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New Jersey Gay Marriage: State Senate Passes Bill Legalizing Same-Sex Marriage

New Jersey Gay Marriage

GEOFF MULVIHILL   02/13/12 04:18 PM ET  AP

TRENTON, N.J. — In a move that supporters called a civil rights milestone, New Jersey's state Senate on Monday passed a bill to recognize same-sex marriages, marking the first time state lawmakers officially endorsed the idea – despite the promise of a veto by Gov. Chris Christie.

Monday's vote was 24-16 in favor of the bill, a major swing from January 2010, when the Senate rejected it 20-14.

"It means the world isn't changing, it means the world has already changed," Steven Goldstein, chairman of the gay rights group Garden State Equality said after the vote. "So wake up and smell the equality."

Before the vote, Marsha Shapiro squeezed the hand of her longtime partner Louise Walpin, and reflected on how a body that rejected gay marriage two years ago was about to change its stance. "The pride will overpower the sorrow," she said.

But opponents say it's "an exercise in futility" even if the Assembly passes the bill Thursday as expected, given Christie's veto vow.

Len Deo, president of New Jersey Family Policy Council, called the vote "something we have to go through" and said it would be made moot with a veto.

While New Jersey differs from most states in that it has no law or state constitutional amendment banning gay marriage, neither its court nor lawmakers have allowed gay nuptials. Seven states and Washington, D.C., allow gay marriage. Washington state joined the list Monday when Gov. Christine Gregoire signed a same-sex marriage law.

In 2006, the New Jersey's Supreme Court ruled that the state had to give the legal protections of marriage to committed gay and lesbian couples, but that it need not call those protections marriage.

Lawmakers responded by creating civil unions rather than marriage.

Gay rights advocates say civil unions have not provided true equality. They complain that they set up a separate and inherently unequal classification for gays – something social conservatives dispute.

Seven gay couples, along with several of their children, filed a lawsuit last year to try to get the court to order gay nuptials be allowed.

In the meantime, Democratic leaders in the Legislature are trying to do the same thing by passing a law.

When the Senate last voted on gay marriage two years ago, just before Gov. Jon Corzine, a Democrat who supported the measure, left office, several last-minute defections killed the bill. With the arrival of Republican Gov. Chris Christie, who spoke against gay marriage when asked about it during his campaign, advocates' hopes dimmed.

But the bill returned this year after Senate President Stephen Sweeney, a Democrat from Deptford, declared that it was a mistake for him to abstain on the 2010 bill. He vowed to make legalizing gay marriage a priority this year.

Christie last month said he'd veto the legislation if it passed. Christie said that such a fundamental change should be up to a vote of the people, and he has called for a referendum on the issue.

Democratic leaders say they will not allow a vote, arguing that a majority of the people should not be entrusted with deciding whether to protect a minority.

Instead, gay-rights supporters are hopeful that they can get enough lawmakers on their side to override Christie's expected veto.

It would take two-thirds of both chambers of the Legislature and would have to happen by the time the current legislative session ends in January 2014.

Sweeney said he knows which senators he'll try to persuade but won't name them publicly.

Sen. Raymond Lesniak, a Democrat from Elizabeth, said that if all lawmakers voted their conscience and didn't cave to political pressure, there would be enough Senate votes now to override a veto. And he said that some lawmakers could switch positions, partly because of the influence of gay friends or family. "You never know who's going to forward – a daughter, a son, a neighbor of significant meaning of a senator or assemblyperson – and change a mind," he said.

Two Democrats voted no and two voted yes in what was otherwise a party-line vote.

"It is my opinion that our republic was established to guarantee liberty to all people," said Jennifer Beck, a Republican from Red Bank who voted yes. "It is our role to protect all of the people who live in our state."

Sen. Gerald Cardinale, a Republican from Demarest, was the only senator to speak against the bill, saying allowing gays to marry goes against nature and history. "This bill simply panders to well-financed pressure groups and is not in the public interest," he said.

___

Follow Mulvihill at http://www.twitter.com/geoffmulvihill

Here's a look back at some of the most notable recent developments in LGBT rights:
Repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell
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The Obama administration's repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell went into effect on September 20, 2011. The longstanding policy prevented gay, lesbian and bisexual individuals from openly serving in the military.

