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Same-sex marriage in Canada

Same-sex marriage in Canada was progressively introduced in several provinces and territories by court decisions beginning in 2003 before being legally recognized nationwide with the enactment of the Civil Marriage Act on July 20, 2005. On June 10, 2003, the Court of Appeal for Ontario issued a decision immediately legalizing same-sex marriage in Ontario, thereby becoming the first province where it was legal. The introduction of a federal gender-neutral marriage definition made Canada the fourth country in the world, and the first country outside Europe, to legally recognize same-sex marriage throughout its borders. Before the federal recognition of same-sex marriage, court decisions had already introduced it in eight out of ten provinces and one of three territories, whose residents collectively made up about 90 percent of Canada's population. More than 3,000 same-sex couples had already married in those areas before the Civil Marriage Act was passed.[1] Most legal benefits commonly associated with marriage had been extended to cohabiting same-sex couples since 1999.

The Civil Marriage Act was introduced by Prime Minister Paul Martin's Liberal minority government to the House of Commons of Canada on February 1, 2005, as Bill C-38. It was passed by the House of Commons on June 28, 2005, by the Senate on July 19, 2005, and it received royal assent the following day. Following the 2006 election, which was won by a Conservative minority government under Prime Minister Stephen Harper, the House of Commons defeated a motion to reopen the matter by a vote of 175 to 123 on December 7, 2006, effectively reaffirming the legislation. This was the third vote supporting same-sex marriage taken by three parliaments under three prime ministers.

Same-sex marriage by province/territory

Same-sex marriage was legally recognized in the provinces and territories as of the following dates:

In some of these cases, some marriages were in fact legal at an earlier date (for example, an Ontario ruling held that marriages performed in January 2001 were legal when performed), but the legality was questioned. As of the given dates, the legality was authoritatively established. The decision of the Government of Ontario to recognize two marriages that took place in Toronto on January 14, 2001, retroactively made Canada the first country in the world to have a government-legitimized same-sex marriage (the Netherlands and Belgium, which legalized same-sex marriage before Canada, had their first in April 2001 and June 2003, respectively).[2]

Overview

 
Provinces and territories with same-sex marriage before its nationwide legalization on July 20, 2005.
  Permitted
  Did not permit

Same-sex marriage was originally recognized by law as a result of cases in which courts in eight out of the ten Canadian provinces, and in one of its three territories, ruled existing bans on same-sex marriage unconstitutional. Thereafter, many same-sex couples obtained marriage licences in those provinces; like opposite-sex couples, they did not need to be residents of any of those provinces to marry there.

The legal status of same-sex marriages in these jurisdictions created an unusual jurisdictional issue. According to the Constitution of Canada, the definition of marriage is the exclusive responsibility of the federal government; this interpretation was upheld by a December 9, 2004, opinion of the Supreme Court of Canada (Reference Re Same-Sex Marriage). Until July 20, 2005, the federal government had not yet passed a law redefining marriage to conform to recent court decisions. Until the passage of the Civil Marriage Act, the previous definition of marriage remained binding in the four jurisdictions (two provinces and two territories) where courts had not yet ruled it unconstitutional, but void in the nine jurisdictions (eight provinces and one territory) where it had been successfully challenged before the courts. Before the enactment of federal legislation recognizing same-sex marriage, therefore, the application of federal marriage law differed depending on the province or territory.

Given the Supreme Court ruling, the role of precedent in Canadian law, and the overall legal climate, it was very likely that any challenges to legalize same-sex marriage in the remaining four jurisdictions would be successful as well. Federal lawyers had ceased to contest such cases,[3] and only Alberta's Conservative provincial government remained officially opposed.[4] Premier Ralph Klein threatened to invoke the notwithstanding clause of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms to avoid having to comply with the ruling.[5] Many commentators opined that a province likely could not use the notwithstanding clause to avoid recognizing same-sex marriage because the federal government had jurisdiction over marriage.[6][7][8][9] Alberta Attorney General Ron Stevens agreed with that conclusion, stating: "Since the court ruled the authority over same-sex marriage falls to the federal government, it is only the federal government who can invoke the notwithstanding clause to maintain the traditional definition of marriage."[10]

On June 17, 2003, Prime Minister Jean Chrétien announced that the government would present a bill to grant same-sex couples equal rights to marry.[11][12] A draft of what would become Bill C-38 was released on July 17, 2003, by Justice Minister Martin Cauchon. Before introducing it to Parliament, the Cabinet submitted the bill as a reference to the Supreme Court (Reference Re Same-Sex Marriage), asking the court to rule on whether limiting marriage to heterosexual couples was consistent with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and if same-sex civil unions were an acceptable alternative.[13][14] On December 9, 2004, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that the marriage of same-sex couples is constitutional, that the federal government has the sole authority to amend the definition of marriage, and the Charter's protection of freedom of religion grants religious institutions the right to refuse to perform marriage ceremonies for same-sex couples.[15][16]

Following the Supreme Court's decision, Justice Minister Irwin Cotler introduced Bill C-38 on February 1, 2005, to legalize marriage between persons of the same sex across Canada. The Paul Martin government supported the bill but allowed a free vote by its backbench MPs in the House of Commons. Defeat of the bill in Parliament would have continued the status quo and probably incremental legalization, jurisdiction by jurisdiction, via court challenges. This trend could have been reversed only through Parliament passing a new law that explicitly restricted marriage to opposite-sex couples notwithstanding the protection of equality rights afforded by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms or by amending the Canadian Constitution by inserting the clause "marriage is defined as being between a man and a woman", as was recommended by several conservative religious groups and politicians.[17] Given the composition of the House of Commons at the time, such a measure would have been very unlikely to pass. Premier Klein proposed putting the question to the public at large via a national referendum,[18] but his suggestion was rejected by all four party leaders.[19]

History

Court rulings

Background

In 1999, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in M v H that same-sex couples in Canada were entitled to receive many of the financial and legal benefits commonly associated with marriage. However, this decision stopped short of giving them the right to full legal marriage. Most laws which affect couples are within provincial rather than federal jurisdiction. As a result, rights varied somewhat from province to province.

On January 14, 2001, Reverend Brent Hawkes forced the issue by performing two same-sex marriages, taking advantage of the fact that Ontario law authorizes him to perform marriages without a previous license, via the issuance of banns of marriage. The registrar refused to accept the records of marriage, and a lawsuit was commenced over whether the marriages were legally performed. In other provinces, lawsuits were launched seeking permission to marry.

In 2002 and 2003, decisions in the superior trial courts of Ontario and Quebec, Halpern v Canada (AG) and Hendricks and Leboeuf v. Quebec, held that the restriction of marriage to opposite-sex couples was discriminatory and contrary to the equality clause of the Canadian Charter of Rights of Freedoms, while the Supreme Court of British Columbia ruled oppositely. On May 1, 2003, the British Columbia Court of Appeal reversed the superior court decision. The courts in each case suspended the effect of the declarations of invalidity for two years, to allow the federal government to consider legislative responses to the rulings. However, on June 10, 2003, the Court of Appeal for Ontario ruled on an appeal in the Halpern case. The court agreed with the lower court that the heterosexual definition of marriage was discriminatory and that same-sex marriage was legally permitted. However, unlike the previous three court decisions, the Court of Appeal did not suspend its decision to allow Parliament to consider the issue. Instead, it ruled that the 2001 marriages were legal and same-sex marriage was available throughout Ontario immediately.[20] The federal government had appealed the trial decisions to the provincial courts of appeal, but following the decision on the Ontario Court of Appeal, Prime Minister Chrétien announced on June 17, 2003, that the federal government would not seek to appeal the decisions to the Supreme Court. Instead, it would propose a draft Civil Marriage Act and refer it to the Supreme Court for an advisory opinion.

