Civil Unions In New Zealand

On 9 December 2004 New Zealand Parliament passed the Civil Union Bill, establishing the new institution of civil union, available to same-sex and de facto couples. The Civil Union Act has been described as a copy of the Marriage Act with "marriage" replaced by "civil union". Its companion bill, the Relationships (Statutory References) Act, was to remove discriminatory provisions from a large number of pieces of legislation, but has run into stumbling blocks in Parliament and has been shelved until 2005. Both the Civil Union Bill and the Relationships (Statutory References) Bill were drafted by the Labour MP, David Benson-Pope. The Civil Union Bill passed by 65 votes to 55. The bill was treated as a conscience issue by most parties, including the largest parties on the left and right. The table below shows the breakdown of votes by party.
lign=center|Party align=center|Voted For align=center|Voted Against
a href="/encyclopedia/New-Zealand-Labour-Party" title="New Zealand Labour Party">Labour Party align=center|45 align=center|6
a href="/encyclopedia/New-Zealand-National-Party" title="New Zealand National Party">National Party align=center|3 align=center|24
a href="/encyclopedia/New-Zealand-First" title="New Zealand First">New Zealand First align=center|1 align=center|12
a href="/encyclopedia/ACT-New-Zealand" title="ACT New Zealand">ACT align=center|5 align=center|4
a href="/encyclopedia/Green-Party-of-Aotearoa-New-Zealand" title="Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand">Green Party align=center|9 align=center|0
a href="/encyclopedia/United-Future-New-Zealand" title="United Future New Zealand">United Future align=center|0 align=center|8
a href="/encyclopedia/New-Zealand-Progressive-Party" title="New Zealand Progressive Party"> Progressive Party align=center|2 align=center|0
a href="/encyclopedia/Maori-Party" title="Maori Party">Maori Party align=center|0 align=center|1
b>Totals align=center|65 align=center|55
   
During consideration of the bill, proposals were made to bring the question to a binding referendum or to replace the bill with a "civil relationships" bill that would allow any two people to register any personal relationship and gain joint property rights. These proposals were dismissed by supporters of the bill as delaying tactics rather than serious proposals and were defeated in Parliament by a block vote of Labour, the Greens, and the Progressives. The New Zealand public have largely supported the bill, with opinion polls indicating around 56% of New Zealanders are in favour. The bill has, however, been quite controversial, with strong opposition from groups such as the evangelical Destiny Church and the Catholic Church in New Zealand. However, not all Christians were opposed to the Bill. Christians for Civil Unions played an important role in the debates. Civil unions will come into effect on April 26, 2005.

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
vicky (the fairly oddparents)
gbh
eccentricity (mathematics)
eccentricity (behavior)
netscape portable runtime
grievous bodily harm
cuba gooding
quebec lieutenant
church bus and school bus safety
leadership school
heinz holliger
becky worley
empire peacemaker
hymn of the soviet union (other language versions)
persistent world
walter lafeber
sergio frusoni
hovet
august von pelzeln
ranks and insignia of the sturmabteilung
peter macdonald
steve cohen
philippe huttenlocher
smarty mart
thomas penfield jackson
hms caistor castle (k690)
arrow debreu model
united ireland
civil unions in quebec
list of state leaders in 1065
list of state leaders in 1064
list of state leaders in 1063
list of state leaders in 1062
service discovery protocol
list of chiefs of the turkish general staff
ivone ramos
glastonbury canal
national bank of poland
gama goat
holy cross greek orthodox school of theology
green sunfish
galeras
voluntari
list of state leaders in 1061