Premium Content:

Law Body: Government's marriage bill goes too far

Marriage

The Law Council of Australia says the government’s proposed changed to the marriage laws, which would allow civil celebrants and  service providers run by religious bodies to reject same sex weddings, go too far.

- Advertisement -

In their submission to the Senate Inquiry into the proposed legislation the law body recommends that the government drop the provisions for civil celebrants and service providers.

Speaking to the Sydney Morning Herald the council’s president Fiona McLeod, SC, said the government’s proposed legislation went too far.

“The current bill that they’re looking at doesn’t strike the right balance,” McLeod said.

The Law society highlights that the proposed legislation is not in-line with the ways similar laws have been drafted in other countries, including Great Briton.

The council also suggests that the legislation should have a clause that clearly states that same sex couples who have married overseas will not be retrospectively be treated as a married couple for taxation purposes.

The legal group, who support changing the laws to allow for marriage equality, argue that the right to religious freedom is not absolute and suggest that the United Nation’s Yogykarta principles on applying sexuality to human rights laws are a good framework for the government to consider.

The Law Society is just one of a wide range of groups who will testify before the inquiry tomorrow as they begin their public hearings in Melbourne.

The Law Society will be the first group to appear before the committee on Monday morning. On Tuesday the inquiry moves to Sydney, before commencing hearings in Canberra on Wednesday.

South Australian Liberal Senator David Fawcett is the committee’s chair, Western Australian Labor senator Louise Pratt is the deputy chair.

The other committee members include newly inducted Victoria Senator Kimberly Kitching, Western Australia’s Senator Dean Smith, the Liberal’s Senator James Patterson and Senator John Williams for the Nationals.

OIP Staff

 

 

 

Latest

On This Gay Day | George Duncan is murdered in Adelaide

His death was a trigger for major law reform in South Australia.

Minister Hannah Beazley praises outgoing Pride CEO Dr Lauren Butterly

On her social media the Minister posted a photograph of herself and Dr Butterly and praised the community leader's work.  

Queer Book Club picks ‘The Dispossessed’ by Ursula K. Le Guin for May

The sci-fi book is one of only three titles to win the Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards, three of the top accolades in speculative fiction.

Spin It | Aldous Harding, Loraine James, MUNA, and Pigeon.

Aldous Harding, Lorraine James, Pigeon and MUNA have got new records out and they supply a mix of pop, glitch, R&B, punk disco and everything in-between.

Newsletter

Don't miss

On This Gay Day | George Duncan is murdered in Adelaide

His death was a trigger for major law reform in South Australia.

Minister Hannah Beazley praises outgoing Pride CEO Dr Lauren Butterly

On her social media the Minister posted a photograph of herself and Dr Butterly and praised the community leader's work.  

Queer Book Club picks ‘The Dispossessed’ by Ursula K. Le Guin for May

The sci-fi book is one of only three titles to win the Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards, three of the top accolades in speculative fiction.

Spin It | Aldous Harding, Loraine James, MUNA, and Pigeon.

Aldous Harding, Lorraine James, Pigeon and MUNA have got new records out and they supply a mix of pop, glitch, R&B, punk disco and everything in-between.

Westlife are coming to Perth in July 2027

The boyband are marking 25 years of entertaining audiences with a massive world tour.

On This Gay Day | George Duncan is murdered in Adelaide

His death was a trigger for major law reform in South Australia.

Minister Hannah Beazley praises outgoing Pride CEO Dr Lauren Butterly

On her social media the Minister posted a photograph of herself and Dr Butterly and praised the community leader's work.  

Queer Book Club picks ‘The Dispossessed’ by Ursula K. Le Guin for May

The sci-fi book is one of only three titles to win the Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards, three of the top accolades in speculative fiction.