Vote in southern U.S. state bans gay marriages
Voters in North Carolina Tuesday approved a state constitutional amendment forbidding gay marriages, civil unions and domestic partnerships, still divisive social issues in the United States.
The measure was passed by 61 per cent against 39 per cent, according to preliminary results from the North Carolina State Board of Elections.
Similar state constitutional amendments have been approved in some 30 U.S. states.
The amendment solidifies and expands already enacted North Carolina law forbidding same-sex marriage.
President Barack Obama has recently come under greater pressure to clarify his position on gay marriage, after Vice-President Joe Biden stressed that he personally was fully comfortable with it.
Money from national interest groups poured into North Carolina ahead of the election — the National Organization for Marriage which opposes gay unions contributed $425,000 to the Vote for Marriage campaign, according to the latest reports.
The Human Rights Campaign contributed some $257,000 to the opposition, the Coalition to Protect All N.C. Families.
"This overwhelming support for marriage is clearly the reason why President Obama and liberal congressional candidates across the country have not expressed open support for same-sex marriage," Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, said in a statement. "They know that redefining marriage remains a losing position in mainstream American politics."
The Reverend Billy Graham, an evangelical preacher who was born and lives in North Carolina and at 93 remains enormously influential, took out full-page newspaper ads across the state supporting the ban.
"At 93, I never thought we would have to debate the definition of marriage," Graham said in the ads.
"The Bible is clear: God’s definition of marriage is between a man and a woman."
On the other side, former president Bill Clinton and his ex-chief of staff, Erskine Bowles, a North Carolina native, recorded telephone messages to voters urging them to oppose the measure. In a statement, President Barack Obama’s campaign also opposed the amendment.
"The passage of Amendment One is a profound injustice. Singling out a class of citizens for discriminatory treatment is unfair, unlawful and violates basic American values," said Adam Umhoefer with the American Foundation for Equal Rights, a leading U.S. group supporting gay marriage, after the vote.
There are now tens of thousands of same-sex couples in several U.S. states and the District of Columbia who are legally married where they live.
A Pew Research Center Survey last month found that 47 per cent of Americans now favor allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry — well up from 39 per cent in 2008 and 31 per cent in 2004. Forty-three per cent remain opposed.
Vote in southern U.S. state bans gay marriages
EDIT: Posted in CAD subforum by accident. Please move to U.S. subforum. Thanks.
Voters in North Carolina Tuesday approved a state constitutional amendment forbidding gay marriages, civil unions and domestic partnerships, still divisive social issues in the United States.
The measure was passed by 61 per cent against 39 per cent, according to preliminary results from the North Carolina State Board of Elections.
Similar state constitutional amendments have been approved in some 30 U.S. states.
The amendment solidifies and expands already enacted North Carolina law forbidding same-sex marriage.
President Barack Obama has recently come under greater pressure to clarify his position on gay marriage, after Vice-President Joe Biden stressed that he personally was fully comfortable with it.
Money from national interest groups poured into North Carolina ahead of the election — the National Organization for Marriage which opposes gay unions contributed $425,000 to the Vote for Marriage campaign, according to the latest reports.
The Human Rights Campaign contributed some $257,000 to the opposition, the Coalition to Protect All N.C. Families.
"This overwhelming support for marriage is clearly the reason why President Obama and liberal congressional candidates across the country have not expressed open support for same-sex marriage," Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, said in a statement. "They know that redefining marriage remains a losing position in mainstream American politics."
The Reverend Billy Graham, an evangelical preacher who was born and lives in North Carolina and at 93 remains enormously influential, took out full-page newspaper ads across the state supporting the ban.
"At 93, I never thought we would have to debate the definition of marriage," Graham said in the ads.
"The Bible is clear: God’s definition of marriage is between a man and a woman."
On the other side, former president Bill Clinton and his ex-chief of staff, Erskine Bowles, a North Carolina native, recorded telephone messages to voters urging them to oppose the measure. In a statement, President Barack Obama’s campaign also opposed the amendment.
"The passage of Amendment One is a profound injustice. Singling out a class of citizens for discriminatory treatment is unfair, unlawful and violates basic American values," said Adam Umhoefer with the American Foundation for Equal Rights, a leading U.S. group supporting gay marriage, after the vote.
There are now tens of thousands of same-sex couples in several U.S. states and the District of Columbia who are legally married where they live.
A Pew Research Center Survey last month found that 47 per cent of Americans now favor allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry — well up from 39 per cent in 2008 and 31 per cent in 2004. Forty-three per cent remain opposed.
Vote in southern U.S. state bans gay marriages
EDIT: Posted in CAD subforum by accident. Please move to U.S. subforum. Thanks.