New York Governor David Paterson
To Unveil Bill To Legalize Gay Marriage

Editors
Note: We're still unclear while law makers always say it should
be left up to the voters of each state if gay marriage should
be legalized. Last time we checked The Supreme Court has legalized
many things including abortion, but when it comes to equal
and civil rights for the gay community the voters should decide?
Since when do equal rights for all Americans get put in a
voting booth? These are rights granted to all of us under
the Constitution of The United States. Things that make you
go hmmm....
April 15, 2009
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York Governor David
Paterson will introduce legislation on Thursday to make gay
marriage legal, but the move faces an uncertain vote in the
state's Senate.
If the bill passes, New York would follow
Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont and Iowa in legalizing
gay marriage.
"The timing was always right,"
said Paterson, a Democrat -- who ordered all New York state
agencies a year ago to recognize out-of-state gay marriages.
"It's just who is willing to take that step, and I am."
Gay marriage has broad support in the Democratic-controlled
State Assembly, where it passed in a vote of 85 to 61 in 2007.
It was never put to a vote in the Senate while it was controlled
by Republicans.
While the Democrats now hold a Senate majority
for the first time in more than 40 years, it is slim -- 32
to 30 -- and at least one Democratic senator, Ruben Diaz,
opposes gay marriage. He says the issue should be decided
by a voter referendum.
Lawmakers in New Hampshire and Maine, which
already offer same-sex couples some form of legal recognition,
are also considering bills to allow gay marriage.
California briefly recognized gay marriage
until voters banned it in a referendum last year.
Forty-three U.S. states have laws explicitly
prohibiting gay marriage, including 29 with constitutional
amendments restricting marriage to one man and one woman.