chamber's 33 black lawmakers took opposite sides during Friday's debate.

Delegate Jay Walker, D-Prince George's, said he would represent his majority-black district's wishes even if it conflicted with his personal views.

"If I want to truly represent my district I vote red (no)," Walker told his colleagues.

However, Delegate Keiffer Mitchell – the grandson of the legendary NAACP lobbyist Clarence Mitchell Jr. – said the debate was about civil rights.

"It is a civil rights issue when we as a state and a government deny equal protection under the law," said Mitchell, D-Baltimore.

But Delegate Emmett Burns, D-Baltimore County, a black pastor and opponent of gay marriage said the struggles of gays could not match the violence against blacks during the civil rights era.

"Those who desire to ride on our coattails are historically incorrect," Burns said.

Still, because no roll-call vote was taken on the issue, it was hard to determine where exactly the Democratic rift fell. Anderson, also a black lawmaker, said the vote had less to do with race and more to do with differences between conservative and liberal members of the party.

Delegate Anne Kaiser, D-Montgomery, another of the chamber's openly gay members, said supporters were always a few votes short of the 71 and that many factors blocked their way.

"I think in some cases it was the churches back home," Kaiser said. "I really can't explain people's motiviations. Many people who promised us their votes changed their minds."

Opponents said the decision Friday was a victory for defining marriage as being between one man and one woman.

"We took a position to support the existing definition as being between one man and woman and that prevailed," said House Minority Leader Anthony O'Donnell, R-Calvert. "I think it was the appropriate action."

___

Associated Press writer Brian Witte in Annapolis contributed to this report.

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ANNAPOLIS, Md. -- A bill to legalize gay marriage in Maryland fell short Friday after supporters failed to find enough votes to overcome Republican opposition and misgivings by some Democrats in the d...
ANNAPOLIS, Md. -- A bill to legalize gay marriage in Maryland fell short Friday after supporters failed to find enough votes to overcome Republican opposition and misgivings by some Democrats in the d...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John Melgar
01:17 AM on 03/28/2011
this is the one piece of news that put a smile on my face. good to see that america is not loosing its head
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practiceempathy
Tolerance need not yield to willful ignorance.
09:17 PM on 03/28/2011
Nice to see you find pleasure in other people's struggle to live their lives with dignity.
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Tracy Fortune
Geek, mother, lesbian, fair & compassionate ;^)
06:52 AM on 03/18/2011
Can everyone please, PLEASE, get onboard & state, "marriage equaity"?

This is not "gay" anything- it is equality...
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newtom
eschew obfuscation
11:58 AM on 03/21/2011
PRECISELY!!!!!!!!!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ioan Lightoller
Proud Married Gay Pagan Man
05:38 PM on 04/03/2011
I resfuse to use "gay marriage" and in fact despise the term. Like you I believe it should be and is an issue of marriage equality.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Wood
A.T.C.G...(sigh)
11:23 AM on 03/17/2011
To all the religious zealots who so adamantly oppose gay marriage...one question...If millions of people benefit by allowing gay people to marry, and not one person is harmed...can you please offer one rational reason to oppose it ? I ask this question all over HP and so far...no one offers a rational reason. Do you have any reasons...or is it all just an emotional resistance ? My wife and I have been happily married for over 30 years and am in no way threatened by gay marriage. There are benefits from marriage which are automatic...but which require lawyers and contracts for a gay couple to enjoy. If anyone should desire to join their lives together...why should they be denied ? Please give actual reasons. Biblical prohibitions are not rational reasons. They were written by men who had no idea of biochemistry. They were wrong. In any event...if you're not a particpant...why do you care ? If a gay couple chooses to marry...how does that negatively effect you or your marriage ? It doesn't effect mine. Let's hear some reasons...surely you have some. We'll wait to hear them...(sigh)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ioan Lightoller
Proud Married Gay Pagan Man
08:05 PM on 03/17/2011
You'll be waiting a LONG time. Every time I have asked this question, I have never received an answer.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Wood
A.T.C.G...(sigh)
10:47 AM on 03/18/2011
Makes you think they don't have a rational answer doesn't it ?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ioan Lightoller
Proud Married Gay Pagan Man
08:42 PM on 03/15/2011
The smug faces of the religious nuts in the photograph really get to me. They can look smug all they want. The day is coming when they will NOT be permitted to enact their prejudice in law. If they want something to do to "protect marriage", why don't they work on the ridiculous divorce rate in this country? Why don't they work to make divorces harder to get? Nope, it's easier to deny law-abiding citizens their right to marriage. They can, therefore they do.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kittyburger
Schrodinger's micro-bio may or may not be empty.
06:38 PM on 04/03/2011
Why is enforcing anti-LGBT prejudice the signature issue for "real Christians" these days? I'm convinced it's because it lets them focus efforts & enmity on someone outside of themselves without the difficulty or bother of self-reflection. If you start in on false oaths, lying, adultery... why you would have to admit that many "real Christians" do that; that you yourself had done that. But queer people...
08:41 PM on 03/14/2011
Being originally from Maryland, this is sad that this bill didn't pass. Gay marriage will eventually be legal in this country and these marriage debates will be a thing of the past.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ioan Lightoller
Proud Married Gay Pagan Man
09:59 PM on 03/14/2011
Fanned and faved. Then it will be just "marriage" as it should be.
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newtom
eschew obfuscation
03:16 PM on 03/14/2011
For all the fear the right creates about banning Sharia Law from influencing the laws of our country, you'd think they'd see the fact that religious belief has no place in our law.

