Lawmakers likely to approve same-sex marriage next week

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State Sen. Heather Steans, D-Chicago, (left) is congratulated by Rep. Greg Harris, D-Chicago, both supporters of same-sex marriage, as same-sex marriage legislation passes a Senate Executive Committee hearing Thursday at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield. The Illinois Senate is considering a measure that would remove a state prohibition on marriage between two people of the same gender. (AP)
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The measure states: “All laws of the State of Illinois . . . applicable to marriage shall apply equally to marriages of same-sex and different-sex couples and their children.”

The bill specifies that religious organizations don’t have to sanctify or validate same-sex marriages.

Opponents say the measure would nonetheless tread on the freedoms of organized religions that oppose gay marriage by changing the definition of an institution rooted strongly in formal religions.

“Marriage is the lifelong, faithful union of one man and one woman, and the natural basis of the family,” states an open letter to legislators signed by religious leaders of several faiths. “This is the natural order embracing the complementary physical, emotional and spiritual design of men and women.”

Among defenders of the bill are a group of leaders in Illinois’ African-American community, which has been at odds with the gay rights movement based on religious and cultural factors.

In an open letter, black leaders, including the head of the Chicago Urban League, told legislators that those factors shouldn’t limit the right to same-sex marriage today.

“We remember that not long ago, some states defined marriage as limited to people of the same race. We were told marriage between people of different races was ‘unnatural’ and that society would be eroded if marriage changed,” the letter says. “The truth is, marriage has evolved throughout history to reflect the needs and progress of society.”

There could be some potential advantages to a formal designation of marriage. If the federal Defense of Marriage Act is overturned, same-sex married couples could seek the same rights as traditional couples in areas such as Social Security benefits, joint filing of federal taxes, estate taxes and immigration issues.

But proponents in Thursday’s committee hearing stressed intangibles of the issue, particularly the notion that the word “married” carries a social legitimacy that no other term has.

Committee witnesses included Chicago-area resident Theresa Volpe. She and her civil-union partner, Mercedes Santos, appeared before the committee with their young daughter and son.

Volpe told of how they once asked their local county clerk for a marriage license. When the clerk suggested that what they wanted was a civil union, they insisted they wanted a marriage license. The clerk, she said, joked that they were looking for “the upgrade” – a description Volpe said is accurate.

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