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Same-sex marriage in Mexico

Same-sex marriage is legally recognized and performed throughout Mexico since 31 December 2022. On 10 August 2010 the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation ruled that same-sex marriages performed anywhere within Mexico must be recognized by the 31 states without exception, and fundamental spousal rights except for adoption (such as alimony payments, inheritance rights, and the coverage of spouses by the federal social security system) have also applied to same-sex couples across the country.[1] Mexico was the fifth country in North America and the 33rd worldwide to allow same-sex couples to marry nationwide.[2]

Only civil marriages are recognized by Mexican law, and all proceedings fall under state legislation.[3] On 12 June 2015, the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation ruled that state bans on same-sex marriage violate the federal constitution. The court's ruling is considered a "jurisprudential thesis" and did not invalidate any state laws, but required judges and courts throughout Mexico to approve all applications for same-sex marriages, and any marriage law that that was changed and did not recognize same-sex marriage would be declared unconstitutional and invalidated.[4]

By 31 December 2022, Mexico City and all Mexican states had legalized same-sex marriage, either by legislation, executive action, or Supreme Court order.[5][6] However, marital rights are not necessarily equal when it comes to adoption: only 20 of the 31 Mexican states, plus Mexico City, have civil codes that allow same-sex couples to adopt, though in other states same-sex couples can adopt through the court system under jurisprudence established by the Supreme Court. In 4 of the 31 Mexican states, marriage licenses are issued to same-sex couples despite not being allowed under state law; they may take more time to process or be more expensive than licenses for opposite-sex couples.

Same-sex civil unions (Spanish: sociedad de convivencia, pronounced [sosjeˈðað ðe kombiˈβensja])[a] are legally performed in Mexico City and in the states of Campeche,[8] Coahuila, Michoacán,[9] Tlaxcala and Veracruz.[10] From 2013 to 2016, they were also performed in the state of Colima, but were replaced by same-sex marriage legislation.[11] They were also performed in Jalisco beginning in 2014, but the law was struck down on procedural grounds in 2018.

Equality of same-sex marriage in Mexican states
  Legal equality of marriages of same-sex and opposite-sex couples
  Marriage licenses are issued to same-sex couples despite not being allowed under state law; they may take more time to process or be more expensive than licenses for opposite-sex couples
  Inequality of marriage: married same-sex couples do not qualify as married when it comes to the adoption of children

History edit

On 9 November 2006, after several years of consideration, the Legislative Assembly of Mexico City approved a civil union law called Ley de Sociedades de Convivencia. It was the first such law in Mexico, soon followed by the northern state of Coahuila in January 2007.

In late November 2009, the leading party in the Legislative Assembly of Mexico City, the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), announced that it was introducing an amendment to the Civil Code to legalize same-sex marriage in Mexico City, a project endorsed by the local Head of Government, Marcelo Ebrard, but strongly opposed by the second-largest political force in the country, the right-of-center National Action Party (PAN) and the Roman Catholic Church. The bill found support from over 600 non-governmental organizations, including the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA) and Amnesty International. On 21 December 2009, Mexico City became the first Latin American jurisdiction to legalize same-sex marriage. The law became effective on 4 March 2010.[12] On 5 August 2010, the Supreme Court voted 8–2 to uphold the constitutionality of Mexico City's same-sex marriage law.[13] The Court later ruled on 10 August 2010 that Mexico City marriages are valid throughout the entire country.[14]

On 28 November 2011, the first two same-sex marriages occurred in Quintana Roo after discovering that the state's Civil Code did not explicitly prohibit same-sex marriage,[15] but these marriages were later annulled by the Governor of Quintana Roo in April 2012.[16] In May 2012, the Secretary of State of Quintana Roo reversed the annulments and allowed for future same-sex marriages to be performed in the state.[17]

A 2012 Oaxaca case was pivotal in opening the door to legal same-sex marriage in every state in Mexico, through the recurso de amparo process. Using international decisions, whose verdicts serve as legal precedent in Mexican courts, such as the protections in the Atala Riffo and Daughters v. Chile case,[18] the U.S. cases Loving v. Virginia and Brown v. Board of Education and Mexico's own anti-discrimination laws,[19] the Supreme Court ruled on 5 December 2012 that: 1) Laws limiting marriage to one man and one woman, or for the purposes of perpetuating the species, violate federal law requiring that they "correspond to all persons without any distinction" and 2) That such laws are unconstitutional on the basis of discrimination by sexual orientation and usurpation of the right, not only of the individual but also the couple's right, to form a family.[20][21] The ruling did not directly overturn the impugned laws, but established that marriages obtained by injunction (amparo) can be performed in any state, regardless of whether the state Civil Code has been changed.[22]

A landmark decision, issued on 29 January 2014, was the first injunction for marriage recognition in Puebla. The case involved a same-sex couple who legally married in Mexico City in 2012 and filed for spousal benefits with the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS) in the state of Puebla, but were denied.[23] Because the complainant died during the injunction process, a lower court had dismissed the case, but the Supreme Court granted the injunction and ordered recognition of the marriage by both the state of Puebla and the IMSS. The injunction required IMSS to extend benefits it offered to married heterosexual couples to same-sex couples anywhere in Mexico who are married or in civil unions.[24][25]

 
The Supreme Court's Tesis jurisprudencial 1a./J. 43/2015 (10a.) stated that state bans on same-sex marriage violate Articles 1 and 4 of the Constitution of Mexico

A ruling by the Supreme Court on 12 June 2015 stated that state bans on same-sex marriage violate Articles 1 and 4 of the Constitution of Mexico. The court's ruling is considered a "jurisprudential thesis" and did not invalidate any state laws, meaning same-sex couples denied the right to wed would still have to seek individual injunctions in court. The ruling standardized the procedures for judges and courts throughout Mexico to approve all applications for same-sex marriages,[26][27] and made the approval mandatory.[28] The ruling was published in the country's Judicial Gazette on 19 June 2015 and became binding on 22 June 2015.[29] Some have suggested the ruling "effectively legalizes" same-sex marriage in Mexico,[30][31] though without legislative change, civil registrars are still bound to follow state laws.[32][33][34] Indeed, the Supreme Court does not have the legal power to strike down all the states' same-sex marriage bans. It can only do so one at a time and under specific circumstances.

The ruling states:

"Marriage. The law of any federative entity that, on the one hand, considers that the purpose of it [marriage] is procreation and/or that defines it as that which is celebrated between a man and a woman, is unconstitutional." (Matrimonio. La ley de cualquier entidad federativa que, por un lado, considere que la finalidad de aquél es la procreación y/o que lo defina como el que se celebra entre un hombre y una mujer, es inconstitucional.)

On 20 December 2015, the National Human Rights Commission submitted a general recommendation to all state executive and legislative bodies, requesting them to allow same-sex marriages in their jurisdictions.[35] The Commission considers differentiated marriage constructions for same-sex couples (such as civil unions) to be discriminatory.

On 17 May 2016, President Enrique Peña Nieto announced he had signed an initiative to amend Article 4 of the Constitution to legalize same-sex marriage nationwide. Any amendment to the Constitution requires support of at least a two-thirds majority in Congress and ratification by a simple majority of the 31 states.[36][37] He also submitted a bill to make appropriate changes in the Civil Code.[38] Chairman of the Committee on Constitutional Issues of the Chamber of Deputies, Daniel Ordoñez Hernández, announced in June 2016 that the President's initiative would be debated by the committee later in the year. Ordoñez also said that 47,000 letters expressing opposition to the initiative were received though none of them were signed.[39] On 9 November 2016, the committee rejected the initiative by 19 votes to 8.[40]

On 30 November 2016, the Supreme Court unanimously declared that six articles of the Law of the Institute of Social Security and Social Services of State Workers (ISSSTE; Ley del Instituto de Seguridad y Servicios Sociales de los Trabajadores del Estado) were unconstitutional because they discriminated against same-sex couples. The Court found that the wording of articles 6, 39, 40, 131 and 135, and sections I and II of the ISSSTE Act violated the rights of same-sex couples to affiliate as beneficiaries of the institute, and thus, those articles violate the principle of equality and non-discrimination established in Articles 1 and 123 of the Constitution.[41] A further ruling issued by the Supreme Court holding that same-sex couples in Mexico have a nationwide right to establish and maintain a family life, whether through procreation, adoption or other means derived from scientific advances, took effect on 30 January 2017.[42]

The 2018 general elections resulted in the National Regeneration Movement (MORENA), a left-wing party that supports same-sex marriage, winning the majority or plurality of legislative seats in 13 states where same-sex marriage was not legal at the time. MORENA along with the Labor Party also won an absolute majority in the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate.[43][44] In October 2018, shortly after the beginning of the new legislative term, PRD Senator Juan Zepeda Hernández introduced a draft proposal to legalize same-sex marriage nationwide in Mexico.[45] On 18 December 2019, the ruling party introduced a constitutional amendment to legalize same-sex marriage at the federal level, upgrade civil unions to marriage, and require all states to adjust their laws correspondingly within three months of passage.[46]

In September 2018, MORENA Senator Germán Martínez introduced a draft proposal to codify certain court rulings pertaining to the legal rights of same-sex couples into law, namely social security benefits and the right to a widow or widower's pension.[47] On 6 November 2018, the Senate unanimously (110–0) approved the bill,[48] and it unanimously (415–0) passed the Chamber of Deputies later that month.[49] The bill was gazetted on 29 November 2018.[50]

On 19 October 2018, a federal court ruled that Mexico must recognize same-sex marriages performed in Mexican consulates and embassies abroad as long as one partner is a Mexican citizen.[51] The plaintiffs in the case, activist Daniel Berezowsky Ramirez and Jaime Chavez Alor, married at the Mexican consulate in New York City on 26 November.[52] In late November, Senator Ricardo Monreal introduced a bill to Congress to allow same-sex marriages in Mexican consulates without the need for couples to obtain a court injunction.[53] On 16 May 2019, the Secretary of Foreign Relations issued a decree authorizing same-sex marriages in Mexican consulates.[54]

Constitutional wording edit

The Constitution of Mexico does not explicitly define nor ban same-sex marriage. The Constitution does contain various articles protecting the "integrity of the family" and the "fraternity and equality of rights of all" and forbidding "any form of discrimination, based on [...] sexual orientation, marital status, [...] which violates the human dignity or seeks to annul or diminish the rights and freedoms of the people". For these reasons, the Supreme Court has ruled that banning same-sex marriage is unconstitutional.

Article 4 provides that men and women have an equal right to marry,[55][56] and states that "the law shall protect the organization and development of the family."[b]

México Igualitario Project edit

The activist group México Igualitario is pursuing a legal strategy to win same-sex marriage state-by-state through court action. When a court in Mexico rules that an existing law is unconstitutional in five separate and consecutive amparos, using identical language in each ruling, this creates jurisprudence against that law and bounds the state legislatures to change the law. This process is called recurso de amparo. When a same-sex couple is denied the right to marry, they can file an amparo with a court to request that they be allowed to legally marry. Since 2015, the courts have been obliged to rule in favor of same-sex couples seeking marriage certificates. An amparo may be invoked when a person feels their rights have been violated. The process is not expensive, but is "time-consuming". The English word "injunction" can be used to refer to amparos.[57] Despite the legal requirement for the states to legalize same-sex marriage after 5 amparo rulings, this has often not been followed through. In Chihuahua, prior to the legalization of same-sex marriage there in 2015, almost 20 injunctions were carried out. Same-sex marriages by amparo have occurred in every state.

Actions of unconstitutionality edit

 
The Supreme Court (Spanish: Suprema Corte de Justicia de la Nación) directly reviews actions of unconstitutionality.

An "action of unconstitutionality" (Spanish: acción de inconstitucionalidad) is a lawsuit seeking to determine if a certain law is unconstitutional. In Mexico, they can only be filed within 30 days after the law has come into force. As many state marriage laws in Mexico are decades-old, LGBT groups cannot file an action of unconstitutionality against these laws. However, if these laws are modified by the state legislatures, then this qualifies for an action of unconstitutionality. For instance, in 2016, the Congress of Puebla modified its marriage laws, but left intact provisions outlawing same-sex marriages. LGBT groups quickly filed an action of unconstitutionality. Actions of unconstitutionality are reviewed by the full bench of the Supreme Court. The Court decides whether these laws are constitutional, and if they are not, they are struck down and thereafter null and void. As of June 2022, six states (Aguascalientes, Chiapas, Jalisco, Nuevo León, Puebla, and Veracruz) have had their same-sex marriage bans struck down in this way.

2018 Inter-American Court of Human Rights ruling edit

On 8 January 2018, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) ruled that the American Convention on Human Rights mandates and requires the recognition of same-sex marriage. The ruling was fully binding on Costa Rica and set binding precedent in other Latin American and Caribbean countries including Mexico.[58] LGBT advocacy groups in Mexico urged the government to abide by the ruling, and fully legalize same-sex marriage.[59]

By state edit

How same-sex marriage was legalized in each state
Federal entity Date of enactment/ruling Date effective Date of codification

(if different)

Adoption rights Legalization method Details
  Aguascalientes 2 April 2019 16 August 2019[c] TBD   Yes Judicial decree Ruling of the Supreme Court
  Baja California 3 November 2017 3 November 2017 16 June 2021   Yes Governmental decree, legislative statute and constitutional amendment Governmental decree. Later codified by the Congress of Baja California and ratified by a majority of the state's municipalities
  Baja California Sur 27 June 2019 29 June 2019   No

(Law passed November 2022, vetoed March 2024)[60]

Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Baja California Sur
  Campeche 10 May 2016 20 May 2016   Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Campeche
  Chiapas 11 July 2017 11 May 2018[c] TBD   Yes Judicial decree Ruling of the Supreme Court
  Chihuahua 11 June 2015 12 June 2015 TBD   Yes Gubernatorial decree
  Coahuila 1 September 2014 17 September 2014   Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Coahuila
  Colima 25 May 2016 12 June 2016   Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Colima
  Durango 16 September 2022 19 September 2022 10 October 2022   Yes Gubernatorial decree and legislative statute Issued by the Governor of Durango. Later codified by the Congress of Durango
  Guanajuato 20 December 2021 20 December 2021 TBD   No Governmental decree and gubernatorial decree Directive issued by the state's Secretary General of Government, followed by Governor's decree
  Guerrero 25 October 2022 31 December 2022   No Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Guerrero, previously performed only in some municipalities
  Hidalgo 24 May 2019 11 June 2019   Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Hidalgo
  Jalisco 26 January 2016 21 April 2016[c] 9 April 2022   Yes Judicial decree and legislative statute Ruling of the Supreme Court. Later codified by the Congress of Jalisco
  Mexico 11 October 2022 2 November 2022   No

Law has not been updated, but adoptions are allowed.[61]

Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of the State of Mexico
  Mexico City 29 December 2009 4 March 2010   Yes Legislative statute and constitutional amendment Passed by the Legislative Assembly of Mexico City
  Michoacán 18 May 2016 23 June 2016   Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Michoacán
  Morelos 18 May 2016 5 July 2016   Yes Legislative statute and constitutional amendment Passed by the Congress of Morelos and ratified by a majority of the state's municipalities
  Nayarit 17 December 2015 23 December 2015   Yes

(Since 2022)[62]

Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Nayarit
  Nuevo León 19 February 2019 31 May 2019[c] 14 June 2023[63]   Yes Judicial decree and legislative statute Ruling of the Supreme Court. Later codified by the Congress of Nuevo León
  Oaxaca 26 August 2018 26 August 2018 5 October 2019   No Administrative decision and legislative statute Order of the State Director of the Civil Registry. Later codified by the Congress of Oaxaca
  Puebla 1 August 2017 16 February 2018[c] 11 November 2020   Yes Judicial decree and legislative statute Ruling of the Supreme Court. Later codified by the Congress of Puebla
  Querétaro 22 September 2021 12 November 2021   Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Querétaro
  Quintana Roo 3 May 2012 3 May 2012   Yes Administrative decision Decision by the state's Secretary of State
  San Luis Potosí 17 May 2019 21 May 2019   Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of San Luis Potosí
  Sinaloa 15 June 2021 30 June 2021   No Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Sinaloa as ordered by a federal court
  Sonora 23 September 2021 22 October 2021   No

Law has not been updated, but adoptions are allowed.[64]

Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Sonora
  Tabasco 19 October 2022 27 October 2022   No Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Tabasco
  Tamaulipas 26 October 2022 19 November 2022   Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Tamaulipas
  Tlaxcala 8 December 2020 24 December 2020   No

Law has not been updated, but adoptions are allowed.[65]

Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Tlaxcala
  Veracruz 30 May 2022 13 June 2022   Yes Judicial decree and legislative statute Ruling of the Supreme Court. Later codified by the Congress of Veracruz.
  Yucatán 1 March 2022 4 March 2022 Unclear.

The Law on Adoption is written in a gender-neutral fashion.[66]

Constitutional amendment and legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Yucatán
  Zacatecas 14 December 2021 30 December 2021   No Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Zacatecas

Mexico City edit

Civil unions
 
States performing civil unions in Mexico
  Gender-neutral civil unions.
  Former civil unions for same-sex couples, replaced by marriage.
  Civil unions never performed.

Being the seat of the Powers of the Union, Mexico City did not belong to any particular state but to all. After years of demanding greater political autonomy, residents were given the right to directly elect the Head of Government of Mexico City and the representatives of the unicameral Legislative Assembly by popular vote in 1997. For the following two decades, the center-left Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) controlled both political powers.