Ontario decision

 
2003 wedding of Mathieu Chantelois and Marcelo Gomez in Toronto

In 2003, the couples in Halpern v. Canada appealed the decision, requesting that the decision take effect immediately instead of after a delay. On June 10, 2003, the Court of Appeal for Ontario confirmed that current Canadian law on marriage violated the equality provisions in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in being restricted to heterosexual couples. The court did not allow the province any grace time to bring its laws in line with the ruling, making Ontario the first jurisdiction in North America to recognize same-sex marriage.[20][21] The city of Toronto announced that the city clerk would begin issuing marriage licences to same-sex couples. The first same-sex couple to marry, just hours after the Court of Appeal decision, were Michael Leshner and Michael Stark, long-time advocates for marriage equality for same-sex couples who had been litigants and intervenors in various court cases addressing the issue, including the Court of Appeal decision.[22][23][24] The next day, Attorney General Norm Sterling announced that his government would comply with the ruling.[25] The court also ruled that Kevin Bourassa and Joe Varnell, and Elaine and Anne Vautour, two same-sex couples who were married on January 14, 2001, at a wedding ceremony in the Metropolitan Community Church of Toronto following an ancient common-law procedure called the reading of the banns, would be considered legally married.[20]

On September 13, 2004, the Ontario Court of Appeal declared the Divorce Act also unconstitutional for excluding same-sex marriages. It ordered same-sex marriages read into that act, permitting the plaintiffs, a lesbian couple, to divorce.[26][27]

British Columbia decision

A ruling, quite similar to the Ontario ruling, was issued by the British Columbia Court of Appeal on July 8, 2003. Another decision in British Columbia in May of that year had required the federal government to change the law to permit same-sex marriages, Barbeau v. British Columbia. The July ruling stated that "any further delay... will result in an unequal application of the law between Ontario and British Columbia".[28] A few hours after the announcement, Antony Porcino and Tom Graff became the first two men to be legally wed in British Columbia.[29][30]

Quebec decision

 
Michael Hendricks and René Leboeuf, the first same-sex couple to legally marry in Quebec

On March 19, 2004, the Quebec Court of Appeal ruled similarly to the Ontario and British Columbia courts, upholding Hendricks and Leboeuf v. Quebec and ordering that it take effect immediately.[31] The couple who brought the suit, Michael Hendricks and René Leboeuf, immediately sought a marriage licence; the usual 20-day waiting period was waived, and they were wed on April 1 at the Palais de justice in Montreal.[32][33]

Given the populations of Ontario, British Columbia and Quebec, more than two-thirds of Canada's population lived in provinces where same-sex marriage had been legalized after the Quebec decision.

Yukon decision

On July 14, 2004, in Dunbar & Edge v. Yukon (Government of) & Canada (A.G.), the Supreme Court of Yukon issued another similar ruling with immediate effect.[34] Rather than reproducing the Charter equality arguments used by the other courts, the court ruled that since the provincial courts of appeal had ruled that the heterosexual definition of marriage was unconstitutional, it was unconstitutional across Canada. The position was strengthened by the Attorney General's refusal to appeal those rulings. It further ruled that to continue to restrict marriages in Yukon to opposite-sex couples would result in an unacceptable state of a provision's being in force in one jurisdiction and not another.

On August 16, 2004, Justice Minister Irwin Cotler indicated that the federal government would no longer oppose court cases to implement same-sex marriage in the provinces and territories.[35]

Manitoba decision

On September 16, 2004, Justice Douglas Yard of the Manitoba Court of Queen's Bench declared the then-current definition of marriage unconstitutional. The judge said that his decision had been influenced by the previous decisions in British Columbia, Ontario and Quebec.[36] This decision followed suits brought by three couples in Manitoba requesting that they be issued marriage licences. Both the provincial and federal governments had made it known that they would not oppose the court bid. One of the couples, Chris Vogel and Richard North, had legally sought the right to marry in a high-profile case in 1974, but had been denied.[37]

Nova Scotia decision

In August 2004, three couples in Nova Scotia brought suit in Boutilier et al. v. Canada (A.G) and Nova Scotia (A.G) against the provincial government requesting that it issue marriage licences to same-sex couples. On September 24, 2004, Justice Heather Robertson of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court ruled the then-current law unconstitutional. Neither the federal nor the provincial governments opposed the ruling.[3]

Saskatchewan decision

Five couples brought suit in Saskatchewan for the recognition of their marriage in a case that was heard by the Saskatchewan Court of Queen's Bench in chambers on November 3, 2004.[38] On November 5, 2004, the judge ruled that excluding same-sex couples from marriage violated the Charter's right to equality and that the common-law definition was discriminatory, thereby bringing same-sex marriage to Saskatchewan.[38][39]

Newfoundland and Labrador decision

Two lesbian couples brought suit on November 4, 2004, to have Newfoundland and Labrador recognize same-sex marriage. As with the previous decisions, the provincial government did not oppose the suit; moreover, the federal government actually supported it. The case went to trial on December 20 and the next day, Justice Derek Green ordered the provincial government to begin issuing marriage licences to same-sex couples, an order with which the provincial government announced it would comply.[40][41][42]

New Brunswick decision

Two same-sex couples in New Brunswick brought suit in April 2005 to request an order requiring the provincial government to issue them marriage licences. This was granted in June 2005. Premier Bernard Lord, who personally opposed same-sex marriage, pledged to follow a directive to provide for same-sex marriages from the courts or from Parliament.[43][44]

Proceedings in the Northwest Territories

On May 20, 2005, a gay male couple with a daughter brought suit in the Northwest Territories for the right to marry. Territorial Justice Minister Charles Dent had previously said that the government would not contest such a lawsuit. The case was to be heard on May 27 but ended when the federal government legalized same-sex marriage.

Discussion in Parliament, 1995–2003

The shift in Canadian attitudes towards acceptance of same-sex marriage and recent court rulings caused the Parliament of Canada to reverse its position on the issue. On September 18, 1995, the House of Commons voted 124 to 52 to reject a motion introduced by openly gay member of Parliament Réal Ménard calling for the legal recognition of same-sex relationships.[45][46] A 2006 study by Mark W. Lehman suggested that between 1997 and 2004, Canadian public opinion on legalizing same-sex marriage underwent a dramatic shift, moving from minority support to majority support and that this support was the result of a significant shift in positive feelings towards gays and lesbians.[47]

The first bill to legalize same-sex marriage was a private member's bill tabled in the House of Commons by New Democratic MP Svend Robinson on March 25, 1998. Like most private members' bills, it did not progress past first reading, and was reintroduced in several subsequent parliaments.[48] In 1999, the House of Commons overwhelmingly passed a resolution to re-affirm the definition of marriage as "the union of one man and one woman to the exclusion of all others".[49] The following year, this definition of marriage was included in the revised Bill C-23, the Modernization of Benefits and Obligations Act 2000 (French: Loi sur la modernisation de certains régimes d'avantages et d'obligations), which continued to bar same-sex couples from full marriage rights.[50] In early 2003, the issue once again resurfaced, and the House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights proceeded to undertake a formal study of same-sex marriage, including a cross-country series of public hearings. Just after the Ontario court decision, it voted to recommend that the federal government not appeal the ruling.[51]

Civil status is of provincial jurisdiction in Canada. However, the definition of marriage is a matter of federal jurisdiction. On June 17, 2003, Prime Minister Chrétien announced that the government would not appeal the Ontario ruling, and that his government would introduce legislation to recognize same-sex marriage but protect the rights of religious groups to decide which marriages they would solemnize.

A draft of the bill was issued on July 17. It read:

  1. Marriage, for civil purposes, is the lawful union of two persons to the exclusion of all others.
  2. Nothing in this Act affects the freedom of officials of religious groups to refuse to perform marriages that are not in accordance with their religious beliefs.

The draft bill was subsequently referred to the Supreme Court of Canada.

