
By The
Associated Press
01.25.2010 8:40am EST
(Honolulu) The Hawaii Senate approved same-sex
civil unions Friday, potentially setting up the measure for final passage as
soon as next week.
The House has yet to decide if it will vote on
the bill. House leaders say they will take up the bill if they have a
veto-proof two-thirds majority but may let it die if they have only a small
majority. “It’s very close,” said Democratic Speaker of
the House Calvin Say. “During an election year, this issue is so divisive that
it may hurt many of our members.” The bill would grant gay and straight couples
the same rights and benefits the state provides to married couples. Five other states – Colorado, Wisconsin,
Maryland, Maine and New Jersey – allow civil unions. Five states – Iowa,
Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Connecticut – permit same-sex
marriage. Civil union supporters wearing rainbow-colored
lei cheered from the Senate gallery when the vote count was announced, while
opponents in white shirts and “iVote” buttons quietly walked out. “I’m very happy. It’s not marriage, but it gives
us an opportunity to be recognized as a couple,” Carlos Quintana of Honolulu
said. The vote follows a rally at the Capitol last
weekend attended by thousands of people supporting traditional marriage between
a man and a woman. Protesters urged lawmakers to vote down civil unions and
promised repercussions during this year’s elections to those who didn’t. Lingle has urged the Legislature to drop the
issue but hasn’t said whether she would sign the measure. The House passed last
year’s bill but fell one vote short of a two-thirds majority. “The state Senate is clearly at odds with the
people of Hawaii,” said Republican Lt. Gov. James “Duke” Aiona, who is running
for governor. “Like other movements across the country, voters will have the
final say on election day.” Senators said in speeches before the vote that
same-sex unions are a matter of basic civil rights. Many compared civil unions
to civil rights movements for racial minorities. “I see nothing in this measure that denies,
hurts or harms traditional marriage,” said Democratic Sen. Roz Baker. “What I
see is an acknowledgment that there are all kinds of families, that there are
all kinds of relationships and all of those deserve to be treated equally under
the law.” Hawaii’s Legislature almost passed civil unions
last year when liberal senators forced a vote on the issue following a tied
committee vote. But in the waning hours of the session, the
Senate’s majority amended the bill so that civil unions could apply to both
homosexual and heterosexual couples. Because that decision came only one day before
the Legislature adjourned for the year, a final vote was delayed until this
year to satisfy public notice requirements.