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Ireland: Civil Partnerships for Same-Sex-Marriages Proposed

 
 
Reply Sun 21 Nov, 2004 12:34 am
Following a statement last week by Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahearn that same-sex couples deserved "better rights" , Irish Justice Minister Michael McDowell said Saturday that Ireland should pursue civil partnerships for unwed couples, both heterosexual and homosexual, but should not institute a full process for 'gay marriage'. This was McDowell's first policy speech on the issue following the initiation of a civil suit against the goverment in October by a lesbian couple that were married in Canada in 2003. The couple is seeking to require Irish Revenue, the country's tax collection agency to assign them the income tax credit permited for married couples. McDowell said his remarks were not focussed on sexual orientation, but rather on the reality that modern life puts people together in ways that make them dependant on each other. He suggested that estate, inheritance, tax, and pension law should all be reformed to recognize these 'civil partnerships'. McDowell also stated that seeking to grant gay couples full marriage rights would require an amendment to the 1937 Irish Constitution.


Quote:
Irish Official Promotes Civil Partnerships

By SHAWN POGATCHNIK

Associated Press Writer

DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) - Ireland should legalize civil partnerships between unmarried couples, including homosexuals, but not pursue full-fledged ``gay marriage,'' Justice Minister Michael McDowell said Saturday in his first major policy speech on the matter.

Ireland has become one of Europe's most prominent legal battlegrounds on the matter after a lesbian couple launched a lawsuit this month against the country's tax collection agency for refusing to recognize their 2003 marriage in Canada. Married couples can claim a special income tax credit.

An all-party committee of lawmakers this month also launched public hearings into possible reforms to family law in Ireland, a predominantly Roman Catholic country where homosexuality itself was outlawed until 1993.

McDowell declared that the government today was ``unequivocally in favor of treating gay people as fully equal citizens in our society.'' But he said the current heavy public focus on whether to extend full marriage rights and responsibilities to gay couples ``is too narrow.''

He listed a wide range of committed relationships outside of marriage that the state should recognize as likely to require reforms to Ireland's laws governing tax, inheritance and pensions.

``There are many cohabiting heterosexual couples. There may be brothers sharing a farm. There may be an elderly parent being supported by a child. These may be people living together who share an economic interdependence without having any sexual aspect to their relationship at all,'' he said.

He said Ireland's parliament should pass legal reforms that ``formally recognize people who have entered into a civil partnership with each other,'' regardless of their sexuality, and allow the surviving half of such partnerships ``to acquire next-of-kin status.''

But McDowell said the question of whether non-married couples should enjoy the full range of financial rights and responsibilities as married couples involved ``detailed and often technical questions not capable of being easily answered.''

Ireland's 2001 census identified nearly 70,000 households in Ireland involving non-married couples, including 1,300 gay couples, in this country of 3.9 million. McDowell said cutting the tax burden on those households would increase the tax burdens elsewhere.

He did recommend that the surviving partner of a non-married couple should pay no capital gains tax on an inherited property, a major current complaint of discrimination.

McDowell said that seeking to grant gay couples full marriage rights would require a national referendum to Ireland's 1937 constitution. He predicted that an electoral battle would polarize society and run a strong risk of voter rejection, which would delay for years the introduction of civil-partnership rights.

He also noted that in Ireland - where divorce was legalized only in 1997 following a razor-thin referendum victory - cohabiting couples would be wise to avoid the legal downsides of marriage.

Ireland's divorce law requires married couples to be separated for a minimum of four years before they can file for divorce, an often grueling process that can require two separate court battles - the first to reach a separation agreement, the second a divorce.

He said it would be unreasonable for Ireland to impose the same system on people ending a civil partnership. He said such people should be ``free to formalize a new relationship'' without waiting for four years.
Source


Link to BUNREACHT NA hÉIREANN/Constitution of Ireland
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