New Marriage Amendment
Gets Judiciary Hearing on Tuesday
April
10, 2006
The Judiciary Committee
of the Mass. House will hear testimony on the new Marriage Amendment,
which will be voted by the entire legislature during its upcoming
Constitutional Convention in May.
The hearing
on Tuesday will begin at 10:00 in Hearing Room A-1 at the State House.
The Amendment will go to a vote sometime between May 10 and July 31.
It needs only 25% of the legislature’s vote (50 Reps or Senators)
to proceed. If it receives that this year, as well as during the Constitutional
Convention during the next legislative session in 2007, it will go
on the ballot in 2008 for a vote by the voters of the state.
In 2001,
Massachusetts Citizens for Marriage sponsored an Amendment that forbad
both gay marriage and civil unions and certified enough signatures
that got it to the Constitutional Convention in 2002. However, in
a move that the state’s Supreme Judicial Court ruled was illegal
and unconstitutional, the legislature adjourned the Convention without
ever taking a vote on the Amendment that was before it. (Click Here)
Governor Swift refused to reconvene the Constitutional Convention
and the petition died without a vote as a result of pressure from
the New York Times/Boston Globe conglomerate.
Proponents of the current
Amendment are trusting that the legislature won’t simply do
the same thing either this year or next year to what they did to the
2001 petition.
See These Related Stories:
Legislature
Denies Citizens a Chance to Vote
Citizens
Assembling Today to Protest Unresponsive Legislature
The
Vote About Marriage Is Not Over