AP)                                                                  –                                                                  Old-time, backroom politics faced down hundreds of chanting protesters  from each side of the highly charged gay marriage debate in New York  today as the issue stalled again over whether religious groups could be  protected from discrimination charges. After a three-hour conference  behind closed doors, while groups from each side waited in a stifling  hallway, Senate Republicans emerged without comment. A vote to even move  the bill to the floor for final legislative approval was pushed to at  least tomorrow as negotiations continue between Republican Senate leader  Dean Skelos and Democrat Gov. Andrew Cuomo. 
                                                                 New  York's vote is pivotal in the national question over same-sex marriage,  an effort that largely stalled in the same room two years ago when the  Senate voted it down. Skelos worries a federal judge could strike down  flimsy religious protections in the current proposal if a religious  group, such as the Knights of Columbus, is sued for discrimination for  refusing to provide its hall for a gay wedding. "I think that's  critically important," Skelos said. Other opponents were more dire: "If  this passes, we will become Sodom and Gomorrah," says one 80-year-old.


No comments:
Post a Comment