How do they justrify wanting it both ways? Xtian law is ok but Sharai law is not?

Keep your religion as you wish but don't force it on me.
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
07:07 PM on 03/14/2011
It's how they operate: make someone else feared for maybe at some point in the future doing what the Republicans are doing right in front of us.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ioan Lightoller
Proud Married Gay Pagan Man
07:40 PM on 03/14/2011
Faved and a big "blessed be" to that. This is nothing more than trying to distract attention from their drive to make this an unfree Xtian theocracy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John Melgar
01:21 PM on 03/14/2011
maryland good job for sticking to your principles.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ben Schroeder
02:50 PM on 03/14/2011
Why are you encouraging bigotry?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ioan Lightoller
Proud Married Gay Pagan Man
06:43 PM on 03/14/2011
Because he or she sees us as "other" and hence, inferior. This is pretty much the basis of all bigotry--the desire to keep a given group "in their place".
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LintLass
"When you can balance a tackhammer on your head...
07:05 PM on 03/14/2011
Really, it seems to me that the Right and certain other special interests lobbied votes *away* from marriage equality at the last minute to kill it in committee..... What 'Principles' do you figure that is in a state with popular support for equality?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ioan Lightoller
Proud Married Gay Pagan Man
07:41 PM on 03/14/2011
With this lot, "principles" are what they say they are. Just shows how morally bankrupt they truly are.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alberto J Pacheco
01:06 PM on 03/14/2011
The church (organization) is the biggest enemy of liberty and freedom in this country. If not directly, then indirectly due in fact to the prey of EVERY scam being a god-fearing human lacking luck or practical intelligence.

And same-sex marriage WILL pass in MD eventually. It IS inevitable, and conservatives WILL lose support for antiquated bigotry as soon as we start educating their children.

Arguments I've encountered today:

"not all Christians are hypocrites"
--->but the overwhelming majority of people lacking morals & ethics while utterly exuding money & power ARE OR PRETEND TO BE.

"statistics show that in general no more than 10% of church funds go to charitable efforts, that is, helping people outside the church."
--->you're boat has hit an iceberg, brother. think about it. your religion has cannibalized the validity of its own faith.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ioan Lightoller
Proud Married Gay Pagan Man
07:42 PM on 03/14/2011
Fanned and faved. These people don't even realise how morally bankrupt they truly are.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
joelb5000
10:11 AM on 03/14/2011
Well, despite the hurdles for gay marriage through the democratic process, it's still MUCH HARDER to amend the 14th Amendment of the Constitution that guarantees equality. These bigots will soon be put in their place.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ioan Lightoller
Proud Married Gay Pagan Man
06:44 PM on 03/14/2011
I pray to the Goddess daily for this. Christians are not the only people of faith in this country. Those faiths deserve protection of the law as do our citizens of no belief at all.
01:00 PM on 03/13/2011
it is interesting that ethnic churches in this country, the congregants, whose ancestors suffered so grievously from an extreme interpretation of lev" take slaves from the surrounding countries(pagan) for life and pass them onto your children as inheritance" could then on their own take up an extreme interpretation of another verse of lev as a reason to oppress homosexuals.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
09:05 PM on 03/13/2011
Self-righteousness is common in people who have been oppressed, but it is not an attractive quality.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ioan Lightoller
Proud Married Gay Pagan Man
06:16 PM on 03/15/2011
Amen to that Bob.
11:50 PM on 03/13/2011
after listening, last night, to a debate about" is homosexuality unafrican" i now understand. the same religious colonialism that took place in africa, took place in this country among enslaved ethnics." their response today is out of that same colonial influence.
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thereisonlyoneparty
more amazing than you
01:15 AM on 03/14/2011
Not necessarily.