In the early 2000s, Enoé Uranga, an openly lesbian politician and activist, unsuccessfully pushed a bill that would have legalized same-sex civil unions in Mexico City under the name Ley de Sociedades de Convivencia (LSC).[67] Despite being passed four times by legislative commissions, the bill repeatedly got stuck in plenary voting for its sensitive nature, which could be attributed to the widespread opposition from right-wing groups and then Head of Government Andrés Manuel López Obrador's ambiguity concerning the bill.[68] Nonetheless, since new left-wing Head of Government Marcelo Ebrard was expected to take power in December 2006, the Assembly decided to take up the bill and approved it in a 43–17 vote on 9 November.[68]

The law was well received by feminist and LGBT groups, including Emilio Álvarez Icaza, then-chairman of Mexico City's Human Rights Commission, who declared that "the law was not a threat to anyone in particular and that it will be a matter of time before it shows positive consequences for different social groups." It was strongly opposed by conservative groups such as the National Parents' Union and the Roman Catholic Church, which labeled the assemblymen who voted for the law as "sinners" and complained it was "vengeance against the Catholic Church from the more radical groups from the left, who felt it was a demand for justice."[68] The law officially took effect on 16 March 2007.[69] Mexico City's first same-sex civil union was between Jorge Cerpa, a 31-year-old economist, and Antonio Medina, a 38-year-old journalist.[69] By December 2009, 736 same-sex civil unions had taken place in the city, of which 24 had been annulled (3%).[70]

In early September 2014, modifications to the civil union agreement were drafted to eliminate discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and dissolution support. In essence, the law had provided that upon termination, domestic partners were only allowed support for a period equal to half the length of the partnership. The Supreme Court ruled that the provision was discriminatory as it accorded differential treatment in cases of partnership for cohabitation, marriage or concubinage.[71]

Year Unions Annulled
2007 257 10
2008 268 14
2009 211
Total 736 24
Marriage

On 24 November 2009, PRD Assemblyman David Razú proposed a bill to legalize same-sex marriage in Mexico City.[72] Luis González Plascencia, chairman of the Human Rights Commission of Mexico City, backed the bill and said that it was up to the Legislative Assembly to consider LGBT adoption.[73] The International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA), Amnesty International, the AIDS Healthcare Foundation and over 600 non-governmental organizations supported the legalization of same-sex marriage in Mexico City.[74] The conservative National Action Party (PAN) announced it would either go to the courts to appeal the law or demand a referendum.[75][76] However, a referendum on same-sex marriage was rejected by the Legislative Assembly in a 36–22 vote on 18 December 2009.[77] On 21 December 2009, the Legislative Assembly legalized same-sex marriage (39–20) in Mexico City. The bill changed the definition of marriage in the city's Civil Code from "a free union between a man and a woman" to "a free union between two people."[78] The law grants same-sex couples the same rights as opposite-sex couples, including adopting children.[79] PAN vowed to challenge the law in the courts.[79] On 29 December 2009, Head of Government Marcelo Ebrard signed the bill into law, which became effective on 4 March 2010.[12][80] On 5 August, the Supreme Court voted 8–2 to uphold the constitutionality of Mexico City's same-sex marriage law.[13] The Court further ruled on 10 August 2010 that Mexico City marriages are valid throughout the country.[81]

In early January 2017, the Constituent Assembly of Mexico City voted, in its plenary session, 68–11 to fully enshrine same-sex marriage in the Mexico City Constitution.[82]

Aguascalientes edit

From 2014 onwards, multiple same-sex marriage, concubinage and civil union bills were proposed in Aguascalientes, though all of them stalled in Congress due to opposition from the ruling National Action Party.[83][84][85][86][87]

An action of unconstitutionality was filed in 2018 by the State Human Rights Commission of Aguascalientes, challenging articles 143, 144 and 313bis of the Civil Code, which limited marriage to opposite-sex couples to "perpetuate the species". On 2 April 2019, the full bench of the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that the state's same-sex marriage ban was discriminatory against same-sex couples and unconstitutional.[88][89] The ruling went into effect upon publication in the Official Gazette of the Federation on 16 August 2019,[90] though the Civil Registry had already begun issuing same-sex marriage certificates prior to this date. Nevertheless, the text of the law still refers to marriage as between a man and a woman.[91]

Baja California edit

On 23 August 2010, shortly after the ruling of the Supreme Court requiring all states to recognise same-sex marriages validly performed in other states, state legislators introduced an amendment to article 7 of the Constitution of Baja California, adding the definition of marriage as being "the union of a man and a woman". On 29 September 2010, the Congress of Baja California voted 18–1 in favor of the amendment, and after approval by municipalities, it was published on 27 May 2011.[92] On 13 November 2014, the Supreme Court of Mexico ruled that the state's ban on same-sex marriage was unconstitutional.[93][94]

A bill was introduced to the Baja California Congress on 12 February 2015 to legalize same-sex marriage in the state by changing article 7 of the state Constitution.[92][95][96][97] However, the legislation was stalled for years by opponents of same-sex marriage.

On 3 November 2017, the Government of Baja California announced that it would cease to enforce its same-sex marriage ban and that the Civil Registry will begin accepting applications for marriage licenses by same-sex couples.[98][99]

The Congress of Baja California passed a bill legalizing same-sex marriage by a vote of 18–4 on 16 June 2021. The bill modified the Constitution to remove the ban on same-sex marriage added back in 2011. The amendment entered into force on 17 July 2021 after three of Baja California's six municipalities ratified it and the three others were deemed to have accepted it by taking no action ahead of the 30-day time period to consider the amendment.[100] The amendment took effect on 9 August, one day after being published in the government gazette.[101]

Baja California Sur edit

A same-sex marriage bill was first proposed in Baja California Sur on 9 April 2010 by the organization La Comunidad Sudcaliforniana en Diversidad Sexual.[102] No action was taken by the state Congress.[103][104] The July 2018 elections resulted in the National Regeneration Movement and other supportive parties winning a majority of legislative seats in Congress.[43] On 27 June 2019, the state Congress approved a bill to legalize same-sex marriage in a 14–5 vote with one abstention.[105][106] It was signed by Governor Carlos Mendoza Davis the same day and published in the official journal on 28 June 2019. The law took effect the following day.[107][108][109] The congress of Baja California Sur passed a bill allowing same-sex couples to adopt on 16 November 2022, but it was vetoed in March 2024.[110] In June 2023, the Baja California Sur congress approved a citizen initiated bill that expands the recognition of concubinage to same-sex couples.[111]

Campeche edit

In April 2016, Campeche Governor Alejandro Moreno Cárdenas submitted a same-sex marriage bill to Congress, which was approved on 10 May 2016. The law was published in the official state gazette on 16 May 2016 and came into effect on 20 May 2016.[112] Campeche became the seventh state to allow same-sex marriage without the need for a court order.[113]

Chiapas edit

On 6 April 2016, an action of unconstitutionality was filed with the Supreme Court.[114][115][116] The Supreme Court ruled, in a 9–2 decision, on 11 July 2017 that the heterosexual definition of marriage in the Civil Code was unconstitutional, legalizing same-sex marriage in Chiapas and eliminating the need for a court injunction.[117][118] The ruling came into effect upon publication in the Official Gazette of the Federation on 11 May 2018.[119] Nonetheless, the Civil Registry began accepting marriage applications from same-sex couples from 30 October 2017, and same-sex couples have been able to marry since that date.[120]

As of June 2022, a bill to codify same-sex marriage into the state Civil Code is pending in the state congress.[121]

Chihuahua edit

On 11 June 2015, Governor César Duarte Jáquez announced the state would no longer prevent same-sex marriages, making Chihuahua the fourth jurisdiction to legalize same-sex marriage.[122] Duarte Jáquez announced that licenses would be available by 12 June 2015.[123] On 16 June 2015, the president of the state Congress announced that it would debate the legal codification of the executive decision. Additionally, according to the state National System for Integral Family Development, same-sex couples are allowed to adopt jointly in Chihuahua.[124]

In February 2017, the Supreme Court ruled that the state's Civil Code was unconstitutional because it has not yet been modified to reflect the legalization of same-sex marriage. The Supreme Court ordered the state Congress to change its Civil Code within 90 days.[125] However, the Congress refused to do so. In October 2018, the 10th District Court ruled that should the Congress fail to update its laws "soon", it would hold legislators in contempt and order their dismissal from office.[126]

Coahuila edit

The legalization of same-sex civil unions in Coahuila had started to be discussed as early as November 2006, simultaneously with the discussion then ongoing in Mexico City.[127] On 11 January 2007, the state Congress legalized same-sex civil unions under the name pacto civil de solidaridad, which gave property and inheritance rights to same-sex couples.[128][129] Twenty days after the law had passed, the country's first same-sex civil union took place in Saltillo. It was between 29-year-olds Karina Almaguer and Karla Lopez, a lesbian couple from Tamaulipas.[130]

On 5 March 2013, Congressman Samuel Acevedo Flores, from the Social Democratic Party, introduced a bill to the Congress of Coahuila to legalize same-sex marriages and adoption by same-sex couples.[131] On 11 February 2014, Congress approved the adoption bill and passed the same-sex marriage bill on 1 September 2014.[132][133] It took effect on 17 September,[134] and the first couple married on 20 September.[135]

Colima edit

In July 2009, the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) introduced a formal initiative to legalize civil unions in the western state of Colima.[136] Nevertheless, the following month, the local Congress decided not to take up the initiative, following widespread opposition from right-wing groups.[137] In December 2009, Governor Mario Anguiano Moreno agreed to discuss the legalization of civil unions and adoption by same-sex couples.[138]

On 4 July 2013, the state Congress approved a new form of union called enlace conyugal (conjugal bond) for same-sex couples, which according to Deputy Martín Flores Castañeda grants the same rights and obligations as marriage.[139]

A bill to legalize same-sex marriage in the state was unanimously approved by the Congress of Colima on 25 May 2016.[140][141] The bill was passed 24 to 0.[142][non-primary source needed] The existing same-sex civil union law was repealed simultaneously.[143] The same-sex marriage law was published in the state's official gazette on 11 June 2016 and came into effect on 12 June 2016. The new law allows couples who previously contracted civil unions before the legislation was repealed to have them recognized by the state or converted to a marriage.[144] It also allows same-sex couples to adopt children jointly.[145]

Durango edit

Same-sex marriage became legal in Durango state on 19 September 2022, with a decree from the state governor.[146]

In September 2013, PRD Deputy Israel Soto Peña introduced a bill to legalize same sex marriage in the state. On 10 April 2014, the bill was rejected on the basis that it would not sufficiently address the legal changes necessary to correct the Civil Code.[147] In May, Soto Peña announced that he would revamp the initiative and resubmit it,[148] which he did on 1 November 2014.[149]

On 10 February 2016, the Justice Commission of the Congress of Durango approved a draft bill to legalize same-sex marriage in the state.[150] However, the bill's plenary discussion was postponed for 6 months to organize discussions on the matter and to inform legislators on the subject before a vote.[151] On 31 January 2017, Congress rejected the bill, in a 15–4 vote with 4 abstentions. The bill proposed by PAN was supported by both the PRD and PAN, but was opposed by the PRI.[152]

The July 2018 elections resulted in MORENA, PRD and the Labor Party, pro-same-sex marriage parties, winning the majority of legislative seats in Durango.[43][153]

In July 2022 a federal judge ordered the Durango Congress to consider an abandoned same-sex-marriage bill in their next session, due to the critical number of amparos having been reached. The ruling does not require a particular vote, but does require legislators to go on record as to whether they will comply with the Supreme Court ruling.[154] On 16 September 2022, the newly elected governor Esteban Villegas Villarreal published a decree for same-sex marriage.[155]

Five days later, on 21 September 2022, the Congress of Durango voted 15–9 to pass a bill codifying the right to same-sex marriage and non-discrimination based on sexual orientation, religion, disability, or health status by marriage officiants.[156]

Guanajuato edit

Same-sex marriage became legal in Guanajuato on 20 December 2021, when government secretary Libia García Muñoz Ledo announced that the right to marry would be extended to any two people regardless of gender in strict adherence to the constitutions of Mexico and Guanajuato, precedents of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation, and requirements under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.[157]

In response to the first amparo approval, on 21 February 2014, the PRD introduced a bill to Congress to amend the Guanajuato Civil Code so as to allow same-sex marriages.[158] The plan was endorsed by the PRI,[159] but on 13 April 2015, the Justice Committee, with a majority from the state's ruling PAN party, voted 3–2 to shelve both bills citing PAN's objection to same-sex unions.[160] On 29 April 2016, the Guanajuato City Council unanimously passed a resolution allowing a lesbian couple to marry in the municipality. Additionally, they urged Governor Miguel Márquez Márquez to change the Civil Code to allow for same-sex marriages.[161] In October 2018, PRD Deputy Isidoro Bazaldúa Lugo introduced a same-sex marriage bill to Congress.[162] Guanajuato is the 23rd Mexican state to approve same-sex marriage.

Guerrero edit

The Congress of Guerrero passed a same-sex marriage bill on 25 October 2022, by 38–6. The bill also recognizes same-sex concubinage.[163] The bill was finally published on 30 December 2022, taking effect the next day.[164]

After the Supreme Court ruling went into effect on 22 June 2015, officials in Guerrero began announcing plans for a series of collective group weddings.[165] Governor Rogelio Ortega submitted a same-sex marriage bill to Congress on 7 July 2015. Legislators complained that they would have preferred to have the bill passed before marriages took place, but it was not feasible in the available time-frame.[166] On 10 July 2015, 20 same-sex couples were married by Governor Ortega in Acapulco.[167] On 13 January 2016, the head of the Civil Registry of Acapulco stated that the 20 same-sex marriages that occurred on 10 July 2015 in Acapulco were void, as there was no law to permit same-sex marriage in the state.[168] On 13 February 2016, a day before mass Valentine's Day weddings were planned statewide, the head of Guerrero's State Civil Registry department announced that same-sex couples could marry in any jurisdiction willing to marry the couples and criticised Acapulco's Civil Registry and other civil registries throughout the state for not allowing the weddings. The department head stated that same-sex marriages conducted in Guerrero would be legally valid.[169] Some other Guerreran municipalities, such as Chilpancingo de los Bravo and Zihuatanejo de Azueta, began to marry same-sex couples.[170][171][172][173] In August 2020, Acapulco announced that it would perform same-sex marriages.[174]

Hidalgo edit

As Mexico City and Coahuila had recently legalized civil unions, a similar proposal was introduced in Hidalgo in July 2007.[175] However, it stalled and never reached a vote.[176] In October 2013, the Congress indicated there was not sufficient "maturity" in the society to accept same-sex marriage and that it would instead consider a conjugal partnership bill.[177]

The 2018 elections resulted in the National Regeneration Movement (MORENA) winning the majority of legislative seats in Congress. After the election, a same-sex marriage bill was introduced to the state Congress.[43][178] The bill was approved on 14 May 2019 in a vote of 18–2 with 8 abstentions.[179] Governor Omar Fayad signed the bill on 24 May. It was published in the official journal on 10 June 2019 and took effect the following day.[180]

Jalisco edit

In April 2013, a cross-party group of deputies presented the Free Coexistence Act (Spanish: Ley de Libre Convivencia) to the state Congress.[181] The Act established that same-sex civil unions can be performed in the state, as long as they are not considered marriages. It did not legalize adoption and mandated that civil unions be performed with a civil law notary.[181][182] On 31 October 2013, the Congress of Jalisco approved the Act in a 20–15 vote,[183] one abstained and three were absent.[182] The law took effect on 1 January 2014.[184] On 13 September 2018, the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation struck down the law on procedural grounds.[185][186]

The first same-sex marriage in the state occurred via injunction in December 2013. On 26 January 2016, the full bench of the Supreme Court unanimously declared the Civil Code unconstitutional for limiting marriage to heterosexual couples.[187][188] The Jalisco State Civil Registry Directory changed all marriage licenses to gender-neutral on 22 March 2016 so that same-sex couples could already begin receiving them.[189] On 21 April 2016, the Supreme Court ruling took effect after being printed in the Official Gazette of the Federation.[190]

On 12 May 2016, the Congress of Jalisco instructed all the state's municipalities to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples.[191][192][193] In June 2017, a bill removing the heterosexual definition of marriage and inserting a gender-neutral definition was introduced to Congress.[194]

On 6 April 2022, the Congress of Jalisco passed a bill codifying same-sex marriage into law, on a vote of 26–8 with 3 abstentions.[195]

México edit

In 2008, an initiative for the legalization of civil unions was launched in the State of México, but never advanced. In 2010, a citizen's initiative to legalize same-sex marriage was presented to Congress. After three years, it had not been reviewed, so in mid-2013 PRD Deputy Octavio Martínez introduced a same-sex marriage bill.[196] The state Governor submitted a new marriage bill, while PRD submitted a proposal to legalize same-sex adoption on 5 March 2015.[197] Neither bill was brought to a vote.

