The bill allowing same sex marriage passed into law tonight to cheers from the public gallery and the majority of MPs in
Parliament.
The Marriage (Definition of Marriage) Amendment Bill passed its third reading by 77 to 44 on a conscience vote.
Support for the bill held up through all stages, at the end of the committee stage the bill was reported by 77 to 43.
The bill completed its second reading by 77 to 44 and its first reading by 80 to 40.
The bill’s sponsor Louisa Wall said there were few times the House’s public gallery was full to overflowing.
``This Bill has seen a full gallery at the first and second readings and again tonight. My only other experience of that
has been Treaty settlement legislation recording the agreement reached between Maori and the Crown.
``In both instances the parties affected are a minority group who've been marginalised. They've been dealt with unjustly
under the law and steps are being taken to right the wrongs they've suffered.’’
National Minister Maurice Williamson assured opponents of the bill that the world would not end with the passage of the
bill and their lives would not change.
Winston Peters said most New Zealanders sat in the middle on this issue and did not like the extreme arguments put by
either side.
NZ First would oppose the bill because the issue should be put to a referendum as no one had campaigned on it at the
last election and there was no mandate.
An attempt by Peters to seek a referendum on the issue was voted down by MPs at an earlier stage.
National MP and former NZ First Deputy Leader Tau Henare said Peters had developed his policy and his ``shyster speech’’
to pander to bigots at the extreme end of the argument.
ACT MP John Banks Mr Banks voted against decriminalising male homosexuality in 1986, but voted for the marriage bill
tonight.
At its final reading in Parliament, he described the Homosexual Law Reform Bill as "evil".
Voting for the bill tonight, Banks said he had been wrong, and he and the country had changed. The issue was one of
simple human rights and while his vote was not necessary it was important for the record and the gay community that it
was recorded.
National MP Chester Burrows said he supported gay marriage as two people who loved one another should be allowed to love
one another equally under the law.
Though later in the speech he said he would vote against the bill because the debate should be about the nature of
marriage.
Jonathan Young said marriage was a matter of history and tradition and its present definition should be retained.
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