"Service members will no longer be forced to hide who they are in order to serve our country," President Obama said in a July statement after signing the repeal. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and then-chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mike Mullen also signed the certification.
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TRENTON, N.J. — In a move that supporters called a civil rights milestone, New Jersey's state Senate on Monday passed a bill to recognize same-sex marriages, marking the first time state lawmake...
TRENTON, N.J. — In a move that supporters called a civil rights milestone, New Jersey's state Senate on Monday passed a bill to recognize same-sex marriages, marking the first time state lawmake...
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11:02 PM on 02/16/2012
I am straight but I have no problem with gay people being married. Some people talk about it like it is a crime which it is not. It's almost the same as an African American person marrying a caucasion person or a Jewish person marrying a Christian person. Gay people being married is not going to make the world a worse place. There is only one thing that matters in marriage and that is love. If you love someone you should be able to be married to them. Not to mention another couples marriage does not affect someone else in this world that they don't know in anyway. Marriage affects family and friends of the people and most importantly the two people married. There are so many more worse problems the government should be focusing on right now, and hopefully someday will start focusing on the bigger problems in the world today.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BooBoo Bob
Fighter, activist, bon-vivant and lover.
03:42 PM on 02/16/2012
By the way, is there any way to remove a "favorite"? I have a few posts that I most definitely did not want to support but my finger slipped.
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macanudo101
Not Left, Nor Right, I'm Ambidextrous
05:29 PM on 02/16/2012
I don't think so. I've tried/looked before and couldn't find an "un-favorite" button.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BooBoo Bob
Fighter, activist, bon-vivant and lover.
06:10 PM on 02/16/2012
Dangit.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
03:44 AM on 02/16/2012
LATEST FEAR TACTIC FROM CONSERVATIVE CATHOLICS AND THE MORHOLES

"Churches will be forced to perform Gay marriages, baptise their kids, etc"

Of course, there is NO legislature in the USA that would pass that, because it is against Freedom of Religion

But then, the NEW definition of "Freedom of Religion" is
"We can slam you, call you disgusting, hold back your rights, and you have no right to object or call us names back"
09:18 PM on 02/15/2012
I am straight but this is 2012. It should get passed. Until the world ends, it will always be gay people. So get over it governor. Election is coming up. Vote him out.
07:46 PM on 02/15/2012
i really don't understand the fear some have that a state giving a gay couple the same license with the same name as a straight couple would get denigrates or endangers straight marriages. here's a little factoid (something you probably haven't heard on faux news, but can look up on official sites): since massachusetts legalized gay marriage, the overall divorce rate has gone down...to the lowest in the country or near so. where are the highest rates of divorce? besides nevada (for obvious reasons), most are in the deep south...places which won't allow gay marriage until the federal governement (most likely the u.s. supreme court) forces them to do so (but don't hold your breath).
08:40 PM on 02/15/2012
sorry all. that first sentence was almost unintelligible, but i think my query is clear.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
05:22 PM on 02/15/2012
MR PIGGY

WAS WORRIED THAT HE WOULD NOT GET A COOKIE AT MASS ON SUNDAY

If he went against the bishops' demands
01:13 AM on 02/16/2012
Being who you are,you will never have a New Year W/ Love, Less greed & Vengence. Why do you people even put those saying's up there they are sooooooooooooo stupid.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
03:39 AM on 02/16/2012
BLOCKING OTHERS' LOVE IS STUPID

DEFENDING THE BLOCKING IS UN-AMERICAN
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YouAreJokingRight
Taking you less seriously than you take yourself.
01:54 PM on 02/16/2012
why do you have to attack his appearance? There is no need for that. You are smart enough to be able to attack his politics. Don't stoop to the appearance attacks.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bob Kellerman
Let's have more sanity toward each other
05:19 PM on 02/16/2012
It is not the appearance, but the overall demeanor to which I refer
treabeton
Gold dust at my feet, On the sunny side of the str
04:26 PM on 02/15/2012
Christie. " The times they are a changin." Get on the right side of history.
treabeton
Gold dust at my feet, On the sunny side of the str
04:19 PM on 02/15/2012
If civil rights were left up to a state's voters, blacks would have no rights in the southern states.
12:22 PM on 02/15/2012
Governor Christie,
the faster you veto treating LGBTs as EQUALS the quicker your career ENDS.

Works for me...Shamu
http://i1186.photobucket.com/albums/z379/BoyInBOYCOTT/ChristieWorks.jpg
10:37 AM on 02/15/2012
"Sen. Gerald Cardinale, a Republican from Demarest, was the only senator to speak against the bill, saying allowing gays to marry goes against nature and history. "

Senator, the same can be said for the first bill against slavery but thousands of years and a few Constitutional amendments later, slavery was abolished. Get on the side of right and do no people harm.
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TXanimal
Somewhere between Occam's Razor & Murphy's Law
11:37 AM on 02/15/2012
Whenever I see a quote like that I wonder if lies like "allowing gays to marry goes against nature and history" is a willful lie, intellectual laziness or plain old ignorance...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BooBoo Bob
Fighter, activist, bon-vivant and lover.
12:24 PM on 02/16/2012
Obviously, this senator has no background in biology OR history.
03:26 AM on 02/15/2012
What price judicial ... and now legislative .. . tyranny in New jersey and America. When legislators ignore the evidence and refuse to include the voice of the people in their decisionmaking, we should hold them to a higher standard. We have asked searching questions of the NJ Legislature in the online articles "Why Chris Christie Should, Must and Will Veto Gay Marriage in New Jersey" and "Is the New Jersey Legislature Ignoring the Evidence Against Gay Marriage?"
10:42 AM on 02/15/2012
Tyranny is what our country was built on.

Tyranny is exactly what the anti-gay people are subjecting the gays.