On September 16, 2003, a motion was brought to Parliament by the Canadian Alliance (now the Conservative Party) to once again reaffirm the heterosexual definition of marriage. The same language that had been passed in 1999 was brought to a conscience vote, with members asked to vote for or against the 1999 definition of marriage as "the union of one man and one woman to the exclusion of all others".[52] Motions are not legislatively binding in Canada, and are mostly done for symbolic purposes. The September vote was extremely divisive, however. Prime Minister Chrétien reversed his previous stance and voted against the motion, as did Paul Martin (who later became prime minister) and many other prominent Liberals. Several Liberals retained their original stance, however, and thus the vote was not defined purely along party lines. Controversially, over 30 members of the House did not attend the vote, the majority of whom were Liberals who had voted against legalizing same-sex marriage in 1999. In the end, the motion was narrowly rejected by a vote of 137–132.[53]

Supreme Court Reference Re Same-Sex Marriage

In 2003, the Liberal government referred a draft bill on same-sex marriage to the Supreme Court of Canada, essentially asking it to review the bill's constitutionality before it was introduced. The reference as originally posed by the Chrétien government asked three questions:

  1. Is the annexed Proposal for an Act respecting certain aspects of legal capacity for marriage for civil purposes within the exclusive legislative authority of the Parliament of Canada? If not, in what particular or particulars, and to what extent?
  2. If the answer to question 1 is yes, is section 1 of the proposal, which extends capacity to marry to persons of the same sex, consistent with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms? If not, in what particular or particulars, and to what extent?
  3. Does the freedom of religion guaranteed by paragraph 2(a) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms protect religious officials from being compelled to perform a marriage between two persons of the same sex that is contrary to their religious beliefs?

The government of Prime Minister Martin later added a fourth question in January 2004:[54]

  1. Is the opposite-sex requirement for marriage for civil purposes, as established by the common law and set out for Quebec in s. 5 of the Federal Law-Civil Law Harmonization Act, No. 1, consistent with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms? If not, in what particular or particulars and to what extent?

The addition of a fourth question considerably delayed the opening of the court reference until well after the June 2004 general election, raising accusations of stalling.[55] In its hearings that began in October 2004, the Supreme Court of Canada accused the government of using the court for other goals when it declined to appeal rulings that altered the definition of marriage in several provinces; "Justice Ian Binnie said it 'may not fulfill any useful purpose' to examine traditional marriage all over again, 'given the policy decision of the government'".[56] The Supreme Court of Canada ruled that the government has the authority to amend the definition of marriage but did not rule on whether or not such a change is required by the equality provisions of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The court stated that such a ruling is not necessary because the federal government had accepted the rulings of provincial courts to the effect that the change was required. The court also ruled that given the freedom of religion provisions in the Charter, and the wording of provincial human rights codes, it was highly unlikely that religious institutions could be compelled to perform same-sex marriages, though because solemnization of marriage is a matter for provincial governments, the proposed bill could not actually guarantee such protections.[57]

Debate prior to C-38's introduction

On December 9, 2004, Prime Minister Martin indicated that the federal government would introduce legislation expanding marriage to same-sex couples. The government's decision was announced immediately following the court's answer in the Reference Re Same-Sex Marriage reference question.[58] The parliamentary bill caused rifts in the House of Commons, especially among the governing Liberals. Many Liberal MPs indicated that they would oppose the government's position in favour of same-sex marriage at a free vote. The majority of each of the Liberal Party, the New Democratic Party and the Bloc Québécois voted in favour of the bill; the majority of the Conservative Party voted against the bill.[59][60]

In 2000, Alberta had amended its Marriage Act to define marriage as being between "a man and a woman".[61] The law included a notwithstanding clause in an attempt to protect the amendment from being invalidated under the Charter. However, the amendment was invalid since, under the Canadian Constitution, the definition of marriage is a federal right.

Complicating matters, Conservative Party leader Stephen Harper indicated that a Conservative government would work to restore the prohibition on same-sex marriage if Parliament voted to do so in a free vote.[62] Following the court decision on December 9, Premier Ralph Klein of Alberta suggested that a national referendum be held on same-sex marriage, a measure Prime Minister Martin rejected.[63]

Legislative progress of the Civil Marriage Act

Bill C-38, the Civil Marriage Act (French: Loi sur le mariage civil), was introduced to Parliament for its first reading in the House of Commons on February 1, 2005.[64][65][66] Prime Minister Martin launched the debate on February 16. The bill passed second reading on May 4 and third reading on June 28, with votes of 164–137 and 158–133, respectively.[67][68][69] It then moved to the Senate, and received its first reading on June 29. Debate was launched on July 4, and a Liberal closure motion limited debate on the bill to only four hours. Second reading and committing the bill occurred on July 6, with a vote of 43–12. The Senate passed the legislation on third reading by a margin of 47 to 21 on July 19, 2005.[70][71][72] It received royal assent at the hand of Beverley McLachlin (in her capacity as the Deputy of the Governor General of Canada) on July 20, 2005.[73]

28 June 2005 vote in the House of Commons of Canada[74]
Party Voted for Voted against Abstained
  Liberal Party (LPC/PLC)
  Conservative Party (CPC/PCC) -
  Bloc Québécois (BQ)
  New Democratic Party (NDP/NPD) -
  Independent - -
Total 158 133 4
19 July 2005 vote in the Senate of Canada[75]
Party Voted for Voted against Abstained
  Liberal Party (LPC/PLC)
  Conservative Party (CPC/PCC)
  Progressive Conservative Party (PC) - -
  Independent New Democratic Party (NDP/NPD) - -
  Independent -
Total 47 21 3

Same-sex marriage in the 39th Parliament

The Conservative Party, led by Harper, won a minority government in the federal election on January 23, 2006. Harper had campaigned on the promise of holding a conscience vote on a motion to re-open the debate on same-sex marriage.[62] The motion would re-open the same-sex marriage debate, but did not prescribe restoring the opposite-sex definition of marriage. A news report from CTV News on May 31, 2006, showed that a growing number of Conservatives were wary about re-opening the debate on same-sex marriage. One cabinet minister stated he just wanted the issue "to go away", while others including Chuck Strahl and Bill Casey were undecided, instead of directly opposed.[76] Foreign Affairs Minister Peter MacKay noted that not a single constituent had approached him on the issue, and Minister for Fisheries and Oceans Loyola Hearn was against re-opening the debate.[76]

By November 2006, the debate had shifted and it was the supporters of same-sex marriage that were arguing for a fall vote on the issue and the opponents who were lobbying for a delay.[77][78] On December 6, 2006, the government brought in a motion asking if the issue of same-sex marriage debate should be re-opened. This motion was defeated the next day in a vote of 175 (nays) to 123 (yeas).[79][80][81] Prime Minister Harper afterwards told reporters, "I don't see reopening this question in the future."[82][83][84]

Recognition of foreign legal unions

In Hincks v. Gallardo, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice decided on January 7, 2013, that same-sex partners who entered into civil partnerships in the United Kingdom are to be treated as married for the purposes of Canadian law.[85]

Marriage statistics

From June 2003 (date of the first same-sex marriages in Ontario) to October 2006, 12,438 same-sex marriages were contracted in Canada.[86]

Province Date of legalization Number of same-sex marriages
Ontario June 10, 2003 6,524
British Columbia July 8, 2003 3,927
Quebec March 19, 2004 947
Alberta July 20, 2005 409
Nova Scotia September 24, 2004 273
Manitoba September 16, 2004 193
Saskatchewan November 5, 2004 83
New Brunswick June 23, 2005 44
Newfoundland and Labrador December 21, 2004 14
Yukon July 14, 2004 13
Prince Edward Island July 20, 2005 8
Northwest Territories July 20, 2005 2
Nunavut July 20, 2005 1

By 2011, 21,015 same-sex marriages had been performed in Canada,[87] with an additional 43,560 cohabiting same-sex couples. According to the 2016 census, there were 72,880 same-sex couples residing in Canada, of which 24,370 (33.4 percent) were married.[88] In British Columbia, 38.5 percent of all same-sex couples were married, compared to 38.2 percent in Ontario and 22.5 percent in Quebec. 10,020 children were living in same-sex families.[89]

Other same-sex partner benefits in Canada

Other kinds of partnership

Canadian cohabiting same-sex couples are entitled to many of the same legal and financial benefits as married opposite-sex couples. In 1999, after the court case of M v H, the Supreme Court of Canada declared that same-sex partners must also be extended the rights and benefits of common-law relationships.