On 11 October 2022, the Congress of the State of Mexico voted 49–12 with six abstentions to pass a bill legalizing same-sex marriage and concubinage.[198][199] It was published on 1 November 2022, and took effect the next day.[200]

Michoacán edit

On 27 August 2015, the Justice and Human Rights Committee announced it would enact a civil union law for same-sex couples. It was approved unanimously in a 34–0 vote by the Congress of Michoacán on 7 September 2015.[201][202] The law was published on 30 September 2015 in the state's official journal.[203]

On 9 February 2016, the Justice and Human Rights Committee approved a Family Code that would allow same-sex marriage and joint adoption.[204] It was stated that the Michoacán Congress would vote on the proposal in the coming days.[205] However, the vote was postponed until sometime in May 2016.[206] On 18 May 2016, the state Congress eventually approved the proposal by a vote of 27 in favor, none opposed and 8 abstentions.[207][208] The law was published in the state's official diary on 22 June 2016 and came into effect on 23 June. The law allows couples to adopt children jointly.[209]

Morelos edit

On 18 May 2016, the Congress of Morelos voted 20 to 6 to approve a constitutional change to legalize same-sex marriage. A constitutional amendment requires the ratification of at least 17 of the 33 municipalities in the state.[210][211] The 33 municipalities had until 25 June 2016 to act on the amendment.[212] At the end of the process, a total of 17 municipalities had ratified the constitutional change and 15 had voted against ratification, while 1 municipality was awarded an extra week, although the clear majority being in favor meant that same-sex marriage would become legal in the state.[213][214] The law was promulgated and published in the state's official gazette on 4 July 2016.[215] It took effect on 5 July.[216] The state adoption agency clarified that the law shall allow same-sex couples to adopt jointly as the process is open to all spouses in Morelos.[217]

Nayarit edit

On 25 June 2015, Deputy Luis Manuel Hernández Escobedo introduced a bill allowing same-sex couples to marry and making the definition of concubinage gender-neutral.[218] On 17 December 2015, the state Congress approved the bill in a 26–1 vote with 1 abstention.[219][220] The bill was published in the official journal, following Governor Roberto Sandoval Casteñeda's signature, on 22 December 2015, and took effect the following day.[221][222]

Nuevo León edit

On 17 June 2015, the New Alliance Party announced their intention to introduce a same-sex marriage bill. An Independent congressman announced his intention to submit his own civil union proposal with the support of the ruling PAN. On 22 June 2015, New Alliance member and Congress President, María Dolores Leal Cantú, presented the same-sex marriage bill.[223] On 16 May 2016, the president of the Legislative Commission of the State Congress announced that the bill would be voted upon sometime in September,[224] but this did not happen.

An action of unconstitutionality against Nuevo León's same-sex marriage ban was filed in February 2018.[225] On 19 February 2019, the Supreme Court declared articles 140 and 148 of the state Civil Code unconstitutional, fully legalizing same-sex marriage in Nuevo León.[226][227] The ruling came into effect on 31 May 2019 upon publication in the Official Gazette of the Federation.[228]

The law was amended to formally permit same-sex marriage on 14 June 2023.[63]

Oaxaca edit

On 26 August 2012, a federal court judge ordered the state of Oaxaca to perform same-sex marriages based on a constitutional amendment which bans discrimination based on sexual orientation. This ruling was reviewed by the Supreme Court, which issued a unanimous ruling against the ban on same-sex marriage.[229]

In July 2017, a same-sex couple was successful in getting married without first receiving a court order.[230] From late August 2018, the Civil Registry has allowed same-sex couples to marry without the need for an amparo. However, the process took three business days, compared with two hours for opposite-sex couples.[231][232][233][234][non-primary source needed]

On 28 August 2019, the Congress of Oaxaca passed legislation bringing the state into line with the executive order.[235][236]

Puebla edit

On 7 December 2006, a similar civil union bill to that of Mexico City was proposed in Puebla, but it faced strong opposition and criticism from deputies of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and the National Action Party (PAN), who declared that "the traditional family is the only social model, and there cannot be another one."[237] Though proposals were presented in 2011 and repeatedly introduced in successive years, no change to the law was approved by the legislatures.[238][239]

On 27 April 2016, an action of unconstitutionality was filed before the Supreme Court.[114][240] On 1 August 2017, the Supreme Court unanimously declared same-sex marriage to be legal in Puebla, striking down the Civil Code which limited marriage to one man and one woman for the purpose of procreation, and eliminating the need for individual amparos.[241][242][243] The ruling came into effect on 16 February 2018,[244] after publication in the Official Diary of the Federation. Shortly after the ruling, Puebla officials confirmed that same-sex couples are allowed to adopt.[245]

The Congress of Puebla passed a bill codifying the legality of same-sex marriage on 3 November 2020.[246]

Querétaro edit

The Congress of Querétaro passed a bill to amend the state civil code to allow same-sex marriage on 22 September 2021. It will take effect upon publication in the official gazette.[247][248]

On 21 July 2015, the civil registrar of the municipality of Santiago de Querétaro, which comprises 46% of the state's population, announced that same-sex couples may marry in the municipality without the need for an amparo.[249] As of January 2017, seven other municipalities in the state are marrying same-sex couples without requiring them to receive an amparo beforehand: Amealco de Bonfil, Cadereyta de Montes, Ezequiel Montes, Huimilpan, Pedro Escobedo, San Joaquín and Tolimán, comprising 60% of the state's population altogether.[250] The state congress legalized same-sex marriage statewide on 22 September 2021.[251]

Quintana Roo edit

Same-sex marriages can be performed in Quintana Roo after a decision by the state's Secretary of State.[17] In November 2011, some public officials in the state began performing same-sex marriages after reviewing the state's Civil Code. The Civil Code of Quintana Roo does not state sex or gender requirements for marriage, only specifying "people interested in getting married".[15] A same-sex couple filed for a marriage license in Cancún and Chetumal after discovering this legal quirk, but both cities rejected their applications, arguing that a man-woman marriage was implied. The couple then applied in Lázaro Cárdenas Municipality, where authorities accepted the application. Quintana Roo's first two same-sex marriages were held in the community of Kantunilkin on 28 November 2011.[252] In May 2012, the Secretary of State issued a decision allowing for future same-sex marriages to be performed in Quintana Roo.

In November 2014, it was announced that a bill to officially legalize same-sex marriage in the state would be introduced and voted on in the current legislative session, thereby replacing the loophole used by couples.[253] In May 2017, a new same-sex marriage bill was introduced to the state Congress.[254]

San Luis Potosí edit

On 28 April 2014, a citizens' initiative to legalize same-sex marriage was submitted to the Congress of San Luis Potosí. On 8 August 2014, the Deputy Chairman of the Commission on Human Rights and Gender Equity, Miguel Maza Hernández, said that analysis of the proposal would begin.[255] On 17 June 2015, Hernández announced the state's commitment to extending marriage to same-sex couples and stated that deliberations would happen after the June 2015 Supreme Court ruling declaring all laws against same-sex marriage unconstitutional is published in the judicial gazette.[256] On 6 June 2016, it was announced that a special committee would study the marriage bill and vote on it within 90 days.[257] In November 2016, the state Congress voted against the bill legalizing same-sex marriage.[258] One PRD deputy, who mistakenly voted against the bill, announced that he would introduce a new same-sex marriage proposal in 2017.[259]

The new bill was introduced in October 2017.[260] It was approved by the state Congress on 16 May 2019, in a vote of 14–12, with 1 abstention and signed by the Governor on 20 May 2019.[261]

Sinaloa edit

In January 2013, the Family Code of the state of Sinaloa was changed to limit marriage or cohabitation to couples consisting of a man and a woman. Three injunctions were filed to contest the changes, but two were dismissed.[262]

On 2 September 2014, Deputy Sandra Lara launched an initiative to amend articles 40 and 165 of the Family Code and allow for same-sex marriage in the state.[263] In February 2015, the conservative National Action Party (PAN) introduced a civil union bill which would have banned children of same-sex partners from residing with their same-sex parents.[264] In July 2017, PAN and the New Alliance Party of Sinaloa announced their support for same-sex marriages.[265] According to a September 2017 poll, 57% of Sinaloans supported same-sex marriage.[266] The July 2018 elections resulted in MORENA, a pro-same-sex marriage party, winning the majority of legislative seats in Sinaloa.[43][267]

On 25 November 2016, the Supreme Court issued its fifth resolution against Sinaloa's same-sex marriage ban. The Court declared the state's same-sex marriage ban unconstitutional, void and inoperable. According to local LGBT activists however, state authorities deliberately delayed the legalization of same-sex marriage.[268] On 15 May 2018, following approximately 17 months of delay, the Supreme Court ordered the state to legalize same-sex marriage within 90 days or face unspecified consequences.[269][270] However, that deadline also passed without the state legalizing same-sex marriage. On 19 June 2019, Congress rejected proposed same-sex marriage legislation by 20 to 18, including six legislators from MORENA voting against.[271]

On 12 June 2021, a federal court ordered the Sinaloa Congress to legalize same-sex marriage within three days, with any legislators who vote against the bill to be found in contempt of court and unable to run for or hold office for seven years. On 15 June 2021, the Sinaloa Congress voted 23–0 to pass the bill legalizing same-sex marriage in the state, with all dissenters marking themselves absent for the vote.[272] It took effect one day after being published in the official gazette on 29 June 2021.[273][274]

Sonora edit

Same-sex couples could marry only with the assistance of an amparo (court order) until 11 May 2016, when the Director of the State Civil Registry, Martha Julissa Bojórquez Castillo, announced that same-sex couples could begin marrying in the state without the need for an amparo.[275] However, on 18 May 2016, the Governor ordered all civil registries in the state to retain the existing statutory ban on same-sex marriage and only provide same-sex couples with marriage certificates if they successfully receive an amparo.

In September 2017, all political parties in the state agreed to begin analyzing a proposed same-sex marriage bill. The bill's main sponsor said he was hopeful it would be accepted.[276]

The July 2018 elections resulted in pro-same-sex marriage parties winning a majority of legislative seats in Sonora.[43] On 23 September 2021, the Congress of Sonora passed a bill legalizing same-sex marriage throughout the state.[277] It went into force on 22 October.[278]

Tabasco edit

The Congress of Tabasco passed a bill to reform the state civil code to allow same-sex marriage on 19 October 2022. It was scheduled to take effect on 30 October 2022.[279]

After Mexico City's Legislative Assembly legalized same-sex marriages and LGBT adoption in December 2009, debate resurged in states where civil unions had been previously proposed. In 2009, in the southeastern state of Tabasco, 20 same-sex couples sent a motion to the state Congress, asking it to allow them to marry.[280] The state's largest political parties, the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), announced their support for same-sex marriage in 2010.[281] Despite the support of political parties, there was no legislative will to change the law, so in April 2014 an initiative to reform Article 154 of the Civil Code of the State of Tabasco and legalize same-sex marriage was presented by the organization Tabasco Unites for Diversity and Sexual Health (Spanish: Tabasqueños Unidos por la Diversidad y la Salud Sexual; Tudyssex).[282] PRD submitted its own same-sex marriage and adoption bill on 3 July 2015.[283][284]

The July 2018 elections resulted in MORENA, a pro-same-sex marriage party, winning the majority of legislative seats and the governorship.[43] The Congress passed the same-sex marriage bill on 19 October 2022 with a 23–5 vote.[285] It was signed by Governor Carlos Manuel Merino Campos, and published in the official state journal on 26 October, taking effect the next day.[286][287]

Tamaulipas edit

The Congress of Tamaulipas passed a bill to reform the state civil code to allow same-sex marriage on 26 October 2022 in a 23–12 vote.[288] It was the final state to legalize same-sex marriage.

In 2011, a bill to provide "coexistence" for same-sex couples was promoted by local organizations in Tamaulipas.[289] In 2012, organizers presented legislators with 25,000 signatures in favor of same-sex marriage.[290] In 2013, the PRD agreed to bring the issue to the Congress of Tamaulipas and support the proposal.[291] In June 2015, Deputy Olga Sosa Ruiz confirmed that the Congress of Tamaulipas was working on a bill to legalize same-sex marriage. She stated that the reform is complex as they are attempting to remove all discriminatory terms and are working with the Gender Equality Commission. She predicted that the law would be passed within the next legislative session,[292] though no bill has passed as of October 2022.

In September 2018, the Supreme Court began proceedings against Tamaulipas' same-sex marriage ban.[293] On 16 November 2018, the Court issued its fifth resolution against Tamaulipas, declaring the state's marriage ban unconstitutional and ordering the state to modify it within 180 business days.[294]

Tamaulipas was one of four states without same-sex marriage where pro-same-sex marriage parties did not win a majority of legislative seats in the 2018 election. However, the other three had all passed same-sex marriage legislation by early 2022. A state deputy filed a lawsuit with the Supreme Court against the state, to force it to comply with the earlier ruling.[295] A bill to legalize same-sex marriage was passed through the commission stage on a 14–1 vote on 19 October 2022.[296] It was then passed by the unicameral Congress of Tamaulipas on 26 October 2022 with 23 votes in favour and 12 against,[297] and was published in the government gazette on 18 November.[298]

Tlaxcala edit

On 29 December 2016, the Congress of Tlaxcala approved a coexistence bill. The bill established civil unions, under the name sociedad de convivencia solidaria, which provides cohabiting same-sex and opposite-sex couples with many of the same rights and obligations of marriage.[299][300] It was published in the official journal, following the Governor's signature, on 11 January 2017 and took effect the following day.[301]

On 13 October 2017, the New Alliance Party introduced a same-sex marriage bill to the State Congress.[302] The July 2018 elections resulted in MORENA and the Labor Party, pro-same-sex marriage parties, winning the majority of legislative seats in Tlaxcala.[43]

On 8 December 2020, the Congress of Tlaxcala approved a marriage-equality bill in a 16–3 vote.[303]

Veracruz edit

Same-sex marriage was approved by the Congress of Veracruz in a 38–4 vote on June 2, 2022,[304] three days after the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation ruled that articles of the state Civil Code that barred same-sex couples from marriage were invalid.[305]

Congress had previously enacted recognition of same-sex concubinage in May 2020.[306]

In September 2016, the head of Veracruz's adoption agency announced that same-sex couples may adopt children jointly in the state.[307] In April 2017, the Civil Registry of Xalapa announced its support for same-sex marriage.[308] On 20 February 2017, Governor Miguel Ángel Yunes issued an executive order legalizing same-sex marriage in the state. Four days later, following protests from Catholic groups, Governor Yunes repealed the order. Following the repeal of the order, LGBT activists announced they were filing a case to legalize same-sex marriage in the state.[309] On 20 July 2017, the case against the Governor and the state's same-sex marriage ban was filed before the Fourth District Court.[310]

On 7 November 2017, the Court issued its ruling in the case, declaring the state's ban on same-sex marriage unconstitutional.[311] Some LGBT groups had suggested that the ruling effectively legalizes same-sex marriage in the state,[312] though state officials announced that they would continue to enforce the state's marriage ban.

In July 2018, as one of their last actions before leaving office, PAN submitted a proposal to Congress to explicitly ban same-sex marriage in the state Constitution. It failed to pass, with 32 deputies in favor, 10 against and 2 absentions. It needed 33 votes to pass, thus failing by one vote.[313]

Yucatán edit

The Yucatán state congress legalized same-sex marriage in a unanimous vote on 1 March 2022,[314] after it overwhelmingly approved a state constitutional amendment in August 2021 that would permit same-sex marriage legislation.[315]

The local Congress had overwhelmingly approved a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage in a 24–1 vote on 21 July 2009. The bill was promoted by right-wing organization Pro Yucatán Network to reject all efforts by people of the same sex to form a family and adopt children. PAN politicians justified the ban alleging that "there still aren't adequate conditions within Yucatán society to allow for unions between people of the same sex".[316] The event led to protests outside the local Congress by LGBT organizations, whose leaders were expected to appeal the case to the Supreme Court.[317]

On 17 May 2014, a group of civil society organizations brought a legal action before the Constitutional Court of the State of Yucatán under the guise of "correcting a legislative omission." It was the first time a mechanism to correct an omission had been used in Mexico as the basis of a suit. The organizations claimed 10 injunctions had been approved in the state without legislative action. The suit asked for Articles 49 and 94 of the Family Code which limit marriage to one man and one woman to be "considered in the broadest sense and that the gender of its members be undefined."[318] On 2 March 2015, the Yucatán court dismissed the appeal for constitutional action to change the Civil Code. Supporters of amending the code vowed to appeal the decision.[319] In June 2015, they filed a lawsuit against the Yucatán court in federal court. The suit argued that the Yucatán court's decision was flawed as the Constitution prohibits discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.[320] After postponing a hearing five times, the Supreme Court dismissed the lawsuit on 31 May 2017.[321]

On 24 May 2016, a prominent member of the state Congress stated that Yucatán would wait for the Congress of the Union to legislate on same-sex marriage before taking the necessary steps to legalize it.[322] In September 2017, the Yucatán Congress unanimously approved a PRD-proposed bill to begin discussion on issues that had previously been neglected and not discussed, including same-sex marriage.[323] On 15 August 2018, Governor Rolando Zapata Bello introduced bills to amend the state Constitution and Family Code to legalize same-sex marriage.[324][325] On 10 April 2019, the state Congress rejected an amendment to repeal the constitutional ban on same-sex marriage, in a 9–15 vote.[326] In response to the failure to pass legislation, the 17th Pride Parade in Mérida saw the unprecedented participation of around 8,000 people.[327][328] A second attempt at legalizing same-sex marriage failed on 15 July 2019, with 15 votes against and 9 votes in favor.[329]