The majority of US citizens voted down laws against slavery, women rights and other topics in our history. The majority is not always right.
01:15 AM on 02/16/2012
But the MAJORITY ALWAYS WINS, because there's POWER IN NUMBERS.
01:30 AM on 02/16/2012
We make the point, ad nauseam, that a behaviour-based group is not to be confused with a reak "minority". Read robert Regier and Daniel Garcia's "Homosexuality is Not a Civil Right" (www,crrange.com/wall34.html )
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TBJ
Irrelevent Blurb
10:54 AM on 02/15/2012
Care to actually link those articles?
01:38 AM on 02/16/2012
I would have thought that Google was still alive and well ...
"Why Chris Christie Should, Must and Will Veto Gay Marriage in New Jersey" ( http://www.scribd.com/doc/81560824/Why-Chris-Christie-Should-Must-and-Will-Veto-Gay-Marriage-in-New-Jersey )
"Is New Jersey's Legislature Ignoring the Evidence Against Gay Marriage?" ( http://www.scribd.com/doc/81560347/Is-New-Jersey-s-Legislature-Ignoring-the-Evidence-Against-Gay-Marriage )
02:50 AM on 02/15/2012
"Wake up and smell the EQUALITY"???

That ain't what I'm smelling!!
treabeton
Gold dust at my feet, On the sunny side of the str
04:21 PM on 02/15/2012
Christie sweating?
04:54 PM on 02/15/2012
Nope. Politicians and cronies, particularly Democrats, trying to get close enough to stick their hands in my pockets.
01:16 AM on 02/16/2012
That's for Damn sure
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Terence Duke
Tea Pty Slogan:We Will SEE it When We BELIEVE It
12:07 AM on 02/15/2012
I am surprised by Christies reaction. With his many forceful comments and other things that go against his parties lock step, I thought he would actually be a leader and do the right thing. I loved when he spoke up telling people to knock off all this Sharia Law junk thats used to scare people etc and other things. He would end up helping his party by not vetoing this. He is not a christian conservative type republican....
10:43 AM on 02/15/2012
Loved your comment on Christies voice against Sharia Law junk.
01:19 AM on 02/16/2012
Who cares if he's not a conservative, Dukey He's putting you in your place right now. He will Veto this putrid bill
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Terence Duke
Tea Pty Slogan:We Will SEE it When We BELIEVE It
02:32 AM on 02/16/2012
It's just posturing. It will soon win at federal level and it won't matter what states have banned it it will be ruled unconstitutional very soon which anyone in first year law school or first grade who can read English. It falls under 14th amendment. That will put you in your place. Permanently
08:49 PM on 02/14/2012
There is no hope any more it's getting worse. Soon well be in camps.
10:57 AM on 02/15/2012
Camping sounds fun. :3
06:26 PM on 02/15/2012
I can be very camp, myself?

Who's going to put you in a camp, and why?
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robertstone1robert
My micro bio is too big.
03:51 PM on 02/14/2012
It's not a matter of legalities. It's a matter of understanding the English language. Marriage is a union of people of the opposite sex. If a union of people of the same sex occurs you can call it a "Civil Union."
There is only one thing to be gained by calling a union of people of the same sex "marriage." The same thing that was gained when the homosexuals co-opted a perfectly legitimate word,"gay," and made it synonymous with homosexual. They make homosexuality more palatable.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jason N
Proud Firebagger Lefty
04:27 PM on 02/14/2012
" It's a matter of understand­ing the English language. Marriage is a union of people of the opposite sex."

Yep, and in 1966, it was the union of people of the opposite sex and same race. Understanding the English language? LMAO!!! So I assume to you, tell means to count and brave means cowardice? Just to name two words that have utterly different meanings now from their origins.
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robertstone1robert
My micro bio is too big.
06:48 PM on 02/14/2012
Really? I'm no expert on linguistics but I do know the origin of "brave." It comes from the old Italian and Spanish word "bravo," which by no stretch of the imagination meant cowardice. If you go further back I know it is thought to come from the word "barbarous."
For thousands of years "marriage" meant the union of two people of the opposite sex.
04:27 PM on 02/14/2012
Actually what you are saying flies in the face of the traditions of this nation. You are employing circular logic that is failing you. You assert YOUR personal definition of marriage and then insist that cannot change because it is always as it has been.

If you knew anything of civil rights and the traditions in this country you would know that we do NOT withhold rights because a minority has never traditionally had them. This notion has been shot down in EVERY court case in which it has been raised.

Why is it that you who are SO glib about keeping me from my rights NEVER know this?

In other words? You are just a garden variety bigot.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
robertstone1robert
My micro bio is too big.
07:51 PM on 02/14/2012
You make me laugh. When you have no argument you resort to name calling, like a child.
I'm keeping you from your "rights!" What rights are those? Obama , me, you have the same rights. If you marry someone of the opposite sex it's a marriage. If you unite with someone of the same sex it's a civil union, to you,me,Obama. If you feel that in your union you don't enjoy the same rights we do in marriage, they should be granted.
Why do you need the imprimatur of marriage? Only to make homosexuality more palatable.
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