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Same-sex couples wed in Florida as gay marriage ban ends

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Scores of same-sex Florida couples tied the knot early Tuesday after the state's ban on gay marriage ended.

Overjoyed couples filed into courthouses and exchanged vows just after midnight, as Florida became the 36th of America's 50 states to allow gay marriage.

"I'm glad it's finally legal," William Lee Jones told the Miami Herald after he married his partner of more than 10 years, Aaron Huntsman.

The couple were among several who had sued Florida for the right to marry.

US District Judge Robert Hinkle ruled last week that court officials must not enforce the state's ban, which was approved by voters in 2008.

Juan Talavera (L) and Jeff Ronci show off their wedding rings after picking up their marriage licens...
Juan Talavera (L) and Jeff Ronci show off their wedding rings after picking up their marriage license at the Clerk of the Courts - Miami-Dade County Court on January 5, 2015 in Miami, Florida
Joe Raedle, Getty/AFP

In an August ruling, Hinkle said the ban was unconstitutional and he likened it to laws banning interracial marriages that were overturned 50 yeas ago.

So many couples showed up at the courthouses in some counties that officials held mass wedding ceremonies as jubilant friends and supporters cheered outside.

"It's about time, is what I feel. I didn't think it would happen in my lifetime," Irma Oliver of West Palm Beach told the Palm Beach Post as she married her partner of a decade, Julia Borghese.

Florida is America's third most populous state behind California and Texas, with a population of about 20 million.

In 2013, the US Supreme Court recognized marriage equality when it overturned a federal law that defined marriage in strictly heterosexual terms.

Newlyweds Jeff Delmay (3rd R) and Todd Delmay (2nd R) hug as Karla Arguello (L) and Catherina Pareto...
Newlyweds Jeff Delmay (3rd R) and Todd Delmay (2nd R) hug as Karla Arguello (L) and Catherina Pareto (2nd L), who were also married, look on during a marriage ceremony in the Miami-Dade court room on January 5, 2015 in Miami, Florida
Joe Raedle, Getty/AFP

This cleared the way for married gay and lesbian couples to enjoy the same rights and privileges under federal law as their straight counterparts.

It nevertheless left it to each of the 50 states to legalize or ban same-sex marriages.

Scores of same-sex Florida couples tied the knot early Tuesday after the state’s ban on gay marriage ended.

Overjoyed couples filed into courthouses and exchanged vows just after midnight, as Florida became the 36th of America’s 50 states to allow gay marriage.

“I’m glad it’s finally legal,” William Lee Jones told the Miami Herald after he married his partner of more than 10 years, Aaron Huntsman.

The couple were among several who had sued Florida for the right to marry.

US District Judge Robert Hinkle ruled last week that court officials must not enforce the state’s ban, which was approved by voters in 2008.

Juan Talavera (L) and Jeff Ronci show off their wedding rings after picking up their marriage licens...

Juan Talavera (L) and Jeff Ronci show off their wedding rings after picking up their marriage license at the Clerk of the Courts – Miami-Dade County Court on January 5, 2015 in Miami, Florida
Joe Raedle, Getty/AFP

In an August ruling, Hinkle said the ban was unconstitutional and he likened it to laws banning interracial marriages that were overturned 50 yeas ago.

So many couples showed up at the courthouses in some counties that officials held mass wedding ceremonies as jubilant friends and supporters cheered outside.

“It’s about time, is what I feel. I didn’t think it would happen in my lifetime,” Irma Oliver of West Palm Beach told the Palm Beach Post as she married her partner of a decade, Julia Borghese.

Florida is America’s third most populous state behind California and Texas, with a population of about 20 million.

In 2013, the US Supreme Court recognized marriage equality when it overturned a federal law that defined marriage in strictly heterosexual terms.

Newlyweds Jeff Delmay (3rd R) and Todd Delmay (2nd R) hug as Karla Arguello (L) and Catherina Pareto...

Newlyweds Jeff Delmay (3rd R) and Todd Delmay (2nd R) hug as Karla Arguello (L) and Catherina Pareto (2nd L), who were also married, look on during a marriage ceremony in the Miami-Dade court room on January 5, 2015 in Miami, Florida
Joe Raedle, Getty/AFP

This cleared the way for married gay and lesbian couples to enjoy the same rights and privileges under federal law as their straight counterparts.

It nevertheless left it to each of the 50 states to legalize or ban same-sex marriages.

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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