On 25 August 2021, the Congress of Yucatán approved in a 20–5 vote a bill that would repeal the heterosexual definition of marriage in the state constitution, thus allowing same-sex marriage.[330] The bill was signed by the Governor on 3 September 2021 and published on 7 September 2021.[331] Congress had 180 days from that date (i.e., until 6 March 2022) to amend all laws, including the Family Code, to conform with the new wording of the constitution.[332] The state congress voted unanimously to pass secondary legislation allowing same-sex marriage on 1 March 2022.[314]

Zacatecas edit

On 18 June 2015, a member of PRD announced that she would submit a bill to reform the state's Civil and Family Codes to give same-sex couples the same rights as heterosexual married couples.[333]

The July 2018 elections resulted in pro-same-sex marriage parties winning a majority of legislative seats in Zacatecas.[43]

On 14 February 2019, the city of Zacatecas announced it would begin issuing same-sex marriage certificates.[334] Despite claims from the Governor that the marriages would be void,[335] and calls from Bishop Sigifredo Noriega to stop the marriages,[336] the first couple married on 23 February.[337] The municipality of Cuauhtémoc followed suit on 1 March,[338] while a new same-sex marriage bill was introduced to the state Congress around that time.[339] Villanueva followed suit on 20 May 2019.[340]

On 14 August 2019, the state Congress rejected a bill to legalize same-sex marriage, in 11–13 vote, with 2 abstentions.[341]

On 14 December 2021, the state Congress approved a bill to legalize same-sex marriage, in 18–10 vote, with 1 abstention. It took effect on 30 December 2021, the day after its publication in the official gazette.[342]

Marriage statistics edit

In 2020, 335,563 marriages were celebrated in Mexico. Of these, 2,476 (0.7%) were between same-sex partners,[343]

Public opinion edit

 
Public support of same-sex marriage in Mexico, as of 2017[344]
  > 60%
  > 50%
  > 40%

In a Parametría poll, conducted from 17 to 20 November 2006, 1,200 Mexican adults were asked if they would support a constitutional amendment that would legalize same-sex marriage in Mexico. 17% responded yes, 61% said no and 14% had no opinion. The same poll showed 28% in support of same-sex civil unions, 41% were opposed and 28% had no opinion.[345] From 27 to 30 November 2009, major Mexican newspaper El Universal polled 1,000 Mexico City citizens concerning the legalization of same-sex marriage in the city. 50% supported it, 38% were against it and 12% had no idea. The same poll showed that support was stronger among the youngest population (age: 18–29), 67%, and weaker among the oldest (age: 50-onwards), 38%. With 48%, the most cited reason was "right of choice" for the supporters, followed by "everybody is equal" with 14%. 39% of the opposers cited "it is not normal" as the main reason to not support same-sex marriage, followed by "we lose values" with 18%.[346]

Guillermo Bustamante Manilla, a PAN member and president of the National Union of Parents of Families (Spanish: Unión Nacional de Padres de Familia), as well as the father of Guillermo Bustamante Artasánchez, a law director of the Secretary of the Interior, opposes abortion and same-sex civil unions and has described the latter as "anti-natural."[347][348] He has publicly asked voters not to cast votes for "abortionists" parties and those who are in favor of homosexual relationships.[349]

 
The Marcha TodosSomosFamilia in Mexico City in 2016, campaigning for same-sex marriage rights

A study conducted by Vanderbilt University in 2010 concluded that 37.8% of Mexicans supported same-sex marriage.[350]

A poll conducted in July 2013 found a significant increase in support for same-sex marriage, with 52% of Mexicans in favour of legalising same-sex marriage. When broken down by religion, support was 52% among Roman Catholics and 62% among non-religious people. However, in the same poll, only 24% of respondents supported same-sex adoption.[351]

According to a Pew Research Center survey, conducted between 30 October and 12 November 2013, 49% of Mexicans supported same-sex marriage, 43% were opposed.[352][353]

In early 2014, the Strategic Communication Cabinet, a statistical consulting services company, published a report called "Social Intolerance in Mexico",[354] in which polls that covered several social issues were conducted in the 45 largest cities and municipalities. The study found that the strongest support for same-sex marriages was registered in Mexico City, Tijuana, San Luis Potosí, Colima and La Paz; whereas it was the weakest in Durango, Ciudad Victoria, Aguascalientes, Chihuahua and Monterrey. Additionally, adoption by same-sex couples was more widely accepted in Mexico City, the border cities of Tijuana and Ciudad Juárez, as well as Xalapa and Cancún; meanwhile the least support was found in Chihuahua, Guadalajara, Aguascalientes, Durango and Campeche.

Following President Enrique Peña Nieto's proposal to legalize same-sex marriage in Mexico in May 2016, a poll on the issue was carried out by Gabinete de Comunicación Estratégica. 69% of respondents were in favor of the change. 64% said they saw it as an advance in the recognition of human rights. Public opinion changed radically over the course of 16 years. In 2000, 62% felt that same-sex marriage should not be allowed under any circumstances. In 2016, only 25% felt that way.[355] In addition, a BGC-Excélsior survey conducted the same month found similar numbers: 65% of Mexicans expressed support for same-sex marriage. However, a poll conducted by Parametría that same month found completely opposite figures. According to the polling firm, 59% of Mexicans opposed same-sex marriage.[356]

The 2017 AmericasBarometer showed that 51% of Mexicans supported same-sex marriage.[357]

A 2017 survey by the Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía (INEGI) found that opposition to same-sex marriage was most marked in southern Mexico, namely the states of Chiapas (58.7%), Tabasco (56.5%), Campeche (56.1%), Veracruz (54.3%) and Guerrero (54.0%). It was lowest in the central and northwestern parts of the country, with Mexico City (28.6%), Baja California (30.7%), Sonora (31.4%), Querétaro (32.4%) and México (33.8%) being the five states/districts with the least opposition. Overall, 42.6% men and 38.5% women in Mexico opposed same-sex marriage.[344]

A study by the National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI) in 2022 indicated that 76% of Mexicans supported same-sex marriage.[358]

A Pew Research Center poll conducted between February and May 2023 showed that 63% of Mexicans supported same-sex marriage, 32% were opposed and 5% did not know or refused to answer. When divided by age, support was 77% among 18-39-year-olds and 49% among 40-plus-year-olds.[359]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Defined by law in Campeche as sociedad civil de convivencia, in Coahuila as pacto civil de solidaridad, in Colima as enlace conyugal, in Jalisco as libre convivencia, and in Tlaxcala as sociedad de convivencia solidaria.[7]
  2. ^ In Spanish: Esta protegerá la organización y el desarrollo de la familia.
    In Nahuatl: Inin kin manauis nejchikolis uan iueixka iuikaluan.
    In Yucatec Maya: Le je'ela' yaan u kanáantik u nu'ukbesajil yéetel u jóok'ol táanil le láak'tsililo'.
    In Tzeltal: Ja' inito yame skolta te mach'a stsobo sbaik sok ta sp'oleselbel te alnich'ane.
    In Tzotzil: Ja' ta sk'elbe k'u sba smelolal stsob sbaik xchi'uk slekubtasel smuk'ubtasel uts' alal.
    In Mixtec: Ndihi ñivi iyo cha cuiti cha cua cachi ñi cha cua savaha cha vaha chi ñi chi iqui cuñu ñi, ta cha vaha iyo chi cha cua cuu chi.
    In Zapotec: Ne laaca laani nga gusiroobani, ne gutagulisaani xquenda biaani binni ti guibani ca jneza.
    In Otomi: Nuna mädi ra mutsi ne ra te nuya mengu.
    In Totonac: Ja'é namakgtakgalha ixtalakaxlan xawa ixlitatlanit litalakgapasni.
    In Chʼol: Iliyi mi ikäntyañ bajche' mi ichumtyäl lakpi'älob cha'añ mi ip'äty-esañ wembä ichumtyäl tyi lakmajchil.
    In Mazatec: Jè kjoatéxoma siikonda ní nga mi ki mé katama la koni 'sín nga siíxájtín ko nga ma katamiìjin ra jngo ni'ya xita.
    In Huastec: Ax neets kin k'aniy in yanel jant'in ti neets ti puwel in yanel.
    In Mazahua: Nu tjurꞹ nu nge k'o ra pjorꞹ ja ra mimiji, ja ra b'ꞹntjoji ñe ja ra nok'ꞹ texe in dyojui.
    In Tlapanec: Xú mambàyú xú makuwíin gajmaá xú magajiin xàbù.
    In Purépecha: I kwách'akwati tánkurhikwani ka kw'íripikwa sïrukwichiri.
    In Mixe: A ëda ley je'e nëwa'an guwa'anaamp jadu'un ja tu' jëën tu' tëjkpë ajxy oy jyak'yeegët.
    In Tarahumara: 'Échi kó'á tibúma, natuíka nocháa´mi kíti kó a'lá kánílika retemáka perélima.
  3. ^ a b c d e Rulings of the Supreme Court officially take effect on the day they are published in the Official Journal (Diario Oficial de la Federación). Despite this, in several of the relevant states, the state Civil Registry and many local municipalities chose to issue marriage certificates to same-sex couples prior to this date. In Chiapas, the first same-sex marriage occurred on 30 October 2017, and in Nuevo León on 11 March 2019, for instance.

