Bill passes to House of Lords despite opposition in lower house from majority of ruling Conservative party members. |
A bill to legalise gay
marriage in Britain has passed a crucial hurdle in parliament, despite efforts
by the majority of politicians from Prime Minister David Cameron's Conservative
party to wreck the plans.
Members of the House of
Commons on Tuesday voted by 366 to 161 in favour of the same sex marriage
bill, which will now go to the country's upper house for
consideration.
The bill is likely to face
strong opposition when it is debated in the House of Lords next month,
especially from the 26 bishops holding seats in the assembly.
Cameron was forced to make a
deal with the opposition Labour party to pass the bill as many members of his
own party had looked to prevent it from passing.
Some more right-wing Tories
had proposed an amendment to allow heterosexual couples to form civil
partnerships, which was condemned by Cameron's office as a "wrecking
amendment" that would have delayed the introduction of the new law.
Although the motion was
easily defeated with Labour's help, the depth of the Conservatives' division
was made clear when it was revealed that 128 of its MPs had voted against the
bill, 11 more than voted in favour.
The action marks the
second revolt of its kind on gay marriage.
Another proposed amendment
would have given registrars the right to refuse to perform gay marriage
ceremonies if they objected.
Conservative rift
Cameron's failure to unite
his party over gay marriage and his other major policy - renegotiating
Britain's membership of the EU - risks undermining his chances of being
re-elected in 2015, even as the economy is showing some signs of returning to
growth.
Britain has seen none of the
mass protests over gay marriage held across the channel in France, which last
weekend became the fourteenth country in the world to legalise it, but some
protesters did gather outside the House of Commons while the bill was debated
on Monday.
About 54 percent of Britons
are in favour of allowing same-sex couples to marry, according to a YouGov poll
for the Sunday Times.
Politicians remain divided,
with Conservative former minister Norman Tebbit stoking a row on Tuesday by
claiming gay marriage could result in a lesbian queen giving birth to an heir
by artificial insemination.
"When we have a queen
who is a lesbian and she marries another lady and then decides she would like
to have a child and someone donates sperm and she gives birth to a child, is
that child heir to the throne?" he told The Big Issue magazine.
Many Conservative supporters
fear that with a general election two years away, Cameron's backing for gay
marriage is driving traditional Tory voters to the UK Independence Party.
The anti-immigration,
anti-EU party is a fast-rising force in British politics and made strong gains
in local elections last month.
Tim Loughton, the
Conservative MP who introduced the amendment critics regarded as an attempt to
sabotage the bill, said Cameron's determination to push for gay marriage
"hadn't helped" relations with his own party.
"It was a
mistake," the MP told the Reuters news agency.
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