The province of Quebec also offers civil unions to same-sex couples. Nova Scotia's domestic partnerships offer similar benefits. Legislative changes between 2001 and 2004 extended the benefits of common-law relationships in Manitoba to same-sex couples as well as those of different sex. In 2003, Alberta passed a law recognizing adult interdependent relationships. These relationships provide specific financial benefits to interdependent adults, including blood relations.[90]

Recognition in other provinces and territories

The legal status of same-sex marriages in provinces and territories that did not perform them was uncertain prior to the passage of the Civil Marriage Act. One of the couples that brought suit in Nova Scotia acted so that their Ontario marriage would be recognized.

Premier Ralph Klein wanted to prevent same-sex marriages from being performed or recognized in Alberta, but eventually admitted that the province's chances of doing so were slim to none, and said Alberta would obey the legislation.[91] By contrast, the other remaining province without same-sex marriage, Prince Edward Island, announced that it would voluntarily bring its laws into compliance with the federal legislation.

In October 2003, Premier Paul Okalik announced that Nunavut would recognize same-sex marriages performed in other provinces and territories.

Immigration

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) acknowledges same-sex marriages contracted in Canada between immigration applicants and Canadian citizens or permanent residents. Canadians may also sponsor their same-sex common-law or civil union partners for family-class immigration, provided they meet various requirements, including proof of legitimacy and cohabitation for at least one year.

After the enactment of the Civil Marriage Act, IRCC adopted an interim immigration policy which did not recognize same-sex marriages conducted outside of Canada. For example, a Canadian citizen, legally married in the Netherlands to his or her same-sex Dutch partner, could not sponsor his or her Dutch partner for immigration as a spouse, despite the fact that both Dutch law and Canadian law made no distinction between opposite-sex and same-sex civil marriages, and despite the fact that IRCC did recognize a Dutch opposite-sex marriage.

On December 12, 2006, New Democratic Party MP Bill Siksay introduced a motion in the House of Commons of Canada Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration calling on the IRCC to immediately rescind the interim policy and "recognize legal marriages of gay and lesbian couples performed in jurisdictions outside Canada for purposes of immigration in exactly the same way as the legal marriages of heterosexual couples are recognized"; the committee voted to recommend that the government do this.[92] In late January 2007, Citizenship and Immigration Minister Diane Finley informed the committee that this would be done.[93] In February 2007, the IRCC website was updated to reflect the fact that the policy had been updated.[94]

Military

Since September 2003, military chaplains have been allowed to bless same-sex unions and to perform these ceremonies on a military base.[95]

Survivor benefits

On December 19, 2003, an Ontario court ruled that survivor benefits for Canadians whose same-sex partners died should be retroactive to April 1985, the date the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms came into effect. The federal government appealed. On March 1, 2007, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that the federal government must pay Canada Pension Plan benefits to surviving same-sex spouses.[96] Initial news reports indicated that the court limited retroactive benefits to only 12 months' worth, but in fact, some survivors may be entitled to benefits dating back to 2000.[97][98]

Same-sex divorce in Canada

On September 13, 2004, a lesbian couple known as "M.M." and "J.H." (the initials of their respective lawyers) in Ontario were granted Canada's first same-sex divorce. Their initial divorce application had been denied based on the fact that the federal Divorce Act (French: Loi sur le divorce) defined spouse as "either of a man or a woman who are married to each other". However, Madam Justice Ruth Mesbur of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice ruled in M.M. v J.H that the definition of "spouse" in the Divorce Act was unconstitutional.[99][100] In June 2005, a lesbian couple residing in British Columbia obtained a similar ruling.[101]

The Civil Marriage Act in 2005 amended the Divorce Act to permit same-sex divorce. However, prior to 2013, a married couple (same-sex or opposite-sex) could file for divorce in Canada only if at least one spouse was then residing in Canada and had been for at least one full year when the divorce was filed.[102]

In 2012, after the Attorney General of Canada, Rob Nicholson, suggested in a divorce case brought in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice that non-residents of Canada did not have valid marriages if such marriages were not recognized by their home jurisdictions,[103] the Conservative government announced that they would fix this "legislative gap".[104] A government bill, the Civil Marriage of Non-residents Act (French: Loi sur le mariage civil de non-résidents), positively declaring such marriages legal in Canada and allowing non-residents to divorce in a Canadian court if prohibited from doing so in their home jurisdictions, was introduced and received first reading on February 17, 2012, and passed third and final reading on June 18, 2013. The bill then received a quick passage through the Senate and passed third and final reading on June 21, receiving royal assent by Governor General David Johnston on June 26.[105][106] The law came into effect on August 14 by Order of the Governor General in Council made the previous day.[107]

Church and state

Based on the 2001 census, 80 percent of the Canadian population were initiated into one of the three main Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Islam, and Christianity).[108][109] All three have texts interpreted by some to declare sexual relations between people of the same sex as forbidden and sinful, and have been opposed to the recognition of same-sex unions. However, some major religious groups spoke in favour of legalizing same-sex marriage. The largest Protestant denomination in the country, the United Church of Canada, offers church weddings to same-sex couples and supports same-sex marriages, testifying to this effect during the cross-country Justice Committee hearings. Unitarian Universalist congregations also solemnize same-sex marriages, as do the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers), the Metropolitan Community Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada. Some progressive Jewish congregations have also supported same-sex marriage.

The General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada passed an initial motion in July 2016 to perform same-sex marriages in their churches. The measure had to be approved a second time at the next General Synod in 2019 to come into force.[110] The Anglican Church of Canada does not specifically prohibit same-sex marriage. On July 12, 2019, the General Synod did not approve the motion at its second reading. In spite of support by the laity and clergy, the motion did not pass because it was not supported by a full two-thirds of the bishops. Director of Communications Meghan Kilty said that many dioceses have been performing same-sex marriages, including the dioceses of Toronto, Ottawa, British Columbia and others. Kilty added that many dioceses would continue to perform such services since there is no specific prohibition by the Church.[111]

In July 2003, the hierarchy of the Catholic Church in Canada protested the Chrétien government's plans to include same-sex couples in civil marriage. This was significant because Catholicism has a larger number of adherents in Canada than any other religion or denomination, with 43.6 percent of the population identifying themselves as Catholic in 2005.[112] The church criticisms were accompanied by Vatican claims that Catholic politicians should vote according to their personal beliefs rather than the policy of the government. Amid a subsequent backlash in opinion, the Church remained remarkably quiet on the subject, at least in public, until late 2004, when two Catholic bishops clearly stated their opposition to same-sex marriage. The Bishop of Calgary, Frederick Henry, in a pastoral letter urged Catholics to fight against the legalization of same-sex marriage, calling homosexual behaviour "an evil act".[113] Bishop Henry's letter also seemed to urge the outlawing of homosexual acts, saying, "Since homosexuality, adultery, prostitution and pornography undermine the foundations of the family, the basis of society, then the State must use its coercive power to proscribe or curtail them in the interests of the common good."[113] Two human rights complaints were filed against Henry soon afterward under the Alberta Human Rights Act, one of which was dropped at the conciliation stage.