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same, marriage, mexico, same, marriage, legally, recognized, performed, throughout, mexico, since, december, 2022, august, 2010, supreme, court, justice, nation, ruled, that, same, marriages, performed, anywhere, within, mexico, must, recognized, states, witho. Same sex marriage is legally recognized and performed throughout Mexico since 31 December 2022 On 10 August 2010 the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation ruled that same sex marriages performed anywhere within Mexico must be recognized by the 31 states without exception and fundamental spousal rights except for adoption such as alimony payments inheritance rights and the coverage of spouses by the federal social security system have also applied to same sex couples across the country 1 Mexico was the fifth country in North America and the 33rd worldwide to allow same sex couples to marry nationwide 2 Only civil marriages are recognized by Mexican law and all proceedings fall under state legislation 3 On 12 June 2015 the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation ruled that state bans on same sex marriage violate the federal constitution The court s ruling is considered a jurisprudential thesis and did not invalidate any state laws but required judges and courts throughout Mexico to approve all applications for same sex marriages and any marriage law that that was changed and did not recognize same sex marriage would be declared unconstitutional and invalidated 4 By 31 December 2022 Mexico City and all Mexican states had legalized same sex marriage either by legislation executive action or Supreme Court order 5 6 However marital rights are not necessarily equal when it comes to adoption only 20 of the 31 Mexican states plus Mexico City have civil codes that allow same sex couples to adopt though in other states same sex couples can adopt through the court system under jurisprudence established by the Supreme Court In 4 of the 31 Mexican states marriage licenses are issued to same sex couples despite not being allowed under state law they may take more time to process or be more expensive than licenses for opposite sex couples Same sex civil unions Spanish sociedad de convivencia pronounced sosjeˈdad de kombiˈbensja a are legally performed in Mexico City and in the states of Campeche 8 Coahuila Michoacan 9 Tlaxcala and Veracruz 10 From 2013 to 2016 they were also performed in the state of Colima but were replaced by same sex marriage legislation 11 They were also performed in Jalisco beginning in 2014 but the law was struck down on procedural grounds in 2018 Equality of same sex marriage in Mexican states Legal equality of marriages of same sex and opposite sex couples Marriage licenses are issued to same sex couples despite not being allowed under state law they may take more time to process or be more expensive than licenses for opposite sex couples Inequality of marriage married same sex couples do not qualify as married when it comes to the adoption of children Contents 1 History 1 1 Constitutional wording 1 2 Mexico Igualitario Project 1 3 Actions of unconstitutionality 1 4 2018 Inter American Court of Human Rights ruling 2 By state 2 1 Mexico City 2 2 Aguascalientes 2 3 Baja California 2 4 Baja California Sur 2 5 Campeche 2 6 Chiapas 2 7 Chihuahua 2 8 Coahuila 2 9 Colima 2 10 Durango 2 11 Guanajuato 2 12 Guerrero 2 13 Hidalgo 2 14 Jalisco 2 15 Mexico 2 16 Michoacan 2 17 Morelos 2 18 Nayarit 2 19 Nuevo Leon 2 20 Oaxaca 2 21 Puebla 2 22 Queretaro 2 23 Quintana Roo 2 24 San Luis Potosi 2 25 Sinaloa 2 26 Sonora 2 27 Tabasco 2 28 Tamaulipas 2 29 Tlaxcala 2 30 Veracruz 2 31 Yucatan 2 32 Zacatecas 3 Marriage statistics 4 Public opinion 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory editOn 9 November 2006 after several years of consideration the Legislative Assembly of Mexico City approved a civil union law called Ley de Sociedades de Convivencia It was the first such law in Mexico soon followed by the northern state of Coahuila in January 2007 In late November 2009 the leading party in the Legislative Assembly of Mexico City the Party of the Democratic Revolution PRD announced that it was introducing an amendment to the Civil Code to legalize same sex marriage in Mexico City a project endorsed by the local Head of Government Marcelo Ebrard but strongly opposed by the second largest political force in the country the right of center National Action Party PAN and the Roman Catholic Church The bill found support from over 600 non governmental organizations including the International Lesbian Gay Bisexual Trans and Intersex Association ILGA and Amnesty International On 21 December 2009 Mexico City became the first Latin American jurisdiction to legalize same sex marriage The law became effective on 4 March 2010 12 On 5 August 2010 the Supreme Court voted 8 2 to uphold the constitutionality of Mexico City s same sex marriage law 13 The Court later ruled on 10 August 2010 that Mexico City marriages are valid throughout the entire country 14 On 28 November 2011 the first two same sex marriages occurred in Quintana Roo after discovering that the state s Civil Code did not explicitly prohibit same sex marriage 15 but these marriages were later annulled by the Governor of Quintana Roo in April 2012 16 In May 2012 the Secretary of State of Quintana Roo reversed the annulments and allowed for future same sex marriages to be performed in the state 17 A 2012 Oaxaca case was pivotal in opening the door to legal same sex marriage in every state in Mexico through the recurso de amparo process Using international decisions whose verdicts serve as legal precedent in Mexican courts such as the protections in the Atala Riffo and Daughters v Chile case 18 the U S cases Loving v Virginia and Brown v Board of Education and Mexico s own anti discrimination laws 19 the Supreme Court ruled on 5 December 2012 that 1 Laws limiting marriage to one man and one woman or for the purposes of perpetuating the species violate federal law requiring that they correspond to all persons without any distinction and 2 That such laws are unconstitutional on the basis of discrimination by sexual orientation and usurpation of the right not only of the individual but also the couple s right to form a family 20 21 The ruling did not directly overturn the impugned laws but established that marriages obtained by injunction amparo can be performed in any state regardless of whether the state Civil Code has been changed 22 A landmark decision issued on 29 January 2014 was the first injunction for marriage recognition in Puebla The case involved a same sex couple who legally married in Mexico City in 2012 and filed for spousal benefits with the Mexican Social Security Institute IMSS in the state of Puebla but were denied 23 Because the complainant died during the injunction process a lower court had dismissed the case but the Supreme Court granted the injunction and ordered recognition of the marriage by both the state of Puebla and the IMSS The injunction required IMSS to extend benefits it offered to married heterosexual couples to same sex couples anywhere in Mexico who are married or in civil unions 24 25 nbsp The Supreme Court s Tesis jurisprudencial 1a J 43 2015 10a stated that state bans on same sex marriage violate Articles 1 and 4 of the Constitution of Mexico A ruling by the Supreme Court on 12 June 2015 stated that state bans on same sex marriage violate Articles 1 and 4 of the Constitution of Mexico The court s ruling is considered a jurisprudential thesis and did not invalidate any state laws meaning same sex couples denied the right to wed would still have to seek individual injunctions in court The ruling standardized the procedures for judges and courts throughout Mexico to approve all applications for same sex marriages 26 27 and made the approval mandatory 28 The ruling was published in the country s Judicial Gazette on 19 June 2015 and became binding on 22 June 2015 29 Some have suggested the ruling effectively legalizes same sex marriage in Mexico 30 31 though without legislative change civil registrars are still bound to follow state laws 32 33 34 Indeed the Supreme Court does not have the legal power to strike down all the states same sex marriage bans It can only do so one at a time and under specific circumstances The ruling states Marriage The law of any federative entity that on the one hand considers that the purpose of it marriage is procreation and or that defines it as that which is celebrated between a man and a woman is unconstitutional Matrimonio La ley de cualquier entidad federativa que por un lado considere que la finalidad de aquel es la procreacion y o que lo defina como el que se celebra entre un hombre y una mujer es inconstitucional On 20 December 2015 the National Human Rights Commission submitted a general recommendation to all state executive and legislative bodies requesting them to allow same sex marriages in their jurisdictions 35 The Commission considers differentiated marriage constructions for same sex couples such as civil unions to be discriminatory On 17 May 2016 President Enrique Pena Nieto announced he had signed an initiative to amend Article 4 of the Constitution to legalize same sex marriage nationwide Any amendment to the Constitution requires support of at least a two thirds majority in Congress and ratification by a simple majority of the 31 states 36 37 He also submitted a bill to make appropriate changes in the Civil Code 38 Chairman of the Committee on Constitutional Issues of the Chamber of Deputies Daniel Ordonez Hernandez announced in June 2016 that the President s initiative would be debated by the committee later in the year Ordonez also said that 47 000 letters expressing opposition to the initiative were received though none of them were signed 39 On 9 November 2016 the committee rejected the initiative by 19 votes to 8 40 On 30 November 2016 the Supreme Court unanimously declared that six articles of the Law of the Institute of Social Security and Social Services of State Workers ISSSTE Ley del Instituto de Seguridad y Servicios Sociales de los Trabajadores del Estado were unconstitutional because they discriminated against same sex couples The Court found that the wording of articles 6 39 40 131 and 135 and sections I and II of the ISSSTE Act violated the rights of same sex couples to affiliate as beneficiaries of the institute and thus those articles violate the principle of equality and non discrimination established in Articles 1 and 123 of the Constitution 41 A further ruling issued by the Supreme Court holding that same sex couples in Mexico have a nationwide right to establish and maintain a family life whether through procreation adoption or other means derived from scientific advances took effect on 30 January 2017 42 The 2018 general elections resulted in the National Regeneration Movement MORENA a left wing party that supports same sex marriage winning the majority or plurality of legislative seats in 13 states where same sex marriage was not legal at the time MORENA along with the Labor Party also won an absolute majority in the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate 43 44 In October 2018 shortly after the beginning of the new legislative term PRD Senator Juan Zepeda Hernandez introduced a draft proposal to legalize same sex marriage nationwide in Mexico 45 On 18 December 2019 the ruling party introduced a constitutional amendment to legalize same sex marriage at the federal level upgrade civil unions to marriage and require all states to adjust their laws correspondingly within three months of passage 46 In September 2018 MORENA Senator German Martinez introduced a draft proposal to codify certain court rulings pertaining to the legal rights of same sex couples into law namely social security benefits and the right to a widow or widower s pension 47 On 6 November 2018 the Senate unanimously 110 0 approved the bill 48 and it unanimously 415 0 passed the Chamber of Deputies later that month 49 The bill was gazetted on 29 November 2018 50 On 19 October 2018 a federal court ruled that Mexico must recognize same sex marriages performed in Mexican consulates and embassies abroad as long as one partner is a Mexican citizen 51 The plaintiffs in the case activist Daniel Berezowsky Ramirez and Jaime Chavez Alor married at the Mexican consulate in New York City on 26 November 52 In late November Senator Ricardo Monreal introduced a bill to Congress to allow same sex marriages in Mexican consulates without the need for couples to obtain a court injunction 53 On 16 May 2019 the Secretary of Foreign Relations issued a decree authorizing same sex marriages in Mexican consulates 54 Constitutional wording edit The Constitution of Mexico does not explicitly define nor ban same sex marriage The Constitution does contain various articles protecting the integrity of the family and the fraternity and equality of rights of all and forbidding any form of discrimination based on sexual orientation marital status which violates the human dignity or seeks to annul or diminish the rights and freedoms of the people For these reasons the Supreme Court has ruled that banning same sex marriage is unconstitutional Article 4 provides that men and women have an equal right to marry 55 56 and states that the law shall protect the organization and development of the family b Mexico Igualitario Project edit The activist group Mexico Igualitario is pursuing a legal strategy to win same sex marriage state by state through court action When a court in Mexico rules that an existing law is unconstitutional in five separate and consecutive amparos using identical language in each ruling this creates jurisprudence against that law and bounds the state legislatures to change the law This process is called recurso de amparo When a same sex couple is denied the right to marry they can file an amparo with a court to request that they be allowed to legally marry Since 2015 the courts have been obliged to rule in favor of same sex couples seeking marriage certificates An amparo may be invoked when a person feels their rights have been violated The process is not expensive but is time consuming The English word injunction can be used to refer to amparos 57 Despite the legal requirement for the states to legalize same sex marriage after 5 amparo rulings this has often not been followed through In Chihuahua prior to the legalization of same sex marriage there in 2015 almost 20 injunctions were carried out Same sex marriages by amparo have occurred in every state Actions of unconstitutionality edit nbsp The Supreme Court Spanish Suprema Corte de Justicia de la Nacion directly reviews actions of unconstitutionality An action of unconstitutionality Spanish accion de inconstitucionalidad is a lawsuit seeking to determine if a certain law is unconstitutional In Mexico they can only be filed within 30 days after the law has come into force As many state marriage laws in Mexico are decades old LGBT groups cannot file an action of unconstitutionality against these laws However if these laws are modified by the state legislatures then this qualifies for an action of unconstitutionality For instance in 2016 the Congress of Puebla modified its marriage laws but left intact provisions outlawing same sex marriages LGBT groups quickly filed an action of unconstitutionality Actions of unconstitutionality are reviewed by the full bench of the Supreme Court The Court decides whether these laws are constitutional and if they are not they are struck down and thereafter null and void As of June 2022 six states Aguascalientes Chiapas Jalisco Nuevo Leon Puebla and Veracruz have had their same sex marriage bans struck down in this way 2018 Inter American Court of Human Rights ruling edit On 8 January 2018 the Inter American Court of Human Rights IACHR ruled that the American Convention on Human Rights mandates and requires the recognition of same sex marriage The ruling was fully binding on Costa Rica and set binding precedent in other Latin American and Caribbean countries including Mexico 58 LGBT advocacy groups in Mexico urged the government to abide by the ruling and fully legalize same sex marriage 59 By state editHow same sex marriage was legalized in each state Federal entity Date of enactment ruling Date effective Date of codification if different Adoption rights Legalization method Details nbsp Aguascalientes 2 April 2019 16 August 2019 c TBD nbsp Yes Judicial decree Ruling of the Supreme Court nbsp Baja California 3 November 2017 3 November 2017 16 June 2021 nbsp Yes Governmental decree legislative statute and constitutional amendment Governmental decree Later codified by the Congress of Baja California and ratified by a majority of the state s municipalities nbsp Baja California Sur 27 June 2019 29 June 2019 nbsp No Law passed November 2022 vetoed March 2024 60 Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Baja California Sur nbsp Campeche 10 May 2016 20 May 2016 nbsp Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Campeche nbsp Chiapas 11 July 2017 11 May 2018 c TBD nbsp Yes Judicial decree Ruling of the Supreme Court nbsp Chihuahua 11 June 2015 12 June 2015 TBD nbsp Yes Gubernatorial decree nbsp Coahuila 1 September 2014 17 September 2014 nbsp Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Coahuila nbsp Colima 25 May 2016 12 June 2016 nbsp Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Colima nbsp Durango 16 September 2022 19 September 2022 10 October 2022 nbsp Yes Gubernatorial decree and legislative statute Issued by the Governor of Durango Later codified by the Congress of Durango nbsp Guanajuato 20 December 2021 20 December 2021 TBD nbsp No Governmental decree and gubernatorial decree Directive issued by the state s Secretary General of Government followed by Governor s decree nbsp Guerrero 25 October 2022 31 December 2022 nbsp No Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Guerrero previously performed only in some municipalities nbsp Hidalgo 24 May 2019 11 June 2019 nbsp Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Hidalgo nbsp Jalisco 26 January 2016 21 April 2016 c 9 April 2022 nbsp Yes Judicial decree and legislative statute Ruling of the Supreme Court Later codified by the Congress of Jalisco nbsp Mexico 11 October 2022 2 November 2022 nbsp No Law has not been updated but adoptions are allowed 61 Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of the State of Mexico nbsp Mexico City 29 December 2009 4 March 2010 nbsp Yes Legislative statute and constitutional amendment Passed by the Legislative Assembly of Mexico City nbsp Michoacan 18 May 2016 23 June 2016 nbsp Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Michoacan nbsp Morelos 18 May 2016 5 July 2016 nbsp Yes Legislative statute and constitutional amendment Passed by the Congress of Morelos and ratified by a majority of the state s municipalities nbsp Nayarit 17 December 2015 23 December 2015 nbsp Yes Since 2022 62 Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Nayarit nbsp Nuevo Leon 19 February 2019 31 May 2019 c 14 June 2023 63 nbsp Yes Judicial decree and legislative statute Ruling of the Supreme Court Later codified by the Congress of Nuevo Leon nbsp Oaxaca 26 August 2018 26 August 2018 5 October 2019 nbsp No Administrative decision and legislative statute Order of the State Director of the Civil Registry Later codified by the Congress of Oaxaca nbsp Puebla 1 August 2017 16 February 2018 c 11 November 2020 nbsp Yes Judicial decree and legislative statute Ruling of the Supreme Court Later codified by the Congress of Puebla nbsp Queretaro 22 September 2021 12 November 2021 nbsp Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Queretaro nbsp Quintana Roo 3 May 2012 3 May 2012 nbsp Yes Administrative decision Decision by the state s Secretary of State nbsp San Luis Potosi 17 May 2019 21 May 2019 nbsp Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of San Luis Potosi nbsp Sinaloa 15 June 2021 30 June 2021 nbsp No Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Sinaloa as ordered by a federal court nbsp Sonora 23 September 2021 22 October 2021 nbsp No Law has not been updated but adoptions are allowed 64 Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Sonora nbsp Tabasco 19 October 2022 27 October 2022 nbsp No Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Tabasco nbsp Tamaulipas 26 October 2022 19 November 2022 nbsp Yes Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Tamaulipas nbsp Tlaxcala 8 December 2020 24 December 2020 nbsp No Law has not been updated but adoptions are allowed 65 Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Tlaxcala nbsp Veracruz 30 May 2022 13 June 2022 nbsp Yes Judicial decree and legislative statute Ruling of the Supreme Court Later codified by the Congress of Veracruz nbsp Yucatan 1 March 2022 4 March 2022 Unclear The Law on Adoption is written in a gender neutral fashion 66 Constitutional amendment and legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Yucatan nbsp Zacatecas 14 December 2021 30 December 2021 nbsp No Legislative statute Passed by the Congress of Zacatecas Mexico City edit Main article Same sex marriage in Mexico City Civil unions nbsp States performing civil unions in Mexico Gender neutral civil unions Former civil unions for same sex couples replaced by marriage Civil unions never performed Being the seat of the Powers of the Union Mexico City did not belong to any particular state but to all After years of demanding greater political autonomy residents were given the right to directly elect the Head of Government of Mexico City and the representatives of the unicameral Legislative Assembly by popular vote in 1997 For the following two decades the center left Party of the Democratic Revolution PRD controlled both political powers In the early 2000s Enoe Uranga an openly lesbian politician and activist