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Ireland may have said Yes to gay marriage, but Australia won't be following suit

Gay marriage was explicitly outlawed in Australia in 2004.

AUSTRALIAN PRIME MINISTER Tony Abbott says his country will not follow Ireland’s lead and hold a referendum on gay marriage, adding that any decisions would be made by parliament.

“It really is a matter for the parliament,” the Australian leader said when asked by reporters if a public poll should be held in Australia.

“Referendums are held in this country where there’s a proposal to change the constitution. I don’t think anyone’s suggesting that the constitution needs to be changed in this respect.

“Under the constitution, questions of marriage are the preserve of the Commonwealth parliament.”

Gay marriage was explicitly outlawed in Australia under a 2004 revision of the national Marriage Act by the conservative prime minister at the time, John Howard.

Same-sex couples can have civil unions or register their relationships in most states across Australia, but the government does not consider them married under national law.

Abbott’s conservative government is opposed to gay marriage and the party has previously refused to allow a conscience vote among its members, in contrast to the Labor opposition.

A vote on the issue in 2012 was defeated 98 to 42 after Abbott did not allow his MPs, then in opposition, to break with party lines, rendering it a null prospect.

Abbott, whose sister Christine is gay, said he was aware of the strong feelings on the issue.

“Not for a second do I want to underestimate the feelings that people have on this issue, both for and against,” he added.

“Even inside my own family, there are strong feelings both ways.”

Liberal Democratic senator David Leyonhjelm, who introduced a same-sex marriage bill last year, said he believed there was growing support for legislative change.

“The traditional argument is equality… my argument is it’s not the government’s business what gender of person you’re allowed to marry,” Leyonhjelm told Sky News Sunday.

A poll in July last year found that support for same-sex marriage in Australia had reached a record high, with 72 percent of citizens supporting marriage equality and about half of those strongly supporting it.

Read: The world was watching Ireland yesterday – here’s what they said

Read: Ireland has voted Yes to same-sex marriage

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    Jun 2nd 2020, 8:08 PM

    Type debunked into the Journal search bar.

    A theme emerges

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    Jun 2nd 2020, 8:29 PM

    @Vladimir Macro: yup, coronavirus. It’s kind of a big deal, you may have heard of it.

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    Jun 2nd 2020, 8:06 PM

    I was amazed when I first saw racism in the British NHS in the late 70s. Only in the 90s did I personally experience it as an Irishman from an Englishman in Canada. It was in Fire and I later became chief and had the pleasure of firing him over a serious service issue.

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    Jun 2nd 2020, 8:34 PM

    @Niall Sheridan:
    Good on you Niall

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    Jun 2nd 2020, 8:46 PM

    @Niall Sheridan: looks like karma came and gave him a big bite in the arse.

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    Jun 2nd 2020, 9:02 PM

    @Niall Sheridan: good man, Niall. Who’s the daft Mick now?

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    Jun 2nd 2020, 10:37 PM

    Fascism is spelled wrong in the picture.

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    Jun 3rd 2020, 6:33 AM

    @Robert O’H: ha hahaha, so it is.

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