20 Feb Maryland House of Delegates approves gay marriage bill
The Maryland House of Delegates has passed a bill legalising same-sex marriage that is widely expected to be passed by the state senate and already has the support of the governor Martin O’Malley.
The measure was passed 71-67 in the Democrat led House. “This is the civil rights issue of our generation,” said Keiffer J. Mitchell Jr., a Democrat from Baltimore. “I’m overwhelmed,” Luke Clippinger is one of the seven openly gay members of the Maryland House quoted by the New York Times. “My voice is still breaking.”
Anthony O’Donnell, the Republican minority leader said the vote is just the “beginning a process, not ending a process. The citizens of Maryland will have the final say.”
Earlier this month, a 14-year-old girl pleaded for gay marriage to be banned “for my birthday”.
Earlier this week, Washington state’s governor signed gay marriage into law.
Maryland’s Democratic Governor Martin O’Malley actually introduced a gay marriage bill himself. He had campaigned in 2010 to secure his second term promise to work toward enacting marriage equality while in office.
A similar attempt in 2011 failed to pass through the state legislature, but attempts to introduce a constitutional ban on gay marriage have also failed.