unsuccessfully pushed a bill that would have legalized same sex civil unions in Mexico City under the name Ley de Sociedades de Convivencia LSC 67 Despite being passed four times by legislative commissions the bill repeatedly got stuck in plenary voting for its sensitive nature which could be attributed to the widespread opposition from right wing groups and then Head of Government Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador s ambiguity concerning the bill 68 Nonetheless since new left wing Head of Government Marcelo Ebrard was expected to take power in December 2006 the Assembly decided to take up the bill and approved it in a 43 17 vote on 9 November 68 The law was well received by feminist and LGBT groups including Emilio Alvarez Icaza then chairman of Mexico City s Human Rights Commission who declared that the law was not a threat to anyone in particular and that it will be a matter of time before it shows positive consequences for different social groups It was strongly opposed by conservative groups such as the National Parents Union and the Roman Catholic Church which labeled the assemblymen who voted for the law as sinners and complained it was vengeance against the Catholic Church from the more radical groups from the left who felt it was a demand for justice 68 The law officially took effect on 16 March 2007 69 Mexico City s first same sex civil union was between Jorge Cerpa a 31 year old economist and Antonio Medina a 38 year old journalist 69 By December 2009 736 same sex civil unions had taken place in the city of which 24 had been annulled 3 70 In early September 2014 modifications to the civil union agreement were drafted to eliminate discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and dissolution support In essence the law had provided that upon termination domestic partners were only allowed support for a period equal to half the length of the partnership The Supreme Court ruled that the provision was discriminatory as it accorded differential treatment in cases of partnership for cohabitation marriage or concubinage 71 Year Unions Annulled 2007 257 10 2008 268 14 2009 211 Total 736 24 Marriage On 24 November 2009 PRD Assemblyman David Razu proposed a bill to legalize same sex marriage in Mexico City 72 Luis Gonzalez Plascencia chairman of the Human Rights Commission of Mexico City backed the bill and said that it was up to the Legislative Assembly to consider LGBT adoption 73 The International Lesbian Gay Bisexual Trans and Intersex Association ILGA Amnesty International the AIDS Healthcare Foundation and over 600 non governmental organizations supported the legalization of same sex marriage in Mexico City 74 The conservative National Action Party PAN announced it would either go to the courts to appeal the law or demand a referendum 75 76 However a referendum on same sex marriage was rejected by the Legislative Assembly in a 36 22 vote on 18 December 2009 77 On 21 December 2009 the Legislative Assembly legalized same sex marriage 39 20 in Mexico City The bill changed the definition of marriage in the city s Civil Code from a free union between a man and a woman to a free union between two people 78 The law grants same sex couples the same rights as opposite sex couples including adopting children 79 PAN vowed to challenge the law in the courts 79 On 29 December 2009 Head of Government Marcelo Ebrard signed the bill into law which became effective on 4 March 2010 12 80 On 5 August the Supreme Court voted 8 2 to uphold the constitutionality of Mexico City s same sex marriage law 13 The Court further ruled on 10 August 2010 that Mexico City marriages are valid throughout the country 81 In early January 2017 the Constituent Assembly of Mexico City voted in its plenary session 68 11 to fully enshrine same sex marriage in the Mexico City Constitution 82 Aguascalientes edit Main article Same sex marriage in Aguascalientes From 2014 onwards multiple same sex marriage concubinage and civil union bills were proposed in Aguascalientes though all of them stalled in Congress due to opposition from the ruling National Action Party 83 84 85 86 87 An action of unconstitutionality was filed in 2018 by the State Human Rights Commission of Aguascalientes challenging articles 143 144 and 313bis of the Civil Code which limited marriage to opposite sex couples to perpetuate the species On 2 April 2019 the full bench of the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that the state s same sex marriage ban was discriminatory against same sex couples and unconstitutional 88 89 The ruling went into effect upon publication in the Official Gazette of the Federation on 16 August 2019 90 though the Civil Registry had already begun issuing same sex marriage certificates prior to this date Nevertheless the text of the law still refers to marriage as between a man and a woman 91 Baja California edit Main article Same sex marriage in Baja California On 23 August 2010 shortly after the ruling of the Supreme Court requiring all states to recognise same sex marriages validly performed in other states state legislators introduced an amendment to article 7 of the Constitution of Baja California adding the definition of marriage as being the union of a man and a woman On 29 September 2010 the Congress of Baja California voted 18 1 in favor of the amendment and after approval by municipalities it was published on 27 May 2011 92 On 13 November 2014 the Supreme Court of Mexico ruled that the state s ban on same sex marriage was unconstitutional 93 94 A bill was introduced to the Baja California Congress on 12 February 2015 to legalize same sex marriage in the state by changing article 7 of the state Constitution 92 95 96 97 However the legislation was stalled for years by opponents of same sex marriage On 3 November 2017 the Government of Baja California announced that it would cease to enforce its same sex marriage ban and that the Civil Registry will begin accepting applications for marriage licenses by same sex couples 98 99 The Congress of Baja California passed a bill legalizing same sex marriage by a vote of 18 4 on 16 June 2021 The bill modified the Constitution to remove the ban on same sex marriage added back in 2011 The amendment entered into force on 17 July 2021 after three of Baja California s six municipalities ratified it and the three others were deemed to have accepted it by taking no action ahead of the 30 day time period to consider the amendment 100 The amendment took effect on 9 August one day after being published in the government gazette 101 Baja California Sur edit Main article Same sex marriage in Baja California Sur A same sex marriage bill was first proposed in Baja California Sur on 9 April 2010 by the organization La Comunidad Sudcaliforniana en Diversidad Sexual 102 No action was taken by the state Congress 103 104 The July 2018 elections resulted in the National Regeneration Movement and other supportive parties winning a majority of legislative seats in Congress 43 On 27 June 2019 the state Congress approved a bill to legalize same sex marriage in a 14 5 vote with one abstention 105 106 It was signed by Governor Carlos Mendoza Davis the same day and published in the official journal on 28 June 2019 The law took effect the following day 107 108 109 The congress of Baja California Sur passed a bill allowing same sex couples to adopt on 16 November 2022 but it was vetoed in March 2024 110 In June 2023 the Baja California Sur congress approved a citizen initiated bill that expands the recognition of concubinage to same sex couples 111 Campeche edit Main article Same sex marriage in Campeche In April 2016 Campeche Governor Alejandro Moreno Cardenas submitted a same sex marriage bill to Congress which was approved on 10 May 2016 The law was published in the official state gazette on 16 May 2016 and came into effect on 20 May 2016 112 Campeche became the seventh state to allow same sex marriage without the need for a court order 113 Chiapas edit Main article Same sex marriage in Chiapas On 6 April 2016 an action of unconstitutionality was filed with the Supreme Court 114 115 116 The Supreme Court ruled in a 9 2 decision on 11 July 2017 that the heterosexual definition of marriage in the Civil Code was unconstitutional legalizing same sex marriage in Chiapas and eliminating the need for a court injunction 117 118 The ruling came into effect upon publication in the Official Gazette of the Federation on 11 May 2018 119 Nonetheless the Civil Registry began accepting marriage applications from same sex couples from 30 October 2017 and same sex couples have been able to marry since that date 120 As of June 2022 a bill to codify same sex marriage into the state Civil Code is pending in the state congress 121 Chihuahua edit Main article Same sex marriage in Chihuahua On 11 June 2015 Governor Cesar Duarte Jaquez announced the state would no longer prevent same sex marriages making Chihuahua the fourth jurisdiction to legalize same sex marriage 122 Duarte Jaquez announced that licenses would be available by 12 June 2015 123 On 16 June 2015 the president of the state Congress announced that it would debate the legal codification of the executive decision Additionally according to the state National System for Integral Family Development same sex couples are allowed to adopt jointly in Chihuahua 124 In February 2017 the Supreme Court ruled that the state s Civil Code was unconstitutional because it has not yet been modified to reflect the legalization of same sex marriage The Supreme Court ordered the state Congress to change its Civil Code within 90 days 125 However the Congress refused to do so In October 2018 the 10th District Court ruled that should the Congress fail to update its laws soon it would hold legislators in contempt and order their dismissal from office 126 Coahuila edit Main article Same sex marriage in Coahuila The legalization of same sex civil unions in Coahuila had started to be discussed as early as November 2006 simultaneously with the discussion then ongoing in Mexico City 127 On 11 January 2007 the state Congress legalized same sex civil unions under the name pacto civil de solidaridad which gave property and inheritance rights to same sex couples 128 129 Twenty days after the law had passed the country s first same sex civil union took place in Saltillo It was between 29 year olds Karina Almaguer and Karla Lopez a lesbian couple from Tamaulipas 130 On 5 March 2013 Congressman Samuel Acevedo Flores from the Social Democratic Party introduced a bill to the Congress of Coahuila to legalize same sex marriages and adoption by same sex couples 131 On 11 February 2014 Congress approved the adoption bill and passed the same sex marriage bill on 1 September 2014 132 133 It took effect on 17 September 134 and the first couple married on 20 September 135 Colima edit Main article Same sex marriage in Colima In July 2009 the Party of the Democratic Revolution PRD introduced a formal initiative to legalize civil unions in the western state of Colima 136 Nevertheless the following month the local Congress decided not to take up the initiative following widespread opposition from right wing groups 137 In December 2009 Governor Mario Anguiano Moreno agreed to discuss the legalization of civil unions and adoption by same sex couples 138 On 4 July 2013 the state Congress approved a new form of union called enlace conyugal conjugal bond for same sex couples which according to Deputy Martin Flores Castaneda grants the same rights and obligations as marriage 139 A bill to legalize same sex marriage in the state was unanimously approved by the Congress of Colima on 25 May 2016 140 141 The bill was passed 24 to 0 142 non primary source needed The existing same sex civil union law was repealed simultaneously 143 The same sex marriage law was published in the state s official gazette on 11 June 2016 and came into effect on 12 June 2016 The new law allows couples who previously contracted civil unions before the legislation was repealed to have them recognized by the state or converted to a marriage 144 It also allows same sex couples to adopt children jointly 145 Durango edit Main article Same sex marriage in Durango Same sex marriage became legal in Durango state on 19 September 2022 with a decree from the state governor 146 In September 2013 PRD Deputy Israel Soto Pena introduced a bill to legalize same sex marriage in the state On 10 April 2014 the bill was rejected on the basis that it would not sufficiently address the legal changes necessary to correct the Civil Code 147 In May Soto Pena announced that he would revamp the initiative and resubmit it 148 which he did on 1 November 2014 149 On 10 February 2016 the Justice Commission of the Congress of Durango approved a draft bill to legalize same sex marriage in the state 150 However the bill s plenary discussion was postponed for 6 months to organize discussions on the matter and to inform legislators on the subject before a vote 151 On 31 January 2017 Congress rejected the bill in a 15 4 vote with 4 abstentions The bill proposed by PAN was supported by both the PRD and PAN but was opposed by the PRI 152 The July 2018 elections resulted in MORENA PRD and the Labor Party pro same sex marriage parties winning the majority of legislative seats in Durango 43 153 In July 2022 a federal judge ordered the Durango Congress to consider an abandoned same sex marriage bill in their next session due to the critical number of amparos having been reached The ruling does not require a particular vote but does require legislators to go on record as to whether they will comply with the Supreme Court ruling 154 On 16 September 2022 the newly elected governor Esteban Villegas Villarreal published a decree for same sex marriage 155 Five days later on 21 September 2022 the Congress of Durango voted 15 9 to pass a bill codifying the right to same sex marriage and non discrimination based on sexual orientation religion disability or health status by marriage officiants 156 Guanajuato edit Main article Same sex marriage in Guanajuato Same sex marriage became legal in Guanajuato on 20 December 2021 when government secretary Libia Garcia Munoz Ledo announced that the right to marry would be extended to any two people regardless of gender in strict adherence to the constitutions of Mexico and Guanajuato precedents of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation and requirements under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 157 In response to the first amparo approval on 21 February 2014 the PRD introduced a bill to Congress to amend the Guanajuato Civil Code so as to allow same sex marriages 158 The plan was endorsed by the PRI 159 but on 13 April 2015 the Justice Committee with a majority from the state s ruling PAN party voted 3 2 to shelve both bills citing PAN s objection to same sex unions 160 On 29 April 2016 the Guanajuato City Council unanimously passed a resolution allowing a lesbian couple to marry in the municipality Additionally they urged Governor Miguel Marquez Marquez to change the Civil Code to allow for same sex marriages 161 In October 2018 PRD Deputy Isidoro Bazaldua Lugo introduced a same sex marriage bill to Congress 162 Guanajuato is the 23rd Mexican state to approve same sex marriage Guerrero edit Main article Same sex marriage in Guerrero The Congress of Guerrero passed a same sex marriage bill on 25 October 2022 by 38 6 The bill also recognizes same sex concubinage 163 The bill was finally published on 30 December 2022 taking effect the next day 164 After the Supreme Court ruling went into effect on 22 June 2015 officials in Guerrero began announcing plans for a series of collective group weddings 165 Governor Rogelio Ortega submitted a same sex marriage bill to Congress on 7 July 2015 Legislators complained that they would have preferred to have the bill passed before marriages took place but it was not feasible in the available time frame 166 On 10 July 2015 20 same sex couples were married by Governor Ortega in Acapulco 167 On 13 January 2016 the head of the Civil Registry of Acapulco stated that the 20 same sex marriages that occurred on 10 July 2015 in Acapulco were void as there was no law to permit same sex marriage in the state 168 On 13 February 2016 a day before mass Valentine s Day weddings were planned statewide the head of Guerrero s State Civil Registry department announced that same sex couples could marry in any jurisdiction willing to marry the couples and criticised Acapulco s Civil Registry and other civil registries throughout the state for not allowing the weddings The department head stated that same sex marriages conducted in Guerrero would be legally valid 169 Some other Guerreran municipalities such as Chilpancingo de los Bravo and Zihuatanejo de Azueta began to marry same sex couples 170 171 172 173 In August 2020 Acapulco announced that it would perform same sex marriages 174 Hidalgo edit Main article Same sex marriage in Hidalgo As Mexico City and Coahuila had recently legalized civil unions a similar proposal was introduced in Hidalgo in July 2007 175 However it stalled and never reached a vote 176 In October 2013 the Congress indicated there was not sufficient maturity in the society to accept same sex marriage and that it would instead consider a conjugal partnership bill 177 The 2018 elections resulted in the National Regeneration Movement MORENA winning the majority of legislative seats in Congress After the election a same sex marriage bill was introduced to the state Congress 43 178 The bill was approved on 14 May 2019 in a vote of 18 2 with 8 abstentions 179 Governor Omar Fayad signed the bill on 24 May It was published in the official journal on 10 June 2019 and took effect the following day 180 Jalisco edit Main article Same sex marriage in Jalisco In April 2013 a cross party group of deputies presented the Free Coexistence Act Spanish Ley de Libre Convivencia to the state Congress 181 The Act established that same sex civil unions can be performed in the state as long as they are not considered marriages It did not legalize adoption and mandated that civil unions be performed with a civil law notary 181 182 On 31 October 2013 the Congress of Jalisco approved the Act in a 20 15 vote 183 one abstained and three were absent 182 The law took effect on 1 January 2014 184 On 13 September 2018 the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation struck down the law on procedural grounds 185 186 The first same sex marriage in the state occurred via injunction in December 2013 On 26 January 2016 the full bench of the Supreme Court unanimously declared the Civil Code unconstitutional for limiting marriage to heterosexual couples 187 188 The Jalisco State Civil Registry Directory changed all marriage licenses to gender neutral on 22 March 2016 so that same sex couples could already begin receiving them 189 On 21 April 2016 the Supreme Court ruling took effect after being printed in the Official Gazette of the Federation 190 On 12 May 2016 the Congress of Jalisco instructed all the state s municipalities to issue marriage licenses to same sex couples 191 192 193 In June 2017 a bill removing the heterosexual definition of marriage and inserting a gender neutral definition was introduced to Congress 194 On 6 April 2022 the Congress of Jalisco passed a bill codifying same sex marriage into law on a vote of 26 8 with 3 abstentions 195 Mexico edit Main article Same sex marriage in the State of Mexico In 2008 an initiative for the legalization of civil unions was launched in the State of Mexico but never advanced In 2010 a citizen s initiative to legalize same sex marriage was presented to Congress After three years it had not been reviewed so in mid 2013 PRD Deputy Octavio Martinez introduced a same sex marriage bill 196 The state Governor submitted a new marriage bill while PRD submitted a proposal to legalize same sex adoption on 5 March 2015 197 Neither bill was brought to a vote On 11 October 2022 the Congress of the State of Mexico voted 49 12 with six abstentions to pass a bill legalizing same sex marriage and concubinage 198 199 It was published on 1 November 2022 and took effect the next day 200 Michoacan edit Main article Same sex marriage in Michoacan On 27 August 2015 the Justice and Human Rights Committee announced it would enact a civil union law for same sex couples It was approved unanimously in a 34 0 vote by the Congress of Michoacan on 7 September 2015 201 202 The law was published on 30 September 2015 in the state s official journal 203 On 9 February 2016 the Justice and Human Rights Committee approved a Family Code that would allow same sex marriage and joint adoption 204 It was stated that the Michoacan Congress would vote on the proposal in the coming days 205 However the vote was postponed until sometime in May 2016 206 On 18 May 2016 the state Congress eventually approved the proposal by a vote of 27 in favor none opposed and 8 abstentions 207 208 The law was published in the state s official diary on 22 June 2016 and came into effect on 23 June The law allows couples to adopt children jointly 209 Morelos edit Main article Same sex marriage in Morelos On 18 May 2016 the Congress of Morelos voted 20 to 6 to approve a constitutional change to legalize same sex marriage A constitutional amendment requires the ratification of at least 17 of the 33 municipalities in the state 210 211 The 33 municipalities had until 25 June 2016 to act on the amendment 212 At the end of the process a total of 17 municipalities had ratified the constitutional change and 15 had voted against ratification while 1 municipality was awarded an extra week although the clear majority being in favor meant that same sex marriage would become legal in the state 213 214 The law was promulgated and published in the state s official gazette on 4 July 2016 215 It took effect on 5 July 216 The state adoption agency clarified