The Hutterite Brethren spoke out against same-sex marriage in a letter written to Prime Minister Martin in February 2005.[114] The group has historically not involved themselves with politics. The Humanist Association of Canada, which endorses a non-theistic, non-religious ethical philosophy to life and full separation of church and state, has been supportive of same-sex marriage. Local affiliate groups of the Humanist Association offer officiancy services across Canada. Representatives of the World Sikh Organization testified before the Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs in favour of the Civil Marriage Act.[115]

Public opinion

A 1996 Angus Reid Institute/Southam News opinion poll, conducted across Canada, found that 49 percent of Canadians supported same-sex marriage, while 47 percent were opposed. Support was highest in Quebec (58 percent) and among 18–34-year-olds (67 percent), and lowest in Alberta (38 percent) and people over the age of 54 (25 percent).[116] In 1999, the group found support at 53 percent with 44 percent opposed.[116]

An April 2001 Environics Research Group survey showed that 45 percent of Canadians supported same-sex marriage (29 percent "strongly" and 16 percent "somewhat"), while 41 percent opposed (30 percent "strongly" and 11 percent "somewhat").[116] A June 2002 survey conducted by Focus on the Family Canada, a group opposed to same-sex marriage, found that 46 percent of Canadians agreed same-sex marriage should be legalized whereas 44 percent disagreed.[116] A poll conducted by the Centre for Research and Information on Canada in October 2002 showed that 53 percent of Canadians supported same-sex marriage, while 41 percent were opposed.[116] A November 2002 Ekos/CBC poll asked respondents if they would vote "yes" or "no" in a referendum on the issue of same-sex marriage. 47 percent answered "no" and 45 percent answered "yes", while 8 percent did not know.[116]

A 2005 opinion poll taken shortly before Parliament voted on the Civil Marriage Act found that 42 percent of Canadians favoured the nationwide legalization of same-sex marriage, while 40 percent were opposed and 18 percent did not respond or were undecided.[117] A June 2006 poll conducted by Ekos asked respondents if the debate on same-sex marriage should be reopened. 62 percent considered same-sex marriage settled, 27 percent wanted to reopen the issue, and 11 percent either had no opinion or did not respond.[118]

In 2012, a poll by Forum Research showed that 66.4 percent of Canadians approved of legalized same-sex marriage, while 33.6 percent were opposed. Support for same-sex marriage was highest in Quebec (72 percent) and British Columbia (70.2 percent), while lowest in Alberta (45.6 percent).[119] A May 2013 Ipsos poll of residents of 16 countries found that 63 percent of respondents in Canada were in favour of same-sex marriage and another 13 percent supported other forms of recognition for same-sex couples.[120]

After same-sex marriage in the United States was legalized by their Supreme Court in Obergefell v. Hodges in June 2015, a poll by Forum Research showed that 70 percent of Canadians approved of same-sex marriage, while 22 percent disapproved.[121]

In May 2016, members of the Conservative Party of Canada voted 1,036–462 to change the party's political platform from defining marriage as "a union between one man and one woman" to a neutral stance. As a compromise, the party did not elect to support the right to same-sex marriage, allowing members "the freedom to hold personal opinions against same-sex marriage".[122]

A 2017 CROP poll showed that 74 percent of Canadians found it "great that in Canada, two people of the same sex can get married", while 26 percent disagreed. Support for same-sex marriage was higher among women (79 percent) than men (70 percent) and higher among French speakers (82 percent) than English speakers (73 percent). Those with a higher income, a university degree or who were born in Canada were also more likely to support same-sex marriage. When divided by age, young people were overwhelmingly in support (82 percent among 18–24-year-olds and 86 percent among 25–34-year-olds) and, while people over 65 were less likely to be in favour, same-sex marriage still enjoyed 66 percent popular support among people of that age group. The most supportive province was Quebec (80 percent), followed by 78 percent in the four Atlantic provinces, 75 percent in British Columbia, 73 percent in Ontario, 70 percent in Manitoba and Saskatchewan and 68 percent in Alberta.[123][124] The 2017 AmericasBarometer showed that 76 percent of Canadians supported same-sex marriage.[125] A 2020 Research Co. poll found that 67 percent of Canadians supported same-sex marriage remaining legal.[126] A 2022 Research Co. poll found that number had remained quite stable, at 66 percent.[127]

See also

References

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Bibliography

  • Hull, Kathleen (2006), Same-sex marriage: the cultural politics of love and law, Cambridge Univ. Press, ISBN 0521672511
  • Lahey, Kathleen A; Alderson, Kevin (2004), Same-sex marriage: the personal and the political, Insomniac Press, ISBN 1-894663-63-2
  • Larocque, Sylvain (2006). Gay Marriage: The Story of a Canadian Social Revolution. Toronto: James Lorimer & Company. ISBN 1-55028-927-6.

External links

  • Website of Egale Canada
  • Website of Canadians for Equal Marriage
  • Website of Marriage Vote Canada
  • Website of Defend Marriage Canada June 16, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  • Redefining Marriage? A Case for Caution July 23, 2020, at the Wayback Machine, Brief to the Parliamentary Justice Committee
  • CBC News Indepth: Same-Sex Marriage in Canada June 10, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  • Full text of NFO CF Group survey (PDF) September 10, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  • . CBC News. December 10, 2004. Archived from the original on October 16, 2006.