Various reasons for contemporary sexual views exist in Africa today.  It is not all because of foreign influence.  People make up their own views.
01:27 AM on 03/13/2011
The Federal Government needs to stop recognizing marriage as a legal partnership and equally accept civil unions between straight and gay couples. Having done this then marriage truly becomes an issue of faith and different religions and churches can decide for themselves if they wish to marry two individuals that are in love. As an ordained minister I would gladly marry any two people that are in love and are willing to devote themselves to each other. The time has come for those against gay marriage to learn to respect that others do not share their religious views and should be given the freedom to live, love, marry and worship in their own way. If you would deny another their right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, the you do not deserve those rights yourself.
12:14 AM on 03/13/2011
I support gay rights, but drawing parallels between the black civil rights movement and the gay marriage movement is so offensive. One movement emerged from the Church and was strengthened by the Church. The other is a wholly secular movement that attacks Christianity at every corner and degrades anyone who disagrees with it as bigots. They are never going to win the hearts and minds of black Americans by operating this way.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
12:41 AM on 03/13/2011
You "support Gay rights" (actually, you apparently support the ones you approve of)
-- but you think that a PERFECTLY REASONABLE objection to churches interfering in our lives is "attacking Christianity" --- this is, sorry, nonsense!
"Christianity" is not a church, or group of churches -- it is the heart of Christ expressed through people.

MAYBE THE HEARTS AND MINDS ARE TOO CLOSED --- is that possible?

AND WHY IS IT UP TO THE AGGRIEVED GROUP TO KISS YOUR FOOT TO GET YOU TO STOP PLACING THEM BENEATH YOU? That would make Gays "Aunt Toms", no?

THAT attitude attacks Christianity -- for shame!

There is a PERFECTLY REASONABLE point of view among Gays that Blacks should have automatically supported their rights. ALL the criticism is due to Blacks not doing so.

If you wished to argue that the mormons -- the ringleaders-- are not Christians, they would be offended, but you would have a point. But then, YOU COULD be angry at the lds church for manipulating Black churchgoers in CA and other places.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
03:23 AM on 03/13/2011
PS--- Kindly sleep on this:

Did Dr King win the hearts and minds of White Southerners, resulting in the end of segregation, or would you say that some % of Southerners miss the KKK?

You say all comparisons are wrong -- but if Blacks in California were for FREEDOM for everybody, they would have voted NO on 8, or, if uncertain, had the decency to leave that line of the ballot BLANK -- the very least thing a decent Christian could have done.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rachael Crawley
Canadian and proud
09:04 PM on 03/12/2011
This was brought down by cowards looking for votes. I would rather have one term in office knowing I did the right thing for equality than several where I restricted Americans' rights for one more grab at power. For shame.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ioan Lightoller
Proud Married Gay Pagan Man
09:16 PM on 03/12/2011
Thank you!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Doug Watt
Not ready for 2012
10:12 PM on 03/12/2011
Well said, Rachel.
07:37 PM on 03/12/2011
anyone is entitled to believe what he choses without recrimination. any church should be allowed to marry or not marry whom ever they choose. but whether this sin issue about homosexuality is of christ is another matter.

bottom line: that christendom would in any way say homosexuality is a sin shows that christendom, even after 2000 years, is still struggling to fully embrace the new covenant of christ.

secularly, the problem comes when one's religious belief violates anothers equal protection........homosexuality now being deemed by govt as legal, and thus ones religious freedom ends where it violates anothers equal protection.


all you have to do is transpose the word black for the word homosexual, to see what should and should not be allowed, those black now being entitled to equal protection, when not so long ago they were also denied this by the law, influenced by certain religious beliefs that supported such a denial.

as with homosexuals compared to heterosexuals, blacks were thought to be less compared to whites, the common understanding was that it was the white man and not the black man who had been made in god's image.

doesnt that sound familiar???????
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ioan Lightoller
Proud Married Gay Pagan Man
10:11 PM on 03/12/2011
Fanned and faved! It seems as if bigots always need someone or some group as "less than" in order for them to feel superior. I'm surprised these bigots don't pray a modern version of the Pharisee's prayer, maybe "I thank thee O Lord that I am not as the homosexuals"....
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newtom
eschew obfuscation
03:39 PM on 03/14/2011
Something you said may just be the key to a solution to this problem: "any church should be allowed to marry or not marry whom ever they choose"

In fact, the law is interfering with the free exercise of religion. If, in fact, a "church" (to use the common language) believes they should conduct gay marriages, who is the state to tell them that they can't?

Just a thought.
07:33 PM on 03/12/2011
Ignoring the idiocy of "separate but equal", we don't have Civil Unions in MD either.
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newtom
eschew obfuscation
03:40 PM on 03/14/2011
Ah yes, separate but equal. Maryland got in trouble with that once before if I recall my history correctly...