that the law shall allow same sex couples to adopt jointly as the process is open to all spouses in Morelos 217 Nayarit edit Main article Same sex marriage in Nayarit On 25 June 2015 Deputy Luis Manuel Hernandez Escobedo introduced a bill allowing same sex couples to marry and making the definition of concubinage gender neutral 218 On 17 December 2015 the state Congress approved the bill in a 26 1 vote with 1 abstention 219 220 The bill was published in the official journal following Governor Roberto Sandoval Casteneda s signature on 22 December 2015 and took effect the following day 221 222 Nuevo Leon edit Main article Same sex marriage in Nuevo Leon On 17 June 2015 the New Alliance Party announced their intention to introduce a same sex marriage bill An Independent congressman announced his intention to submit his own civil union proposal with the support of the ruling PAN On 22 June 2015 New Alliance member and Congress President Maria Dolores Leal Cantu presented the same sex marriage bill 223 On 16 May 2016 the president of the Legislative Commission of the State Congress announced that the bill would be voted upon sometime in September 224 but this did not happen An action of unconstitutionality against Nuevo Leon s same sex marriage ban was filed in February 2018 225 On 19 February 2019 the Supreme Court declared articles 140 and 148 of the state Civil Code unconstitutional fully legalizing same sex marriage in Nuevo Leon 226 227 The ruling came into effect on 31 May 2019 upon publication in the Official Gazette of the Federation 228 The law was amended to formally permit same sex marriage on 14 June 2023 63 Oaxaca edit Main article Same sex marriage in Oaxaca On 26 August 2012 a federal court judge ordered the state of Oaxaca to perform same sex marriages based on a constitutional amendment which bans discrimination based on sexual orientation This ruling was reviewed by the Supreme Court which issued a unanimous ruling against the ban on same sex marriage 229 In July 2017 a same sex couple was successful in getting married without first receiving a court order 230 From late August 2018 the Civil Registry has allowed same sex couples to marry without the need for an amparo However the process took three business days compared with two hours for opposite sex couples 231 232 233 234 non primary source needed On 28 August 2019 the Congress of Oaxaca passed legislation bringing the state into line with the executive order 235 236 Puebla edit Main article Same sex marriage in Puebla On 7 December 2006 a similar civil union bill to that of Mexico City was proposed in Puebla but it faced strong opposition and criticism from deputies of the Institutional Revolutionary Party PRI and the National Action Party PAN who declared that the traditional family is the only social model and there cannot be another one 237 Though proposals were presented in 2011 and repeatedly introduced in successive years no change to the law was approved by the legislatures 238 239 On 27 April 2016 an action of unconstitutionality was filed before the Supreme Court 114 240 On 1 August 2017 the Supreme Court unanimously declared same sex marriage to be legal in Puebla striking down the Civil Code which limited marriage to one man and one woman for the purpose of procreation and eliminating the need for individual amparos 241 242 243 The ruling came into effect on 16 February 2018 244 after publication in the Official Diary of the Federation Shortly after the ruling Puebla officials confirmed that same sex couples are allowed to adopt 245 The Congress of Puebla passed a bill codifying the legality of same sex marriage on 3 November 2020 246 Queretaro edit Main article Same sex marriage in Queretaro The Congress of Queretaro passed a bill to amend the state civil code to allow same sex marriage on 22 September 2021 It will take effect upon publication in the official gazette 247 248 On 21 July 2015 the civil registrar of the municipality of Santiago de Queretaro which comprises 46 of the state s population announced that same sex couples may marry in the municipality without the need for an amparo 249 As of January 2017 seven other municipalities in the state are marrying same sex couples without requiring them to receive an amparo beforehand Amealco de Bonfil Cadereyta de Montes Ezequiel Montes Huimilpan Pedro Escobedo San Joaquin and Toliman comprising 60 of the state s population altogether 250 The state congress legalized same sex marriage statewide on 22 September 2021 251 Quintana Roo edit Main article Same sex marriage in Quintana Roo Same sex marriages can be performed in Quintana Roo after a decision by the state s Secretary of State 17 In November 2011 some public officials in the state began performing same sex marriages after reviewing the state s Civil Code The Civil Code of Quintana Roo does not state sex or gender requirements for marriage only specifying people interested in getting married 15 A same sex couple filed for a marriage license in Cancun and Chetumal after discovering this legal quirk but both cities rejected their applications arguing that a man woman marriage was implied The couple then applied in Lazaro Cardenas Municipality where authorities accepted the application Quintana Roo s first two same sex marriages were held in the community of Kantunilkin on 28 November 2011 252 In May 2012 the Secretary of State issued a decision allowing for future same sex marriages to be performed in Quintana Roo In November 2014 it was announced that a bill to officially legalize same sex marriage in the state would be introduced and voted on in the current legislative session thereby replacing the loophole used by couples 253 In May 2017 a new same sex marriage bill was introduced to the state Congress 254 San Luis Potosi edit Main article Same sex marriage in San Luis Potosi On 28 April 2014 a citizens initiative to legalize same sex marriage was submitted to the Congress of San Luis Potosi On 8 August 2014 the Deputy Chairman of the Commission on Human Rights and Gender Equity Miguel Maza Hernandez said that analysis of the proposal would begin 255 On 17 June 2015 Hernandez announced the state s commitment to extending marriage to same sex couples and stated that deliberations would happen after the June 2015 Supreme Court ruling declaring all laws against same sex marriage unconstitutional is published in the judicial gazette 256 On 6 June 2016 it was announced that a special committee would study the marriage bill and vote on it within 90 days 257 In November 2016 the state Congress voted against the bill legalizing same sex marriage 258 One PRD deputy who mistakenly voted against the bill announced that he would introduce a new same sex marriage proposal in 2017 259 The new bill was introduced in October 2017 260 It was approved by the state Congress on 16 May 2019 in a vote of 14 12 with 1 abstention and signed by the Governor on 20 May 2019 261 Sinaloa edit Main article Same sex marriage in Sinaloa In January 2013 the Family Code of the state of Sinaloa was changed to limit marriage or cohabitation to couples consisting of a man and a woman Three injunctions were filed to contest the changes but two were dismissed 262 On 2 September 2014 Deputy Sandra Lara launched an initiative to amend articles 40 and 165 of the Family Code and allow for same sex marriage in the state 263 In February 2015 the conservative National Action Party PAN introduced a civil union bill which would have banned children of same sex partners from residing with their same sex parents 264 In July 2017 PAN and the New Alliance Party of Sinaloa announced their support for same sex marriages 265 According to a September 2017 poll 57 of Sinaloans supported same sex marriage 266 The July 2018 elections resulted in MORENA a pro same sex marriage party winning the majority of legislative seats in Sinaloa 43 267 On 25 November 2016 the Supreme Court issued its fifth resolution against Sinaloa s same sex marriage ban The Court declared the state s same sex marriage ban unconstitutional void and inoperable According to local LGBT activists however state authorities deliberately delayed the legalization of same sex marriage 268 On 15 May 2018 following approximately 17 months of delay the Supreme Court ordered the state to legalize same sex marriage within 90 days or face unspecified consequences 269 270 However that deadline also passed without the state legalizing same sex marriage On 19 June 2019 Congress rejected proposed same sex marriage legislation by 20 to 18 including six legislators from MORENA voting against 271 On 12 June 2021 a federal court ordered the Sinaloa Congress to legalize same sex marriage within three days with any legislators who vote against the bill to be found in contempt of court and unable to run for or hold office for seven years On 15 June 2021 the Sinaloa Congress voted 23 0 to pass the bill legalizing same sex marriage in the state with all dissenters marking themselves absent for the vote 272 It took effect one day after being published in the official gazette on 29 June 2021 273 274 Sonora edit Main article Same sex marriage in Sonora Same sex couples could marry only with the assistance of an amparo court order until 11 May 2016 when the Director of the State Civil Registry Martha Julissa Bojorquez Castillo announced that same sex couples could begin marrying in the state without the need for an amparo 275 However on 18 May 2016 the Governor ordered all civil registries in the state to retain the existing statutory ban on same sex marriage and only provide same sex couples with marriage certificates if they successfully receive an amparo In September 2017 all political parties in the state agreed to begin analyzing a proposed same sex marriage bill The bill s main sponsor said he was hopeful it would be accepted 276 The July 2018 elections resulted in pro same sex marriage parties winning a majority of legislative seats in Sonora 43 On 23 September 2021 the Congress of Sonora passed a bill legalizing same sex marriage throughout the state 277 It went into force on 22 October 278 Tabasco edit Main article Same sex marriage in Tabasco The Congress of Tabasco passed a bill to reform the state civil code to allow same sex marriage on 19 October 2022 It was scheduled to take effect on 30 October 2022 279 After Mexico City s Legislative Assembly legalized same sex marriages and LGBT adoption in December 2009 debate resurged in states where civil unions had been previously proposed In 2009 in the southeastern state of Tabasco 20 same sex couples sent a motion to the state Congress asking it to allow them to marry 280 The state s largest political parties the Institutional Revolutionary Party PRI and the Party of the Democratic Revolution PRD announced their support for same sex marriage in 2010 281 Despite the support of political parties there was no legislative will to change the law so in April 2014 an initiative to reform Article 154 of the Civil Code of the State of Tabasco and legalize same sex marriage was presented by the organization Tabasco Unites for Diversity and Sexual Health Spanish Tabasquenos Unidos por la Diversidad y la Salud Sexual Tudyssex 282 PRD submitted its own same sex marriage and adoption bill on 3 July 2015 283 284 The July 2018 elections resulted in MORENA a pro same sex marriage party winning the majority of legislative seats and the governorship 43 The Congress passed the same sex marriage bill on 19 October 2022 with a 23 5 vote 285 It was signed by Governor Carlos Manuel Merino Campos and published in the official state journal on 26 October taking effect the next day 286 287 Tamaulipas edit Main article Same sex marriage in Tamaulipas The Congress of Tamaulipas passed a bill to reform the state civil code to allow same sex marriage on 26 October 2022 in a 23 12 vote 288 It was the final state to legalize same sex marriage In 2011 a bill to provide coexistence for same sex couples was promoted by local organizations in Tamaulipas 289 In 2012 organizers presented legislators with 25 000 signatures in favor of same sex marriage 290 In 2013 the PRD agreed to bring the issue to the Congress of Tamaulipas and support the proposal 291 In June 2015 Deputy Olga Sosa Ruiz confirmed that the Congress of Tamaulipas was working on a bill to legalize same sex marriage She stated that the reform is complex as they are attempting to remove all discriminatory terms and are working with the Gender Equality Commission She predicted that the law would be passed within the next legislative session 292 though no bill has passed as of October 2022 In September 2018 the Supreme Court began proceedings against Tamaulipas same sex marriage ban 293 On 16 November 2018 the Court issued its fifth resolution against Tamaulipas declaring the state s marriage ban unconstitutional and ordering the state to modify it within 180 business days 294 Tamaulipas was one of four states without same sex marriage where pro same sex marriage parties did not win a majority of legislative seats in the 2018 election However the other three had all passed same sex marriage legislation by early 2022 A state deputy filed a lawsuit with the Supreme Court against the state to force it to comply with the earlier ruling 295 A bill to legalize same sex marriage was passed through the commission stage on a 14 1 vote on 19 October 2022 296 It was then passed by the unicameral Congress of Tamaulipas on 26 October 2022 with 23 votes in favour and 12 against 297 and was published in the government gazette on 18 November 298 Tlaxcala edit Main article Same sex marriage in Tlaxcala On 29 December 2016 the Congress of Tlaxcala approved a coexistence bill The bill established civil unions under the name sociedad de convivencia solidaria which provides cohabiting same sex and opposite sex couples with many of the same rights and obligations of marriage 299 300 It was published in the official journal following the Governor s signature on 11 January 2017 and took effect the following day 301 On 13 October 2017 the New Alliance Party introduced a same sex marriage bill to the State Congress 302 The July 2018 elections resulted in MORENA and the Labor Party pro same sex marriage parties winning the majority of legislative seats in Tlaxcala 43 On 8 December 2020 the Congress of Tlaxcala approved a marriage equality bill in a 16 3 vote 303 Veracruz edit Main article Same sex marriage in Veracruz Same sex marriage was approved by the Congress of Veracruz in a 38 4 vote on June 2 2022 304 three days after the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation ruled that articles of the state Civil Code that barred same sex couples from marriage were invalid 305 Congress had previously enacted recognition of same sex concubinage in May 2020 306 In September 2016 the head of Veracruz s adoption agency announced that same sex couples may adopt children jointly in the state 307 In April 2017 the Civil Registry of Xalapa announced its support for same sex marriage 308 On 20 February 2017 Governor Miguel Angel Yunes issued an executive order legalizing same sex marriage in the state Four days later following protests from Catholic groups Governor Yunes repealed the order Following the repeal of the order LGBT activists announced they were filing a case to legalize same sex marriage in the state 309 On 20 July 2017 the case against the Governor and the state s same sex marriage ban was filed before the Fourth District Court 310 On 7 November 2017 the Court issued its ruling in the case declaring the state s ban on same sex marriage unconstitutional 311 Some LGBT groups had suggested that the ruling effectively legalizes same sex marriage in the state 312 though state officials announced that they would continue to enforce the state s marriage ban In July 2018 as one of their last actions before leaving office PAN submitted a proposal to Congress to explicitly ban same sex marriage in the state Constitution It failed to pass with 32 deputies in favor 10 against and 2 absentions It needed 33 votes to pass thus failing by one vote 313 Yucatan edit Main article Same sex marriage in Yucatan The Yucatan state congress legalized same sex marriage in a unanimous vote on 1 March 2022 314 after it overwhelmingly approved a state constitutional amendment in August 2021 that would permit same sex marriage legislation 315 The local Congress had overwhelmingly approved a constitutional ban on same sex marriage in a 24 1 vote on 21 July 2009 The bill was promoted by right wing organization Pro Yucatan Network to reject all efforts by people of the same sex to form a family and adopt children PAN politicians justified the ban alleging that there still aren t adequate conditions within Yucatan society to allow for unions between people of the same sex 316 The event led to protests outside the local Congress by LGBT organizations whose leaders were expected to appeal the case to the Supreme Court 317 Political party Members Yes No nbsp Institutional Revolutionary Party 14 14 nbsp National Action Party 9 9 nbsp Party of the Democratic Revolution 1 1 nbsp Labor Party nbsp Convergence 1 1 Total 25 24 1 On 17 May 2014 a group of civil society organizations brought a legal action before the Constitutional Court of the State of Yucatan under the guise of correcting a legislative omission It was the first time a mechanism to correct an omission had been used in Mexico as the basis of a suit The organizations claimed 10 injunctions had been approved in the state without legislative action The suit asked for Articles 49 and 94 of the Family Code which limit marriage to one man and one woman to be considered in the broadest sense and that the gender of its members be undefined 318 On 2 March 2015 the Yucatan court dismissed the appeal for constitutional action to change the Civil Code Supporters of amending the code vowed to appeal the decision 319 In June 2015 they filed a lawsuit against the Yucatan court in federal court The suit argued that the Yucatan court s decision was flawed as the Constitution prohibits discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation 320 After postponing a hearing five times the Supreme Court dismissed the lawsuit on 31 May 2017 321 On 24 May 2016 a prominent member of the state Congress stated that Yucatan would wait for the Congress of the Union to legislate on same sex marriage before taking the necessary steps to legalize it 322 In September 2017 the Yucatan Congress unanimously approved a PRD proposed bill to begin discussion on issues that had previously been neglected and not discussed including same sex marriage 323 On 15 August 2018 Governor Rolando Zapata Bello introduced bills to amend the state Constitution and Family Code to legalize same sex marriage 324 325 On 10 April 2019 the state Congress rejected an amendment to repeal the constitutional ban on same sex marriage in a 9 15 vote 326 In response to the failure to pass legislation the 17th Pride Parade in Merida saw the unprecedented participation of around 8 000 people 327 328 A second attempt at legalizing same sex marriage failed on 15 July 2019 with 15 votes against and 9 votes in favor 329 On 25 August 2021 the Congress of Yucatan approved in a 20 5 vote a bill that would repeal the heterosexual definition of marriage in the state constitution thus allowing same sex marriage 330 The bill was signed by the Governor on 3 September 2021 and published on 7 September 2021 331 Congress had 180 days from that date i e until 6 March 2022 to amend all laws including the Family Code to conform with the new wording of the constitution 332 The state congress voted unanimously to pass secondary legislation allowing same sex marriage on 1 March 2022 314 Zacatecas edit Main article Same sex marriage in Zacatecas On 18 June 2015 a member of PRD announced that she would submit a bill to reform the state s Civil and Family Codes to give same sex couples the same rights as heterosexual married couples 333 The July 2018 elections resulted in pro same sex marriage parties winning a majority of legislative seats in Zacatecas 43 On 14 February 2019 the city of Zacatecas announced it would begin issuing same sex marriage certificates 334 Despite claims from the Governor that the marriages would be void 335 and calls from Bishop Sigifredo Noriega to stop the marriages 336 the first couple married on 23 February 337 The municipality of Cuauhtemoc followed suit on 1 March 338 while a new same sex marriage bill was introduced to the state Congress around that time 339 Villanueva followed suit on 20 May 2019 340 On 14 August 2019 the state Congress rejected a bill to legalize same sex marriage in 11 13 vote with 2 abstentions 341 On 14 December 2021 the state Congress approved a bill to legalize same sex marriage in 18 10 vote with 1 abstention It took effect on 30 December 2021 the day after its publication in the official gazette 342 Marriage statistics editIn 2020 335 563 marriages were celebrated in Mexico Of these 2 476 0 7 were between same sex partners 343 Public opinion edit nbsp Public support of same sex marriage in Mexico as of 2017 344 gt 60 gt 50 gt 40 In a Parametria poll conducted from 17 to 20 November 2006 1 200 Mexican adults were asked if they would support a constitutional amendment that would legalize same sex marriage in Mexico 17 responded yes 61 said no and 14 had no opinion The same poll showed 28 in support of same sex civil unions 41 were opposed and 28 had no opinion 345 From 27 to 30 November 2009 major Mexican newspaper El Universal polled 1 000 Mexico City citizens concerning the legalization of same sex marriage in the city 50 supported it 38 were against it and 12 had no idea The same poll showed that support was stronger among the youngest population age 18 29 67 and weaker among the oldest age 50 onwards 38 With 48 the most cited reason was right of choice for the supporters followed by everybody is