same, marriage, canada, progressively, introduced, several, provinces, territories, court, decisions, beginning, 2003, before, being, legally, recognized, nationwide, with, enactment, civil, marriage, july, 2005, june, 2003, court, appeal, ontario, issued, dec. Same sex marriage in Canada was progressively introduced in several provinces and territories by court decisions beginning in 2003 before being legally recognized nationwide with the enactment of the Civil Marriage Act on July 20 2005 On June 10 2003 the Court of Appeal for Ontario issued a decision immediately legalizing same sex marriage in Ontario thereby becoming the first province where it was legal The introduction of a federal gender neutral marriage definition made Canada the fourth country in the world and the first country outside Europe to legally recognize same sex marriage throughout its borders Before the federal recognition of same sex marriage court decisions had already introduced it in eight out of ten provinces and one of three territories whose residents collectively made up about 90 percent of Canada s population More than 3 000 same sex couples had already married in those areas before the Civil Marriage Act was passed 1 Most legal benefits commonly associated with marriage had been extended to cohabiting same sex couples since 1999 The Civil Marriage Act was introduced by Prime Minister Paul Martin s Liberal minority government to the House of Commons of Canada on February 1 2005 as Bill C 38 It was passed by the House of Commons on June 28 2005 by the Senate on July 19 2005 and it received royal assent the following day Following the 2006 election which was won by a Conservative minority government under Prime Minister Stephen Harper the House of Commons defeated a motion to reopen the matter by a vote of 175 to 123 on December 7 2006 effectively reaffirming the legislation This was the third vote supporting same sex marriage taken by three parliaments under three prime ministers Contents 1 Same sex marriage by province territory 2 Overview 3 History 3 1 Court rulings 3 1 1 Background 3 1 2 Ontario decision 3 1 3 British Columbia decision 3 1 4 Quebec decision 3 1 5 Yukon decision 3 1 6 Manitoba decision 3 1 7 Nova Scotia decision 3 1 8 Saskatchewan decision 3 1 9 Newfoundland and Labrador decision 3 1 10 New Brunswick decision 3 1 11 Proceedings in the Northwest Territories 3 2 Discussion in Parliament 1995 2003 3 3 Supreme Court Reference Re Same Sex Marriage 3 4 Debate prior to C 38 s introduction 3 5 Legislative progress of the Civil Marriage Act 3 6 Same sex marriage in the 39th Parliament 3 7 Recognition of foreign legal unions 3 8 Marriage statistics 4 Other same sex partner benefits in Canada 4 1 Other kinds of partnership 4 2 Recognition in other provinces and territories 4 3 Immigration 4 4 Military 4 5 Survivor benefits 5 Same sex divorce in Canada 6 Church and state 7 Public opinion 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksSame sex marriage by province territory EditSame sex marriage was legally recognized in the provinces and territories as of the following dates June 10 2003 Ontario July 8 2003 British Columbia March 19 2004 Quebec July 14 2004 Yukon September 16 2004 Manitoba September 24 2004 Nova Scotia November 5 2004 Saskatchewan December 21 2004 Newfoundland and Labrador June 23 2005 New Brunswick July 20 2005 Civil Marriage Act Alberta Prince Edward Island Nunavut and the Northwest TerritoriesIn some of these cases some marriages were in fact legal at an earlier date for example an Ontario ruling held that marriages performed in January 2001 were legal when performed but the legality was questioned As of the given dates the legality was authoritatively established The decision of the Government of Ontario to recognize two marriages that took place in Toronto on January 14 2001 retroactively made Canada the first country in the world to have a government legitimized same sex marriage the Netherlands and Belgium which legalized same sex marriage before Canada had their first in April 2001 and June 2003 respectively 2 Overview Edit Provinces and territories with same sex marriage before its nationwide legalization on July 20 2005 Permitted Did not permit Same sex marriage was originally recognized by law as a result of cases in which courts in eight out of the ten Canadian provinces and in one of its three territories ruled existing bans on same sex marriage unconstitutional Thereafter many same sex couples obtained marriage licences in those provinces like opposite sex couples they did not need to be residents of any of those provinces to marry there The legal status of same sex marriages in these jurisdictions created an unusual jurisdictional issue According to the Constitution of Canada the definition of marriage is the exclusive responsibility of the federal government this interpretation was upheld by a December 9 2004 opinion of the Supreme Court of Canada Reference Re Same Sex Marriage Until July 20 2005 the federal government had not yet passed a law redefining marriage to conform to recent court decisions Until the passage of the Civil Marriage Act the previous definition of marriage remained binding in the four jurisdictions two provinces and two territories where courts had not yet ruled it unconstitutional but void in the nine jurisdictions eight provinces and one territory where it had been successfully challenged before the courts Before the enactment of federal legislation recognizing same sex marriage therefore the application of federal marriage law differed depending on the province or territory Given the Supreme Court ruling the role of precedent in Canadian law and the overall legal climate it was very likely that any challenges to legalize same sex marriage in the remaining four jurisdictions would be successful as well Federal lawyers had ceased to contest such cases 3 and only Alberta s Conservative provincial government remained officially opposed 4 Premier Ralph Klein threatened to invoke the notwithstanding clause of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms to avoid having to comply with the ruling 5 Many commentators opined that a province likely could not use the notwithstanding clause to avoid recognizing same sex marriage because the federal government had jurisdiction over marriage 6 7 8 9 Alberta Attorney General Ron Stevens agreed with that conclusion stating Since the court ruled the authority over same sex marriage falls to the federal government it is only the federal government who can invoke the notwithstanding clause to maintain the traditional definition of marriage 10 On June 17 2003 Prime Minister Jean Chretien announced that the government would present a bill to grant same sex couples equal rights to marry 11 12 A draft of what would become Bill C 38 was released on July 17 2003 by Justice Minister Martin Cauchon Before introducing it to Parliament the Cabinet submitted the bill as a reference to the Supreme Court Reference Re Same Sex Marriage asking the court to rule on whether limiting marriage to heterosexual couples was consistent with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and if same sex civil unions were an acceptable alternative 13 14 On December 9 2004 the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that the marriage of same sex couples is constitutional that the federal government has the sole authority to amend the definition of marriage and the Charter s protection of freedom of religion grants religious institutions the right to refuse to perform marriage ceremonies for same sex couples 15 16 Following the Supreme Court s decision Justice Minister Irwin Cotler introduced Bill C 38 on February 1 2005 to legalize marriage between persons of the same sex across Canada The Paul Martin government supported the bill but allowed a free vote by its backbench MPs in the House of Commons Defeat of the bill in Parliament would have continued the status quo and probably incremental legalization jurisdiction by jurisdiction via court challenges This trend could have been reversed only through Parliament passing a new law that explicitly restricted marriage to opposite sex couples notwithstanding the protection of equality rights afforded by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms or by amending the Canadian Constitution by inserting the clause marriage is defined as being between a man and a woman as was recommended by several conservative religious groups and politicians 17 Given the composition of the House of Commons at the time such a measure would have been very unlikely to pass Premier Klein proposed putting the question to the public at large via a national referendum 18 but his suggestion was rejected by all four party leaders 19 History EditCourt rulings Edit Background Edit In 1999 the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in M v H that same sex couples in Canada were entitled to receive many of the financial and legal benefits commonly associated with marriage However this decision stopped short of giving them the right to full legal marriage Most laws which affect couples are within provincial rather than federal jurisdiction As a result rights varied somewhat from province to province On January 14 2001 Reverend Brent Hawkes forced the issue by performing two same sex marriages taking advantage of the fact that Ontario law authorizes him to perform marriages without a previous license via the issuance of banns of marriage The registrar refused to accept the records of marriage and a lawsuit was commenced over whether the marriages were legally performed In other provinces lawsuits were launched seeking permission to marry In 2002 and 2003 decisions in the superior trial courts of Ontario and Quebec Halpern v Canada AG and Hendricks and Leboeuf v Quebec held that the restriction of marriage to opposite sex couples was discriminatory and contrary to the equality clause of the Canadian Charter of Rights of Freedoms while the Supreme Court of British Columbia ruled oppositely On May 1 2003 the British Columbia Court of Appeal reversed the superior court decision The courts in each case suspended the effect of the declarations of invalidity for two years to allow the federal government to consider