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Italian PM stakes government confidence on gay union bill

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Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi will put his government on the line Thursday by resorting to a confidence vote in the Senate to push through a watered-down draft law on same-sex unions which has angered gay groups.

The Senate will vote around 1800 GMT on a "super-amendment" to the bill, which falls short of homosexual rights groups' demands by excluding key provisions.

Renzi has bowed to Catholic pressure to remove stepchild adoption rights from the text to ease its passage through parliament, as well as any reference to the need for faithfulness in such unions.

Italy is the only major European country to have so far given no legal rights to same-sex couples.

Renzi's centre-left Democratic Party failed to push through a less watered-down version of the bill last week, after the opposition Five Star Movement (M5S) withdrew its support at the last minute.

The Italian premier's party struck a deal late Wednesday with coalition partners on a revised version of the bill to put to a confidence motion in the Senate.

While watered down, the text maintains provisions including the obligation to mutual moral and material support, the right to a residence permit for foreign partners and to take a same-sex partner's name.

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has bowed to Catholic pressure to remove stepchild adoption righ...
Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has bowed to Catholic pressure to remove stepchild adoption rights from his draft law on same-sex unions
Alberto Pizzoli, AFP

After the vote on the "super-amendment," the bill could be adopted by the Senate as early as Friday, before being passed by the Chamber of Deputies, where Renzi has a more comfortable majority, in theory getting definitive approval within weeks.

"The accord on civil unions is a historic event for Italy," Renzi wrote on Twitter later Wednesday.

But gay rights groups have voiced anger, on the streets and on social media, saying the bill has been diluted too much.

"We haven't waited 30 years for this," said a joint statement Thursday by some 30 groups, vowing to express their "anger... in the streets, before the courts and at the ballot box."

"Today the Senate is preparing to write a dark page in the history of civil rights in our country by approving a law which... completely ignores the existence and demands of gay couples' children," they said.

The last attempt to push through such a bill was scuppered in 2007 by mass demonstrations against the centre-left government of Romano Prodi, and the failure was cited as one of the reasons behind the fall of his government.

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi will put his government on the line Thursday by resorting to a confidence vote in the Senate to push through a watered-down draft law on same-sex unions which has angered gay groups.

The Senate will vote around 1800 GMT on a “super-amendment” to the bill, which falls short of homosexual rights groups’ demands by excluding key provisions.

Renzi has bowed to Catholic pressure to remove stepchild adoption rights from the text to ease its passage through parliament, as well as any reference to the need for faithfulness in such unions.

Italy is the only major European country to have so far given no legal rights to same-sex couples.

Renzi’s centre-left Democratic Party failed to push through a less watered-down version of the bill last week, after the opposition Five Star Movement (M5S) withdrew its support at the last minute.

The Italian premier’s party struck a deal late Wednesday with coalition partners on a revised version of the bill to put to a confidence motion in the Senate.

While watered down, the text maintains provisions including the obligation to mutual moral and material support, the right to a residence permit for foreign partners and to take a same-sex partner’s name.

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has bowed to Catholic pressure to remove stepchild adoption righ...

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has bowed to Catholic pressure to remove stepchild adoption rights from his draft law on same-sex unions
Alberto Pizzoli, AFP

After the vote on the “super-amendment,” the bill could be adopted by the Senate as early as Friday, before being passed by the Chamber of Deputies, where Renzi has a more comfortable majority, in theory getting definitive approval within weeks.

“The accord on civil unions is a historic event for Italy,” Renzi wrote on Twitter later Wednesday.

But gay rights groups have voiced anger, on the streets and on social media, saying the bill has been diluted too much.

“We haven’t waited 30 years for this,” said a joint statement Thursday by some 30 groups, vowing to express their “anger… in the streets, before the courts and at the ballot box.”

“Today the Senate is preparing to write a dark page in the history of civil rights in our country by approving a law which… completely ignores the existence and demands of gay couples’ children,” they said.

The last attempt to push through such a bill was scuppered in 2007 by mass demonstrations against the centre-left government of Romano Prodi, and the failure was cited as one of the reasons behind the fall of his government.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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