Obama gay marriage support seen as world precedent

Thursday, May 10, 2012

photo President Barack Obama

LOCAL REACTION"After playing politics for years with the issue of same-sex marriage, President Obama has finally made his true position known. The majority of Tennesseans do not support the president on this issue and I'm curious if Tennessee Democrats will stand by their president on this one."- Tennessee Republican Party Chairman Chris Devaney"I'm pretty ecstatic. It's a big step. I think it's an important thing and good news coming on the tail-end of bad news [North Carolina's Constitutional amendment on same-sex marriage]."- Seth Morris, junior at the University of the South"Anyone who's had any anatomy knows that's not the way it's supposed to be. The Bible says it's Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve."- Helen Bird of Chattanooga"It's about time. [Obama] has been watching and waiting for the right time."- Dennis Bishop of Chattanooga"I'm kind of neutral, but I think there's good reasons for [same-sex marriage] to be OK. I've read a lot about it and it would help those in same-sex relationships - benefits and insurance and things like that."- Becky Goins of Harrison"In the Bible, God created a man and woman. If some kids get a man and man or a woman and woman as parents, I believe it could mess them up."- John Chapman II of Eastdale

JACK CHANG, Associated Press

MEXICO CITY - President Barack Obama's announcement Wednesday that he supports gay marriage boosted the hopes of gay rights groups around the world that other leaders will follow his example, though opponents denounced his switch as a shameless appeal for votes.

Several countries, including Canada, Spain and Argentina, allow same-sex marriage, but far more countries ban it and dozens even prohibit consensual same-sex relations. Gay-rights groups hope Obama's views will inspire more change.

"This is incredibly important, it's excellent news. The United States is a global leader on everything, and that includes gay rights," said Julio Moreira, president of the Rio de Janeiro-based Arco-Iris gay rights group. "This will force other nations like Brazil to move forward with more progressive policies."

Vatican and other religious officials didn't comment, but political leaders and others opposed to gay marriage excoriated Obama. In particular, politicians tied to Pentecostal and Catholic churches have spoken out strongly against same-sex marriage in Latin America.

"Barack Obama is an ethical man and a philosophically confused man," said Peruvian congresswoman Martha Chavez of the conservative Catholic Opus Dei movement. "He knows that marriage isn't an issue only of traditions or of religious beliefs. Marriage is a natural institution that supports the union of two people of different sexes because it has a procreative function."

In Australia, where three bills that would allow gay marriage have been introduced in Parliament, Prime Minister Julia Gillard said she won't be following Obama's lead. She has consistently opposed gay marriage, though many members of her Labor Party support it.

"I've made my mind up and my position on this is well known," Gillard told reporters in Canberra. "I think it just reinforces this as a matter that people form their own views on, a deeply personal question people will think about, work their way through it; obviously President Obama has and he's announced a decision."

Religion-based opposition is strong in Egypt's conservative Muslim-dominated society, which rejects same-sex relations. Laws prohibiting "debauchery" or "shameless public acts" have been used to imprison gay men in recent years.

"This is unacceptable, because it is against religion, traditions and against God," said engineer Shady Azer in Cairo. "God created Adam and Eve. He didn't create two Adams or two Eves."

Gay marriage in legal in several countries; most are in Europe but others include Canada and South Africa. Several U.S. states allow it, but voters in many other states, including North Carolina on Tuesday, have banned it with constitutional amendments.

In 2010, Argentina became Latin America's first country to approve gay marriage. Cesar Cigliutti, president of the Gay Community of Argentina group, said Obama was only catching up to the rest of the world.

"It seems to me that by taking this position Obama is aligning himself with the entire world, with these times we're living in, with the achievements of rights in other countries," Cigliutti said.

Brazil's Supreme Court approved civil unions last year, followed by several state courts upholding the conversion of civil unions into full marriages. The nation's top appeals court then upheld those marriages in October, setting national precedent, but Catholic and evangelical churches and religious politicians continue to block the approval of any legislation in Congress enshrining gay marriage.

Moreira, the Brazilian activist, noted that efforts by President Dilma Rousseff to promote anti-homophobia education in Brazilian schools were scuttled last year after it became clear religious legislators would block unrelated legislation in protest.

In France, outgoing President Nicolas Sarkozy opposes gay marriage - though recent polls suggest that a majority of French voters support it. President-elect Francois Hollande, who defeated Sarkozy in elections Sunday, made "the right to marry and adopt for all couples" part of his campaign platform, and has set legislative passage of a bill ensuring that right for no later than June of next year.

Spain adopted its gay marriage law when the country was ruled by the center-left Socialist Party, but the center-right Popular Party took control of the government late last year.

Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has said he would prefer civil unions instead of marriages, but his administration has made no move to change the current situation. His party does have an appeal of the gay marriage law pending before the country's Constitutional Court.

Jamaica's most prominent evangelical pastor and the island's political ombudsman, Bishop Herro Blair, said late Wednesday afternoon that he was just hearing about Obama's announcement and was still taking it in.

"For now, I can say that I cannot be mad at President Obama. We are in a society where people have choices. However, my belief runs contrary to his," Blair said in Kingston, the island's capital.

Though Obama's change of heart did not appear to change the battle lines in the debate, those on one side felt they had won a powerful ally.

"We're living in other times where acceptance is growing more and more," said restaurant owner Carlos Santiago in Mexico City's Pink Zone gay district. "It's impossible to hold back a wave, against something that is natural."

Anat Chen, a 20-year-old bartender in Jerusalem, said she expected more to come.

"Everyone should be allowed to marry whoever they want," she said. "It matters that Obama said it. Whatever happens in America, the rest of the world follows."

Associated Press writers Alan Clendenning in Madrid, Spain; David McFadden in Kingston, Jamaica; Maggie Michael in Cairo; Cassandra Vinograd in London; Isaac Garrido in Mexico City; Franklin Briceno in Lima, Peru; Bradley Brooks in Sao Paulo; Charmaine Noronha in Toronto; Ian Deitch in Jerusalem; Rod McGuirk in Canberra, Australia; and Debora Rey in Buenos Aires, Argentina, contributed to this report.