equal with 14 39 of the opposers cited it is not normal as the main reason to not support same sex marriage followed by we lose values with 18 346 Guillermo Bustamante Manilla a PAN member and president of the National Union of Parents of Families Spanish Union Nacional de Padres de Familia as well as the father of Guillermo Bustamante Artasanchez a law director of the Secretary of the Interior opposes abortion and same sex civil unions and has described the latter as anti natural 347 348 He has publicly asked voters not to cast votes for abortionists parties and those who are in favor of homosexual relationships 349 nbsp The Marcha TodosSomosFamilia in Mexico City in 2016 campaigning for same sex marriage rights A study conducted by Vanderbilt University in 2010 concluded that 37 8 of Mexicans supported same sex marriage 350 A poll conducted in July 2013 found a significant increase in support for same sex marriage with 52 of Mexicans in favour of legalising same sex marriage When broken down by religion support was 52 among Roman Catholics and 62 among non religious people However in the same poll only 24 of respondents supported same sex adoption 351 According to a Pew Research Center survey conducted between 30 October and 12 November 2013 49 of Mexicans supported same sex marriage 43 were opposed 352 353 In early 2014 the Strategic Communication Cabinet a statistical consulting services company published a report called Social Intolerance in Mexico 354 in which polls that covered several social issues were conducted in the 45 largest cities and municipalities The study found that the strongest support for same sex marriages was registered in Mexico City Tijuana San Luis Potosi Colima and La Paz whereas it was the weakest in Durango Ciudad Victoria Aguascalientes Chihuahua and Monterrey Additionally adoption by same sex couples was more widely accepted in Mexico City the border cities of Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez as well as Xalapa and Cancun meanwhile the least support was found in Chihuahua Guadalajara Aguascalientes Durango and Campeche Following President Enrique Pena Nieto s proposal to legalize same sex marriage in Mexico in May 2016 a poll on the issue was carried out by Gabinete de Comunicacion Estrategica 69 of respondents were in favor of the change 64 said they saw it as an advance in the recognition of human rights Public opinion changed radically over the course of 16 years In 2000 62 felt that same sex marriage should not be allowed under any circumstances In 2016 only 25 felt that way 355 In addition a BGC Excelsior survey conducted the same month found similar numbers 65 of Mexicans expressed support for same sex marriage However a poll conducted by Parametria that same month found completely opposite figures According to the polling firm 59 of Mexicans opposed same sex marriage 356 The 2017 AmericasBarometer showed that 51 of Mexicans supported same sex marriage 357 A 2017 survey by the Instituto Nacional de Estadistica y Geografia INEGI found that opposition to same sex marriage was most marked in southern Mexico namely the states of Chiapas 58 7 Tabasco 56 5 Campeche 56 1 Veracruz 54 3 and Guerrero 54 0 It was lowest in the central and northwestern parts of the country with Mexico City 28 6 Baja California 30 7 Sonora 31 4 Queretaro 32 4 and Mexico 33 8 being the five states districts with the least opposition Overall 42 6 men and 38 5 women in Mexico opposed same sex marriage 344 A study by the National Institute of Statistics and Geography INEGI in 2022 indicated that 76 of Mexicans supported same sex marriage 358 A Pew Research Center poll conducted between February and May 2023 showed that 63 of Mexicans supported same sex marriage 32 were opposed and 5 did not know or refused to answer When divided by age support was 77 among 18 39 year olds and 49 among 40 plus year olds 359 See also edit nbsp LGBT portal nbsp Mexico portal LGBT rights in Mexico Recognition of same sex unions in the AmericasNotes edit Defined by law in Campeche as sociedad civil de convivencia in Coahuila as pacto civil de solidaridad in Colima as enlace conyugal in Jalisco as libre convivencia and in Tlaxcala as sociedad de convivencia solidaria 7 In Spanish Esta protegera la organizacion y el desarrollo de la familia In Nahuatl Inin kin manauis nejchikolis uan iueixka iuikaluan In Yucatec Maya Le je ela yaan u kanaantik u nu ukbesajil yeetel u jook ol taanil le laak tsililo In Tzeltal Ja inito yame skolta te mach a stsobo sbaik sok ta sp oleselbel te alnich ane In Tzotzil Ja ta sk elbe k u sba smelolal stsob sbaik xchi uk slekubtasel smuk ubtasel uts alal In Mixtec Ndihi nivi iyo cha cuiti cha cua cachi ni cha cua savaha cha vaha chi ni chi iqui cunu ni ta cha vaha iyo chi cha cua cuu chi In Zapotec Ne laaca laani nga gusiroobani ne gutagulisaani xquenda biaani binni ti guibani ca jneza In Otomi Nuna madi ra mutsi ne ra te nuya mengu In Totonac Ja e namakgtakgalha ixtalakaxlan xawa ixlitatlanit litalakgapasni In Chʼol Iliyi mi ikantyan bajche mi ichumtyal lakpi alob cha an mi ip aty esan wemba ichumtyal tyi lakmajchil In Mazatec Je kjoatexoma siikonda ni nga mi ki me katama la koni sin nga siixajtin ko nga ma katamiijin ra jngo ni ya xita In Huastec Ax neets kin k aniy in yanel jant in ti neets ti puwel in yanel In Mazahua Nu tjurꞹ nu nge k o ra pjorꞹ ja ra mimiji ja ra b ꞹntjoji ne ja ra nok ꞹ texe in dyojui In Tlapanec Xu mambayu xu makuwiin gajmaa xu magajiin xabu In Purepecha I kwach akwati tankurhikwani ka kw iripikwa sirukwichiri In Mixe A eda ley je e newa an guwa anaamp jadu un ja tu jeen tu tejkpe ajxy oy jyak yeeget In Tarahumara Echi ko a tibuma natuika nochaa mi kiti ko a la kanilika retemaka perelima a b c d e Rulings of the Supreme Court officially take effect on the day they are published in the Official Journal Diario Oficial de la Federacion Despite this in several of the relevant states the state Civil Registry and many local municipalities chose to issue marriage certificates to same sex couples prior to this date In Chiapas the first same sex marriage occurred on 30 October 2017 and in Nuevo Leon on 11 March 2019 for instance References edit Agren David 10 August 2010 Mexican States Ordered to Honor Gay Marriages The New York Times Retrieved 30 July 2013 Same Sex Marriage Around the World Pew Research Center 17 May 2019 Archived from the original on 30 June 2017 Retrieved 23 May 2019 Government of Canada 29 April 2008 Marriage and Divorce in Mexico Retrieved 15 December 2009 Gay Mexico GayTravel 14 May 2019 Aprueban matrimonio igualitario en todo Mexico Grupo Milenio in Mexican Spanish 26 October 2022 Retrieved 27 October 2022 Rob Salerno 27 October 2022 Same sex marriage is finally legal throughout Mexico xtramagazine com LEY DE SOCIEDADES DE CONVIVENCIA SOLIDARIA PARA EL ESTADO DE TLAXCALA PDF Archived from the original PDF on 26 January 2019 Retrieved 26 January 2019 Legalizan bodas gays en Campeche SDP Noticias 23 December 2013 Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 5 April 2014 Aprueban Codigo Familiar en Michoacan no incluye matrimonios gay Quadratin 7 September 2015 Concubinato igualitario madruguete a catolicos y oposicion La Silla Rota 28 May 2020 Congreso de Colima aprueba 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iniciativa matrimonio igualitario Victoria 2022 July 12 Durango Aprueban matrimonio igualitario 19 September 2022 Durango El Siglo de 21 September 2022 Congreso de Durango aprueba el matrimonio igualitario www elsiglodedurango com mx in Spanish Retrieved 21 September 2022 Ya podran casarse personas del mismo sexo en Guanajuato sin necesidad de amparo Periodico AM in European Spanish 20 December 2021 Retrieved 21 December 2021 UNIoN GUANAJUATO Redes de Informacion y Educacion del Siglo XXI de EL UNIVERSAL y UNO TV PRD propone que Guanajuato permita matrimonios gay unionguanajuato mx Archived from the original on 4 April 2016 Retrieved 31 August 2014 UNIoN GUANAJUATO Redes de Informacion y Educacion del Siglo XXI de EL UNIVERSAL y UNO TV PRI se suma a matrimonios gay en Guanajuato unionguanajuato mx Archived from the original on 13 March 2016 Retrieved 31 August 2014 Carmen Pizano Voto panista archiva iniciativas para legalizar el matrimonio gay en Guanajuato ZonaFrancaMX Archived from the original on 8 September 2018 Retrieved 14 April 2015 Acuerda ayuntamiento de Guanajuato apoyar a pareja gay para contraer matrimonio Zona Franca in Mexican Spanish 29 April 2016 Archived from the original on 28 October 2018 Retrieved 13 October 2017 Presentan iniciativa para matrimonio gay Periodico Correo 19 October 2018 elsoldeaca 26 October 2022 Guerrero se suma al reconocimiento del matrimonio igualitario Tweet Archived from the original on 26 October 2022 Retrieved 9 June 2023 via Twitter Periodico Oficial Guerrero December 30 2022 PDF La Jornada A partir de julio en Guerrero se permitira casarse a parejas del mismo sexo Lajornadaguerrero com mx Archived from the original on 1 July 2015 Retrieved 3 July 2015 Recibe el Congreso iniciativa que permitira matrimonios entre personas del mismo sexo in Spanish Acapulco Mexico El Sur Periodico de Guerrero y Acapulco 8 July 2015 Archived from the original on 8 July 2015 Retrieved 8 July 2015 Se casan 20 parejas en boda colectiva de personas del mismo sexo en Guerrero in Spanish Acapulco Mexico El Sur 11 July 2015 Archived from the original on 11 July 2015 Retrieved 11 July 2015 Galarza Cristian 13 January 2016 Invalidos 20 matrimonios gays en Acapulco Registro Civil El Big Data Archived from the original on 22 July 2017 Retrieved 14 January 2016 Pueden casarse parejas del mismo sexo en las bodas del Dia del Amor informa el Registro Civil Archived from the original on 28 December 2016 Acapulco realizara boda masiva por el Dia del Amor El Informador Noticias de Jalisco Mexico Deportes amp Entretenimiento 2 September 2016 Organizacion Editorial Mexicana oem com mx Archived from the original on 27 November 2016 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Permitidas las bodas gay en Zihuatanejo Promueve Iglesia ataques de homofobia senala comunidad gay 17 March 2016 Thomaston Scottie 25 August 2020 8 25 Open Thread UPDATE 8 26 Equality on Trial Retrieved 22 March 2021 Presentan iniciativa de Ley de Sociedades de Convivencia para Hidalgo desdeabajo org mx Hidalgo no legislar bodas gay El Universal Mexico City 19 June 2013 Matrimonios gay dependen de madurez Criterio Hidalgo criteriohidalgo com Archived from the original on 30 August 2014 Buscan aprobar matrimonio igualitario en Hidalgo Excelsior 9 October 2018 Reconocen matrimonio igualitario El Universal in Spanish 15 May 2019 Periodico Oficial Ordinario 0 del 10 de junio de 2019 in Spanish Periodico Oficial del Estado de Hidalgo Retrieved 10 June 2019 a b Jalisco aprueba ley para uniones gay pero recortada Animal Politico Elephant Publishing LLC 31 October 2013 Retrieved 2 November 2013 a b Acuerdo PRD PRI clave para aprobar Libre Convivencia in Spanish El Informador 1 November 2013 Archived from the original on 22 August 2017 Retrieved 2 November 2013 Jalisco cuna de charros y tequila da primer paso hacia el matrimonio gay in Spanish CNN Mexico 1 November 2013 Archived from the original on 3 November 2013 Retrieved 2 November 2013 Same sex civil unions now approved in Jalisco but they won t be called marriage The Mexico Gulf Reporter 31 October 2013 Archived from the original on 16 January 2016 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Invalida Corte Ley de Libre Convivencia del estado de Jalisco El Universal 13 September 2018 SCJN invalida Ley de Libre Convivencia en Jalisco aristeguinoticias com Inconstitucional prohibir matrimonios gay en Jalisco SCJN Expansion 26 January 2016 MEXICO Same Sex Marriage Legalized in Jalisco State After Unanimous Ruling By Supreme Court 26 January 2016 YA HAY ACTAS MATRIMONIALES PARA PERSONAS DEL MISMO SEXO EN PUERTO VALLARTA Archived from the original on 13 October 2017 Retrieved 24 March 2016 DOF Diario Oficial de la Federacion dof gob mx Login Grupo Reforma mural com Archived from the original on 10 June 2016 Exhortan a Ejecutivo a cumplir con matrimonios gays in Spanish El Informador 12 May 2016 Acata Congreso resolucion de SCJN sobre matrimonios igualitarios La Cronica de Hoy Jalisco cronicajalisco com DIPUTADA BUSCA MODIFICAR CoDIGO CIVIL PARA DAR CLARIDAD A MATRIMONIO ENTRE PERSONAS DEL MISMO SEXO Sitio Web del Congreso de Jalisco congresojal gob mx Congreso de Jalisco aprueba el matrimonio igualitario Notisistema in European Spanish Retrieved 7 April 2022 Plana Mayor Periodismo que se Escribe planamayor com mx DEMOS Desarrollo de Medios S A de C V 6 March 2015 La Jornada Plantean regular bodas y adopcion por parte de gays unam mx a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link legismex 11 October 2022 Aprueba la LXILegislaturaEdomex el MatrimonioIgualitario Tweet Archived from the original on 28 October 2022 Retrieved 9 June 2023 via Twitter Eulalio Victoria 11 October 2022 Edomex le da el si al matrimonio igualitario El Financiero Retrieved 13 October 2022 Periodico Oficial del Estado de Mexico PDF Diaz Daniel 28 August 2015 Anadiran al Codigo Familiar del estado la figura de sociedades de convivencia in Spanish Archived from the original on 3 September 2015 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Aprueban Codigo Familiar en Michoacan no incluye matrimonios gay Quadratin 7 September 2015 PERIoDICO OFICIAL DEL GOBIERNO CONSTITUCIONAL DEL ESTADO DE MICHOACAN DE OCAMPO PDF Archived from the original PDF on 30 October 2015 Retrieved 5 November 2015 Inicio Cambio de Michoacan Reforman el Codigo Familiar del Estado Archived from the original on 19 February 2016 Retrieved 10 February 2016 A partir de mayo podrian contraer matrimonio parejas homosexuales en Michoacan Cambio de Michoacan 26 April 2016 Archived from the original on 23 March 2019 Retrieved 8 May 2016 Diputados aprueban matrimonios igualitarios en Michoacan Archived from the original on 4 June 2016 Retrieved 18 May 2016 Aprueban en el Congreso de Michoacan el matrimonio igualitario La Cronica de Hoy cronica com mx Ahora si Michoacan entre los 8 estados que permiten matrimonios igualitarios Revolucion 3 0 Noticias 23 June 2016 Login Grupo Reforma reforma com Bird The Perchy 18 May 2016 Mexico Morelos Approves Same sex Marriage Bill Cuau suspende cabildo por protesta contra matrimonio igualitario Excelsior 16 June 2016 Mata Ana Lilia Emite Congreso declaratoria de validez de reforma constitucional que permitira el matrimonio igualitario en Morelos La Union Anuncian diputados que municipios aprobaron matrimonio igualitario en Morelos Zona Centro Noticias 28 June 2016 Archived from the original on 28 June 2016 Morelos promulga MatrimonioIgualitario aristeguinoticias com PERIoDICO OFICIAL TIERRA Y LIBERTAD PDF in Spanish 4 July 2016 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Abren adopciones a matrimonios gay diariodemorelos com 13 June 2016 Diputado Presidente de la Mesa Directiva del Congreso del Estado de Nayarit Presente PDF in Spanish 2015 Archived from the original PDF on 22 December 2015 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Iniciativa con proyecto de decreto que reforma diversas disposiciones del Codigo Civil para el Estado de Nayarit para reconocer el matrimonio entre personas del mismo sexo Aprueba el Congreso de Nayarit los matrimonios gay La Jornada in Spanish 17 December 2015 Archived from the original on 20 December 2015 Retrieved 18 December 2015 Wee Darren 22 December 2015 Fourth Mexico state legalizes gay marriage Gay Star News Archived from the original on 30 July 2019 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Periodico Oficial Organo Del Gobierno Del Estado De Nayarit PDF 22 December 2015 Archived from the original PDF on 17 January 2016 Gerardo Herrera 30 December 2015 Nayarit tiene matrimonio igualitario Quadratin Presentan iniciativa que permita matrimonio gay en NL Periodico ABC Archived from the original on 5 July 2015 Alistan discusion de matrimonio igualitario en NL 16 May 2016 Archived from the original on 9 June 2016 Retrieved 18 May 2016 Corte admite recurso contra matrimonio entre mujer y hombre en NL milenio com Suprema Corte declara inconstitucional negar matrimonio gay en Nuevo Leon Archived from the original on 24 February 2019 Retrieved 20 February 2019 Rica La Opinion de Poza 19 February 2019 Corte ordena legalizar bodas gay en Nuevo Leon Silvia Erika Arellano 31 May 2019 Publican en DOF aprobacion del matrimonio gay en NL Milenio in Spanish Mexico Supreme Court Rules in Favor of Marriage Equality ThinkProgress 5 December 2012 Retrieved 7 January 2014 Realizan en Oaxaca primera boda gay sin juicio de amparo nvinoticias com Van 6 matrimonios igualitarios en Oaxaca durante 2018 nvinoticias com Hernandez Flor 25 January 2019 Oaxaca gay friendly incorpora Registro Civil matrimonios igualitarios en bodas masivas Newsweek Mexico in Spanish Retrieved 22 March 2021 Por primera vez en Oaxaca permitiran celebracion de matrimonios gay La Silla Rota in Spanish 29 January 2019 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Caballero Jose Luis 23 May 2019 En dos entidades federativas sin reforma legal el matrimonio igualitario se celebra por instrucciones del gobernador o por acuerdos internos de las oficinas del registro civil pic twitter com lSHsNPGik0 El Congreso de Oaxaca aprobo el matrimonio igualitario con 25 votos a favor infobae in Spanish 28 August 2019 Oaxaca aprueba el matrimonio igualitario El Sol de Mexico in Spanish 28 August 2019 Alejrandro Velazquez 27 January 2007 Mas estados van por Ley de Convivencia in Spanish Cronica Archived from the original on 22 July 2011 Retrieved 15 December 2009 Iniciativa que expide la Ley de Sociedad de Convivencia para el Estado de Puebla congresopuebla gob mx Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 30 August 2014 Julio Cesar Morales 29 September 2014 Congreso de Puebla no Abordara Despenalizacion del Aborto y Sociendades de Convivencia Periodicodigital Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 22 March 2021 CNDH impugna reforma en Puebla que excluye el matrimonio igualitario in Spanish Periodico Central 17 May 2016 SCJN avala los matrimonios homosexuales en Puebla Noticias MVS 1 August 2017 Archived from the original on 1 August 2017 Retrieved 1 August 2017 SCJN avala el matrimonio igualitario en Puebla SCJN backs egalitarian marriage in Puebla in Spanish Mexico SDPnoticias 1 August 2017 Archived from the original on 1 August 2017 Retrieved 1 August 2017 Corte abre puerta a martimonios gay en Puebla Court opens the door to gay marriage in Puebla El Universal in Spanish Mexico City Mexico 1 August 2017 Archived from the original on 1 August 2017 Retrieved 1 August 2017 DOF Diario Oficial de la Federacion dof gob mx Parejas del mismo sexo podran adoptar asegura PRD Archived from the original on 6 December 2017 Conservative Mexican state of Puebla legalizes same sex marriage Reuters 4 November 2020 Retrieved 4 November 2020 Queretaro aprueba el matrimonio igualitario Forbes Mexico in Mexican Spanish 22 September 2021 Retrieved 23 September 2021 Diputados aprueban el matrimonio igualitario en Queretaro Codice Informativo in Mexican Spanish 22 September 2021 Retrieved 23 September 2021 Espinoza Jovana 21 July 2015 En Queretaro parejas homosexuales ya no necesitan amparo para casarse in Spanish Diario Rotativo de Queretaro Pese a que diputados se niegan a legislar en 8 municipios de Queretaro permiten matrimonio igualitario sin amparo 4 January 2017 Redaccion Dos 22 September 2021 Queretaro aprueba el matrimonio igualitario ImpactoNoticias com mx Retrieved 7 May 2022 Brisa Munoz 30 November 2011 Sin hacer una reforma legal Quintana Roo realiza sus primeras bodas gay in Spanish CNN Mexico Retrieved 2 January 2012 Ingresan al Congreso uniones gay 13 November 2019 Archived from the original on 14 November 2019 Retrieved 30 April 2021 Vazquez Jesus Quintana Roo garantiza derechos de comunidad LGBTI El Economista En analisis iniciativa del matrimonio igualitario agenciadenoticiasslp com 8 August 2014 Acatara Congreso de SLP exhorto sobre leyes en favor de los homosexuales pulsoslp com mx Archived from the original on 8 September 2018 Retrieved 18 June 2015 Matrimonios igualitarios dictamen en 90 dias planoinformativo com 12 June 2016 Congreso de SLP vota contra el matrimonio igualitario 25 November 2016 El matrimonio igualitario no es normal y SLP no esta para preparado para el Diputado SDPnoticias com December 2016 Presentan iniciativa para legalizar matrimonio gay Archived from the original on 8 September 2018 Retrieved 7 October 2017 Congreso de San Luis Potosi aprueba el matrimonio igualitario La Razon 16 May 2019 Suprema Corte decidira si prohibir matrimonio gay en Sinaloa es constitucional SDPnoticias com Archived from the original on 23 March 2019 Retrieved 28 August 2014 EL DEBATE Personas del mismo sexo podrian casarse en Sinaloa Culiacan EL DEBATE Archived from the original on 4 September 2014 Proponen panistas ley de convivencia noroeste com mx Archived from the original on 24 February 2015 Retrieved 24 February 2015 A favor Panal y PAN de que se legisle en uniones igualitarias Archived from the original on 28 October 2018 Retrieved 29 August 2017 Acepta Sinaloa matrimonio gay pero rechaza el aborto Noroeste noroeste com mx Archived from the original on 23 March 2019 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Diputados ceden a la presion discuten ya matrimonios igualitarios Archived from the original on 23 March 2019 Retrieved 5 February 2019 Sin avances en la queja por matrimonio igualitario en CEDH 27 January 2017 Archived from the original on 9 February 2021 Retrieved 29 May 2020 Sinaloa tiene 90 dias para legislar en materia de matrimonio igualitario El Universal 17 May 2018 span cla, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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