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Malcolm Turnbull was forced to inflict an ugly process on Australia on marriage equality, one he himself succinctly demolished before his elevation to the prime ministership, one that has enabled homophobes to inflict yet more pain on LGBTI Australians, one that has seen Australia at its worst. But it’s delivered the win that Turnbull desperately needed. One that will allow him to remove the discrimination in Australia’s marriage law that targets LGBTI people.
The legislative process for doing so has begun already. Yesterday, Liberal senator Dean Smith gave notice of a marriage equality bill to be introduced in the Senate this afternoon and, if agreed, debated tomorrow. It is backed by Labor, the Greens, NXT, two other Liberals and Derryn Hinch. The draft bill from the Institute of Public Affairs’ James Paterson, which has been savaged across the political spectrum, hasn’t even been the subject of a notice motion, and can’t even be introduced this week.
The contest will now be between the push from marriage equality advocates on all sides, and the government’s senior ministers, to get the issue settled when the House of Representatives returns the week after next, and the deadenders who will want to gum up the process with a torrent of amendments for Smith’s bill. On current form, they may struggle to be able to bring on Paterson’s bill for debate, so the fight will be over despite the effort by deadenders to widen provisions enshrining discrimination as far as possible, hoping for support from senior conservatives like Scott Morrison and Peter Dutton, who’ve already flagged they think Smith’s bill doesn’t do enough. This will be the territory on which the deadenders will circle the wagons.
For all that, Turnbull is still on track to be the PM who delivered marriage equality over the resolute and often deceitful opposition of Tony Abbott and other deadenders (remember how the last parliament was to be “the last term in which the Coalition party room can be bound” on the issue?) Moreover, his greatest enemy has been utterly repudiated — Tony Abbott, who waded into the campaign as a means to undermine Turnbull, set the benchmark of 40% as a “moral victory” for the No vote, and that clearly failed, with a No vote of just 38%. Seventy-five per cent of Abbott’s own electorate voted Yes. Sixty-four per cent of Tasmanians voted Yes, repudiating Abbott ally Eric Abetz; Kevin Andrews’ seat voted 57% Yes, repudiating another reactionary. Moreover, Abbott is held responsible by some within the No camp for providing a distracting and divisive tone to the campaign (who can forget the effort to concoct a scandal over the NRL grand final?), which is why he was sent out of the country for part of the final stages of the campaign.
On this issue, at least, Turnbull has dealt his internal enemies a ferocious blow and left them humiliated in the eyes of their own voters. And for a beleaguered prime minister who may not be leader for too much longer, the finish line for what may be the one significant achievement of his time in office is within sight
As an LGBTQI Australian I have no confidence that Turnbull will get this through both houses by the end of the year without buggering it up.
I’m pleased by the survey result, but much as I’m grateful for the yes votes from total strangers I’m afraid I don’t feel euphoric. I’m not hyping it up to say I actually feel queasy ill as I type, the way you might feel after the shock of a traumatic event finally kicks in. My hetero colleagues, all married, haven’t even mentioned the survey outcome.
Hopefully my malaise passes so I can just enjoy not being deligitimised everyday by campaigners who wouldn’t tell the truth if they could.
Thanks again for all the yesses.
I have every confidence that Turnbull et al have the ability to stuff this up handsomely…but my gut says they won’t dare.
To anger 61.6% of the population would take courage – which this dysfunctional rabble sorely lack.
Bullshit this is a victory for Turnbull!!! The cost in both monetary and personal terms to so many shows that he is a political coward who could have avoided both by standing up to the likes of Abbott in the first place
Agreed, Terry. If anything, it’s allowed the un-evolved far right missing links months of free kicks in the name of democracy and free speech. Turnbull looks just as pissweak as he did yesterday.
Agree, and it was even more nauseating that he was out there on jjj etc, trying to reframe himself as some everlovin’ child of the universe. He is totally responsible for this expensive, insulting convoluted path.
Much more genuine credos and love however to kiwi Jacinda who, while all this is going on, is planting some well placed diplomatic blows to Australia’s international humanitarian credentials.
A Pyhrric victory, perhaps.
The only good thing about this farrago is that there is now nowhere to hide, for Talcum, for the repressed catamites, for the bigots and the knuckle draggers.
From now on, their prejudices and bastardry will lack even the shrivelled figleaf of popular will.
Let all the poisons that lurk in the LNP mud come forth.
Poetic
Only the Turmoil Government would waste $120 million to find out that 60/40 believe in equality of marriage. Yet to meet anyone, across a wide circle of those on the left and right, who doesn’t believe it should have been settled by Parliament.