Maine Becomes 5th State To Allow
Gay Marriage

May 6, 2009
AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) — Maine's governor
signed a freshly passed bill Wednesday approving gay marriage,
making it the fifth state to approve the practice and moving
New England closer to allowing it throughout the region.
New Hampshire legislators were also poised
to send a gay marriage bill to their governor, who hasn't
indicated whether he'll sign it. If he does, Rhode Island
would be the region's sole holdout.
Maine Gov. John Baldacci, a Democrat who
hadn't indicated how he would handle his state's bill, quickly
signed it.
"In the past, I opposed gay marriage
while supporting the idea of civil unions," Baldacci
said in a statement read in his office. "I have come
to believe that this is a question of fairness and of equal
protection under the law, and that a civil union is not equal
to civil marriage."
The vote by the Maine Senate was 21-13, with
one lawmaker absent. The bill authorizes marriage between
any two people rather than between one man and one woman,
as state law currently allows. The House had passed the bill
Tuesday.
The law is to take effect in mid-September
but could be sidetracked before then. Opponents promise to
challenge it through a public veto process that could suspend
it while a statewide vote takes shape.
Sue Estler, of Orono, said she and her partner
of 20 years, Paula Johnson, plan to get married. But she also
thinks opponents might collect enough signatures to force
the referendum.
A professor at the University of Maine, the
64-year-old Estler said she sent an e-mail to out-of-state
friends and family members Wednesday saying "Oh, my god.
The governor just signed the bill."
"But I said, 'Don't make your travel
plans for the wedding yet. There's still probably a referendum
to go,'" she said.
Legislative debate was brief. Senate President
Elizabeth Mitchell, D-Vassalboro, turned the gavel over to
an openly gay member, Sen. Lawrence Bliss, D-South Portland,
to preside over the final vote.
Republican Sen. Debra Plowman of Hampden
argued that the bill was being passed "at the expense
of the people of faith."
"You are making a decision that is not
well-founded," warned Plowman.
But Senate Majority Leader Philip Bartlett
II said the bill does not compel religious institutions to
recognize gay marriage.
"We respect religious liberties. ...
This is long overdue," said Bartlett, D-Gorham.
The activist group Gay & Lesbian Advocates
& Defenders has targeted all six New England states for
passage of a gay marriage law by 2012.
Maine is now the fourth state in the region
to allow same-sex marriages. Connecticut enacted a bill after
being ordered to allow gay marriages by the courts, and Vermont
passed a bill over the governor's veto.
Massachusetts' high court has ordered the
state to recognize gay marriages. In Rhode Island, a bill
to legalize same-sex marriage has been introduced but is not
expected to pass this year.
New Hampshire's House was also expected to
vote on a bill Wednesday and send it to Gov. John Lynch, a
Democrat. He could sign it, veto it or let it become law without
his signature.
New England states have acted quickly since
gay marriages became law in Massachusetts in 2004 because
it's a small region with porous borders, shared media markets
and a largely shared culture, said Carisa Cunningham of the
gay defenders group.
"People can see the sky hasn't fallen
on Massachusetts. There hasn't been a destruction of Western
civilization, and life has gone on," Cunningham said.
Outside New England, Iowa is recognizing
gay marriages on court orders. The practice was briefly legal
in California before voters banned it.
If it comes to a statewide vote in Maine,
Estler is confident gay marriage will prevail.
"I think Maine people will support it,"
she said. "Part of the reason I say that is Maine is
a state where people, regardless of party affiliation, really
believe in live and let live."