legislative responses to the rulings However on June 10 2003 the Court of Appeal for Ontario ruled on an appeal in the Halpern case The court agreed with the lower court that the heterosexual definition of marriage was discriminatory and that same sex marriage was legally permitted However unlike the previous three court decisions the Court of Appeal did not suspend its decision to allow Parliament to consider the issue Instead it ruled that the 2001 marriages were legal and same sex marriage was available throughout Ontario immediately 20 The federal government had appealed the trial decisions to the provincial courts of appeal but following the decision on the Ontario Court of Appeal Prime Minister Chretien announced on June 17 2003 that the federal government would not seek to appeal the decisions to the Supreme Court Instead it would propose a draft Civil Marriage Act and refer it to the Supreme Court for an advisory opinion Ontario decision Edit Main article Same sex marriage in Ontario 2003 wedding of Mathieu Chantelois and Marcelo Gomez in Toronto In 2003 the couples in Halpern v Canada appealed the decision requesting that the decision take effect immediately instead of after a delay On June 10 2003 the Court of Appeal for Ontario confirmed that current Canadian law on marriage violated the equality provisions in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in being restricted to heterosexual couples The court did not allow the province any grace time to bring its laws in line with the ruling making Ontario the first jurisdiction in North America to recognize same sex marriage 20 21 The city of Toronto announced that the city clerk would begin issuing marriage licences to same sex couples The first same sex couple to marry just hours after the Court of Appeal decision were Michael Leshner and Michael Stark long time advocates for marriage equality for same sex couples who had been litigants and intervenors in various court cases addressing the issue including the Court of Appeal decision 22 23 24 The next day Attorney General Norm Sterling announced that his government would comply with the ruling 25 The court also ruled that Kevin Bourassa and Joe Varnell and Elaine and Anne Vautour two same sex couples who were married on January 14 2001 at a wedding ceremony in the Metropolitan Community Church of Toronto following an ancient common law procedure called the reading of the banns would be considered legally married 20 On September 13 2004 the Ontario Court of Appeal declared the Divorce Act also unconstitutional for excluding same sex marriages It ordered same sex marriages read into that act permitting the plaintiffs a lesbian couple to divorce 26 27 British Columbia decision Edit Main article Same sex marriage in British Columbia A ruling quite similar to the Ontario ruling was issued by the British Columbia Court of Appeal on July 8 2003 Another decision in British Columbia in May of that year had required the federal government to change the law to permit same sex marriages Barbeau v British Columbia The July ruling stated that any further delay will result in an unequal application of the law between Ontario and British Columbia 28 A few hours after the announcement Antony Porcino and Tom Graff became the first two men to be legally wed in British Columbia 29 30 Quebec decision Edit Main article Same sex marriage in Quebec Michael Hendricks and Rene Leboeuf the first same sex couple to legally marry in Quebec On March 19 2004 the Quebec Court of Appeal ruled similarly to the Ontario and British Columbia courts upholding Hendricks and Leboeuf v Quebec and ordering that it take effect immediately 31 The couple who brought the suit Michael Hendricks and Rene Leboeuf immediately sought a marriage licence the usual 20 day waiting period was waived and they were wed on April 1 at the Palais de justice in Montreal 32 33 Given the populations of Ontario British Columbia and Quebec more than two thirds of Canada s population lived in provinces where same sex marriage had been legalized after the Quebec decision Yukon decision Edit Main article Same sex marriage in Yukon On July 14 2004 in Dunbar amp Edge v Yukon Government of amp Canada A G the Supreme Court of Yukon issued another similar ruling with immediate effect 34 Rather than reproducing the Charter equality arguments used by the other courts the court ruled that since the provincial courts of appeal had ruled that the heterosexual definition of marriage was unconstitutional it was unconstitutional across Canada The position was strengthened by the Attorney General s refusal to appeal those rulings It further ruled that to continue to restrict marriages in Yukon to opposite sex couples would result in an unacceptable state of a provision s being in force in one jurisdiction and not another On August 16 2004 Justice Minister Irwin Cotler indicated that the federal government would no longer oppose court cases to implement same sex marriage in the provinces and territories 35 Manitoba decision Edit Main article Same sex marriage in Manitoba See also Common law relationships in Manitoba On September 16 2004 Justice Douglas Yard of the Manitoba Court of Queen s Bench declared the then current definition of marriage unconstitutional The judge said that his decision had been influenced by the previous decisions in British Columbia Ontario and Quebec 36 This decision followed suits brought by three couples in Manitoba requesting that they be issued marriage licences Both the provincial and federal governments had made it known that they would not oppose the court bid One of the couples Chris Vogel and Richard North had legally sought the right to marry in a high profile case in 1974 but had been denied 37 Nova Scotia decision Edit Main article Same sex marriage in Nova Scotia In August 2004 three couples in Nova Scotia brought suit in Boutilier et al v Canada A G and Nova Scotia A G against the provincial government requesting that it issue marriage licences to same sex couples On September 24 2004 Justice Heather Robertson of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court ruled the then current law unconstitutional Neither the federal nor the provincial governments opposed the ruling 3 Saskatchewan decision Edit Main article Same sex marriage in Saskatchewan Five couples brought suit in Saskatchewan for the recognition of their marriage in a case that was heard by the Saskatchewan Court of Queen s Bench in chambers on November 3 2004 38 On November 5 2004 the judge ruled that excluding same sex couples from marriage violated the Charter s right to equality and that the common law definition was discriminatory thereby bringing same sex marriage to Saskatchewan 38 39 Newfoundland and Labrador decision Edit Main article Same sex marriage in Newfoundland and Labrador Two lesbian couples brought suit on November 4 2004 to have Newfoundland and Labrador recognize same sex marriage As with the previous decisions the provincial government did not oppose the suit moreover the federal government actually supported it The case went to trial on December 20 and the next day Justice Derek Green ordered the provincial government to begin issuing marriage licences to same sex couples an order with which the provincial government announced it would comply 40 41 42 New Brunswick decision Edit Main article Same sex marriage in New Brunswick Two same sex couples in New Brunswick brought suit in April 2005 to request an order requiring the provincial government to issue them marriage licences This was granted in June 2005 Premier Bernard Lord who personally opposed same sex marriage pledged to follow a directive to provide for same sex marriages from the courts or from Parliament 43 44 Proceedings in the Northwest Territories Edit Main article Same sex marriage in the Northwest Territories On May 20 2005 a gay male couple with a daughter brought suit in the Northwest Territories for the right to marry Territorial Justice Minister Charles Dent had previously said that the government would not contest such a lawsuit The case was to be heard on May 27 but ended when the federal government legalized same sex marriage Discussion in Parliament 1995 2003 Edit The shift in Canadian attitudes towards acceptance of same sex marriage and recent court rulings caused the Parliament of Canada to reverse its position on the issue On September 18 1995 the House of Commons voted 124 to 52 to reject a motion introduced by openly gay member of Parliament Real Menard calling for the legal recognition of same sex relationships 45 46 A 2006 study by Mark W Lehman suggested that between 1997 and 2004 Canadian public opinion on legalizing same sex marriage underwent a dramatic shift moving from minority support to majority support and that this support was the result of a significant shift in positive feelings towards gays and lesbians 47 The first bill to legalize same sex marriage was a private member s bill tabled in the House of Commons by New Democratic MP Svend Robinson on March 25 1998 Like most private members bills it did not progress past first reading and was reintroduced in several subsequent parliaments 48 In 1999 the House of Commons overwhelmingly passed a resolution to re affirm the definition of marriage as the union of one man and one woman to the exclusion of all others 49 The following year this definition of marriage was included in the revised Bill C 23 the Modernization of Benefits and Obligations Act 2000 French Loi sur la modernisation de certains regimes d avantages et d obligations which continued to bar same sex couples from full marriage rights 50 In early 2003 the issue once again resurfaced and the House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights proceeded to undertake a formal study of same sex marriage including a cross country series of public hearings Just after the Ontario court decision it voted to recommend that the federal government not appeal the ruling 51 Civil status is of provincial jurisdiction in Canada However the definition of marriage is a matter of federal jurisdiction On June 17 2003 Prime Minister Chretien announced that the government would not appeal the Ontario ruling and that his government would introduce legislation to