Posts Tagged: bob brown gay marriage


3
Mar 11

POLITICS AS USUAL IN AUSTRALIA

Julia Gillard, Australian Prime Minister

Australia is giving the USA a run for its money on gay marriage politics. I’ve never seen such contortions and nonsense, here’s a small insight.  In essence, this week gay marriage is being used as a prop by at least three different political groups - two of whom (the majority of the ruling Labor party and the Greens party) notionally support marriage equality.

As with the endless court cases and parliamentary readings in the USA, where there is a blog or cable station at every turn to record drama, drama, drama, we are starting to see the same in Australia. A debate about territory rights has turned into a proxy debate about gay marriage (basically Canberra and the Outback have the same status as the Distrtict of Columbia in the US). Because in the nation’s capital the local Labor government and the Greens have long waited to introduce marriage equality, and have been foiled – DOMA style – by more conservative federal administrations who could veto them.

Opportunistic media outlets are having a field day because they smell political blood. And if they can’t smell it, they have decided they will try and manufacture it. So now, instead of just getting on with the job as the UK did in 2005 with civil unions, or properly separating the issues of territory rights and gay marriage, the ruling Labor party is tearing itself apart in a frightening unproductive way.

Remember, this is a country where 60% support equalilty; it is about a territory where around 70% and the local government support equalilty; and its happening in a party where most party members want equality.  Basically, the ONLY thing holding the process up is a dozen or so scared or conservative people at Ministerial level.

This is a debate about nothing. This is politics as soap opeara. And I am really starting to get sick of it.


3
Sep 10

AUSTRALIAN GAYS WAITING AT THE ALTAR

Was it a good or bad election for the nation’s million or so gays and lesbians? Here’s my verdict, published by the National Times today (a joint venture of the Sydney Morning Herald and The Age).  It’s going strong with the most comments of all opinion pieces today.

The start could hardly have been worse. Tony Abbott felt threatened by us, a Family First candidate linked gay marriage to child abuse, and Penny Wong sounded weak in defending Labor’s policy against marriage equality. Things started to look up when Greens’ vocal ‘equal love’ campaign was rewarded with a record vote. When Andrew Wilkie tabled a conscience vote on marriage as a priority the picture looked even better. Now the Labor-Greens agreement now leaves gays waiting (hopefully) at the altar.

The way forward is clearning a conscience vote on a Private Members Bill – but let’s not kid ourselves how tough that campaign will be …

(UPDATE: Good news in that the Greens promise to re-introduce Marriage Equality bill on first day of Parliament.)

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28
Aug 10

AUSTRALIAN GREENS MUST HOLD LINE

Gillard and Brown

For a while it seemed like a bad election for Australia’s million or so gays and lesbians. Tony Abbott felt threatened by us, a Family First candidate linked gay marriage to child abuse, and Penny Wong looked weak in toeing the party line against marriage. With the Greens now potentially holding the balance of power in both houses of Parliament gay marriage has never been closer to the political centre stage.

The question concerning supporters of marriage equality is whether the Greens will reward their faith while negotiating with Labor.  Is gay marriage a core promise, we wonder? Continue reading →


24
Aug 10

THE AUSTRALIAN ELECTION SAGA

It cannot be said that Australians voted for gay marriage on 21 August, but the outcome is indeed good news for equality advocates. While more than 80% of Australians voted for parties (officially) opposed to gay marriage, they handed the balance of power in the upper house, the Senate, to the Australian Greens who were rewarded with record votes.

The Greens will jump from having three senators to eight and hold a crucial vote in the Lower House, which may determine which party forms the Government in the ‘hung parliament.’

If anything, Australians voted against their political class – a group that had collectively produced a farcical campaign in which gay marriage repeatedly featured. They said they didn’t want any one party (including all those opposed to equality) having a ‘blank cheque’ for power. The big question for equality supporters during all the horse-trading over who will form a Government is: will the Greens party hold their line? The Gillard Labor Government desperately needs their vote and the Greens shouldn’t trade it for anything less than a free vote on gay marriage in the next Parliament

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24
Jul 10

NEW ESSAY – LOVE IN A COLD CLIMATE

Griffith Review cover with Ryan Heath's essay Love in a Cold Climate

My latest essay is published in The Age (Melbourne) and the Sydney Morning Herald today – this newspaper version is about 80% of the full essay

It was originally titled  ’Love in A Cold Climate’ and is published in the next edition of the Griffith Review (Edition 29) out next week.

I will provide the official link when it becomes available on the Griffith Review website – in the mean time click through for the full essay.

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