Thursday, July 15, 2010

Facts you didn't know about tonight's historic marriage equality vote in Argentina

Since #MatrimonioGay is a worldwide trending topic on Twitter, here are some of the facts about tonight's historic marriage equality vote in the Argentinean senate you might know by now:
  • Right this moment the Argentinean senate is debating a marriage equality bill. The vote will probably happen early morning today.
  • The lower House of Deputies already passed their version of the bill which means that, if the Senate passes the marriage equality bill tonight, it will go to President Cristina Férnandez de Kirchner for a signature.
  • The president had already said that she would not veto the bill if it reached her desk but, for the most part, she had been absolutely mum on whether she supported the bill.
  • Last week things changed when Senator Liliana Negre de Alonso, a member of the ultra-conservative Opus Dei, pulled out a homophobic card out her sleeve and introduced a brand new "civil union" bill which she hoped would draw away votes from the marriage bill once it reached the senate and kill it. Negre de Alonso, who had previously stated she opposed marriage equality because she wanted to "protect the children", was also the president of the senate committee studying which version of the bill would reach the senate vote.
  • Meanwhile, while the Catholic church was dormant in the early stages of the legislative process, they certainly became active in the last few weeks. Increasing their fundamentalist homophobic ire, they vegan a campaign to motivate followers to oppose the bill, wouldn't you know it, "for the sake of the children". For the purported sake of the children they called the marriage equality bill  the work of the Devil and called for a Holy War to defeat the bill.
  • That's whats set President Kirchner off. Having left on a diplomatic trip to China last week and still away from the country tonight, she held a press conference and said the following...


W00t! That might be the strongest statement ever by a Latin American president on behalf of marriage equality and folk are right to say that not even Obama has been this forthcoming when it comes to the issue BUT you also have to realize that Kirchner was mum all along, even as the bill survived the House of Deputies, and only spoke up a couple of days before the vote. Some say it was a strategy to not associate the bill too strongly with the party in charge.

Those were the facts you might now. Here are the facts you might not know...
  • Opponents of the marriage equality bill who sought to draw away votes last week by introducing a bogus "civil union" bill apparently didn't realize that their bill would not be debated on the floor tonight anyway due to parliamentary procedure which says that new bills cannot be debated before 14 days after being introduced (or at least I believe that is the limit I heard). In addition the bogus "civil union" bill was thrown out of debate yesterday by a procedural vote, which means that today in the senate the ONLY bill that would be debated was the marriage equality bill.
  • There was a question earlier yesterday as to whether quorum would be reached for a vote. Proponents of the marriage equality bill also promised they would not bring the bill up for debate unless they had secured enough votes for passage of the bill. Apparently they did secure the votes because this afternoon quorum was reached and the Senate has gone into marriage equality debate mode since then.
  • The Parlamentario website, which has been tallying votes as the bill has moved forward, has the bill winning to night by one vote at this moment. The bill will win by simple majority or even if there is a tie. The president of the Senate is granted an extra vote in the case of a tie and he has said that, if a tie happens, he will vote in favor of marriage equality.
  • HUGE NEWS: For those of you who said that Ricky Martin's coming out was too little too late and didn't have any impact... coming out frees you to say what you believe. He actually tweeted the following (and made #matrimoniogay a trending topic on Twitter last night):



    Let's go #Argentina ! The same rights with the same name for everyone #GAYMARIAGE #HumanRights #MatrimonioGay #DerechosHumanos 
  • As for marriage equality activists in Argentina, the LGBT Federation of Argentina (FALGBT), led by amazing LGBT rights activist Maria Rachid, has launched two of the most amazing and effective marriage equality ads I have ever seen.
First, a sober look at how the Catholic church opposed a divorce law in Argentina using the same arguments they use today to oppose marriage equality...



Then there is this utterly amazing ad shooting for the heart...


Just amazing, don't you think? In the meantime, it gets crazier...
  • One of the leading newspapers in Argentina, La Nación, recently ran an editorial opposing the marriage equality bill ("Adoption and homosexual unions", July 15, 2010). To back up their anti-gay arguments, they quote "North Americam research in the hands of experts in charge of behavioral studies at the University of South Carolina". They don't name names but, of course, the only expert from USC publishing such studies is none other than Mr. "Lift-My-Travel-Bags-Rent-Boy" George Rekers.
  • In the meantime, House Deputy Cynthia Hotton, a leading anti-gay legislator, posted a YouTube diatribe against marriage equality for the sake of "the children" and used Moby's "Porcelain" as a backround song.
  • Moby's reaction
Oh, some people have drawn my attention to the fact that a homophobic ad campaign is using 'porcelain' needless to say we didn't approve this,
Tonight, there is still no word as whether marriage equality will become law in Argentina or not.

One extra video tonight showing the "love" that religious fundamentalists in Argentina show us gays. From a previous anti-marriage equality rally, "Cumbio goes to Hell"...



Later this morning: The final vote count in the Argentinean senate...

Related: 

1 comment:

kyledeb said...

Cumbio is my new hero. Thanks for doing such a job putting this all together, hermano.