recognize same sex marriage but protect the rights of religious groups to decide which marriages they would solemnize A draft of the bill was issued on July 17 It read Marriage for civil purposes is the lawful union of two persons to the exclusion of all others Nothing in this Act affects the freedom of officials of religious groups to refuse to perform marriages that are not in accordance with their religious beliefs The draft bill was subsequently referred to the Supreme Court of Canada On September 16 2003 a motion was brought to Parliament by the Canadian Alliance now the Conservative Party to once again reaffirm the heterosexual definition of marriage The same language that had been passed in 1999 was brought to a conscience vote with members asked to vote for or against the 1999 definition of marriage as the union of one man and one woman to the exclusion of all others 52 Motions are not legislatively binding in Canada and are mostly done for symbolic purposes The September vote was extremely divisive however Prime Minister Chretien reversed his previous stance and voted against the motion as did Paul Martin who later became prime minister and many other prominent Liberals Several Liberals retained their original stance however and thus the vote was not defined purely along party lines Controversially over 30 members of the House did not attend the vote the majority of whom were Liberals who had voted against legalizing same sex marriage in 1999 In the end the motion was narrowly rejected by a vote of 137 132 53 Supreme Court Reference Re Same Sex Marriage Edit Main article Reference Re Same Sex MarriageIn 2003 the Liberal government referred a draft bill on same sex marriage to the Supreme Court of Canada essentially asking it to review the bill s constitutionality before it was introduced The reference as originally posed by the Chretien government asked three questions Is the annexed Proposal for an Act respecting certain aspects of legal capacity for marriage for civil purposes within the exclusive legislative authority of the Parliament of Canada If not in what particular or particulars and to what extent If the answer to question 1 is yes is section 1 of the proposal which extends capacity to marry to persons of the same sex consistent with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms If not in what particular or particulars and to what extent Does the freedom of religion guaranteed by paragraph 2 a of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms protect religious officials from being compelled to perform a marriage between two persons of the same sex that is contrary to their religious beliefs The government of Prime Minister Martin later added a fourth question in January 2004 54 Is the opposite sex requirement for marriage for civil purposes as established by the common law and set out for Quebec in s 5 of the Federal Law Civil Law Harmonization Act No 1 consistent with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms If not in what particular or particulars and to what extent The addition of a fourth question considerably delayed the opening of the court reference until well after the June 2004 general election raising accusations of stalling 55 In its hearings that began in October 2004 the Supreme Court of Canada accused the government of using the court for other goals when it declined to appeal rulings that altered the definition of marriage in several provinces Justice Ian Binnie said it may not fulfill any useful purpose to examine traditional marriage all over again given the policy decision of the government 56 The Supreme Court of Canada ruled that the government has the authority to amend the definition of marriage but did not rule on whether or not such a change is required by the equality provisions of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms The court stated that such a ruling is not necessary because the federal government had accepted the rulings of provincial courts to the effect that the change was required The court also ruled that given the freedom of religion provisions in the Charter and the wording of provincial human rights codes it was highly unlikely that religious institutions could be compelled to perform same sex marriages though because solemnization of marriage is a matter for provincial governments the proposed bill could not actually guarantee such protections 57 Debate prior to C 38 s introduction Edit On December 9 2004 Prime Minister Martin indicated that the federal government would introduce legislation expanding marriage to same sex couples The government s decision was announced immediately following the court s answer in the Reference Re Same Sex Marriage reference question 58 The parliamentary bill caused rifts in the House of Commons especially among the governing Liberals Many Liberal MPs indicated that they would oppose the government s position in favour of same sex marriage at a free vote The majority of each of the Liberal Party the New Democratic Party and the Bloc Quebecois voted in favour of the bill the majority of the Conservative Party voted against the bill 59 60 In 2000 Alberta had amended its Marriage Act to define marriage as being between a man and a woman 61 The law included a notwithstanding clause in an attempt to protect the amendment from being invalidated under the Charter However the amendment was invalid since under the Canadian Constitution the definition of marriage is a federal right Complicating matters Conservative Party leader Stephen Harper indicated that a Conservative government would work to restore the prohibition on same sex marriage if Parliament voted to do so in a free vote 62 Following the court decision on December 9 Premier Ralph Klein of Alberta suggested that a national referendum be held on same sex marriage a measure Prime Minister Martin rejected 63 Legislative progress of the Civil Marriage Act Edit Main article Civil Marriage Act Bill C 38 the Civil Marriage Act French Loi sur le mariage civil was introduced to Parliament for its first reading in the House of Commons on February 1 2005 64 65 66 Prime Minister Martin launched the debate on February 16 The bill passed second reading on May 4 and third reading on June 28 with votes of 164 137 and 158 133 respectively 67 68 69 It then moved to the Senate and received its first reading on June 29 Debate was launched on July 4 and a Liberal closure motion limited debate on the bill to only four hours Second reading and committing the bill occurred on July 6 with a vote of 43 12 The Senate passed the legislation on third reading by a margin of 47 to 21 on July 19 2005 70 71 72 It received royal assent at the hand of Beverley McLachlin in her capacity as the Deputy of the Governor General of Canada on July 20 2005 73 28 June 2005 vote in the House of Commons of Canada 74 Party Voted for Voted against Abstained Liberal Party LPC PLC 95 Peter AdamsReg AlcockDavid AndersonJean AugustineLarry BagnellNavdeep BainsSue BarnesColleen BeaumierMauril BelangerDon BellCarolyn BennettMaurizio BevilacquaEthel Blondin AndrewFrancoise BoivinDon BoudriaClaudette BradshawScott BrisonBonnie BrownSarmite BulteAileen CarrollMarlene CatterallRaymond ChanDenis CoderreIrwin CotlerJean Claude D AmoursPaul DeVillersRuby DhallaStephane DionUjjal DosanjhClaude DrouinKen DrydenWayne EasterDavid EmersonMark EykingRaymonde FolcoJoe FontanaLiza FrullaHedy FryMarc GodboutJohn GodfreyRalph GoodaleBill GrahamAlbina GuarnieriMark HollandTony IannoMarlene JenningsSusan KadisNancy Karetak LindellJean LapierreDominic LeBlancPaul Harold MacklinDiane MarleauKeith MartinPaul MartinJohn McCallumDavid McGuintyJoe McGuireAnne McLellanMaria MinnaAndy MitchellShawn MurphyLynn MyersAnita NevilleStephen OwenDenis ParadisJim PetersonPierre PettigrewBeth PhinneyJerry PickardRuss PowersMarcel ProulxYasmin RatansiKaren RedmanGeoff ReganLucienne RobillardPablo RodriguezAnthony RotaTodd RussellJacques SaadaMichael SavageAndy ScottJudy SgroMario SilvaDavid SmithLloyd St AmandBrent St DenisBelinda StronachAndrew TelegdiLui TemelkovskiRobert ThibaultPaddy TorsneyTony ValeriRoger ValleyJoe VolpeBorys Wrzesnewskyj 32 Raymond BoninKen BoshcoffJohn CannisGary CarrBrenda ChamberlainJoe ComuzziRodger CuznerRoger GallawayCharles HubbardJim KarygiannisWajid KhanWalt LastewkaDerek LeeJudi LongfieldLawrence MacAulayGurbax Singh MalhiJohn David MaloneyBill MatthewsJohn McKayDan McTeagueMassimo PacettiAndy SavoyFrancis ScarpaleggiaRaymond SimardScott SimmsPaul StecklePaul SzaboAlan TonksRose Marie UrTom WappelBryon WilfertPaul Zed 2 Roy CullenBernard Patry Conservative Party CPC PCC 3 Gerald KeddyJames MooreJim Prentice 93 Jim AbbottDiane AblonczyDean AllisonRona AmbroseRob AndersDavid AndersonDave BattersLeon BenoitJames BezanGarry BreitkreuzGord BrownColin CarrieBill CaseyRick CassonDavid ChattersMichael ChongJohn CumminsStockwell DayBarry DevolinNorman DoyleJohn DuncanKen EppDiane FinleyBrian FitzpatrickSteven FletcherPaul ForsethCheryl GallantPeter GoldringGary GoodyearNina GrewalGurmant GrewalHelena GuergisArt HangerStephen HarperDick HarrisJeremy HarrisonLoyola HearnRuss HiebertJay HillBetty HintonRahim JafferBrian JeanDale JohnstonRandy KampJason KenneyEd KomarnickiDaryl KrampGuy LauzonTom LukiwskiGary LunnJames LunneyPeter MacKayDave MacKenzieInky MarkTed MenziesRob MerrifieldLarry MillerBob MillsRob MooreRob NicholsonDeepak ObhraiGordon O ConnorBev OdaBrian PallisterPierre PoilievreJoe PrestonJames RajotteScott ReidJohn ReynoldsLee RichardsonGerry RitzAndrew ScheerGary SchellenbergerWerner SchmidtCarol SkeltonJoy SmithMonte SolbergKevin SorensonDarrel StinsonChuck StrahlMyron ThompsonGreg ThompsonDavid TilsonVic ToewsBrad TrostMerv TweedPeter Van LoanMaurice VellacottMark WarawaJeff WatsonRandy WhiteJohn WilliamsLynne Yelich Bloc Quebecois BQ 43 Guy AndreClaude BachandAndre BellavanceBernard BigrasRaynald BlaisAlain BoireFrance BonsantMarc BoulianneDiane BourgeoisPaule BrunelleRobert CarrierRoger ClavetBernard ClearyGuy CotePaul CreteNicole DemersJohanne DeschampsGilles DuceppeMeili FailleChristiane GagnonMarcel GagnonSebastien GagnonMichel GauthierMonique GuayMichel GuimondMario LaframboiseFrancine LalondeReal LapierreCarole LavalleeMarc LemayYves LessardYvon LevesqueYvan LoubierRichard MarceauReal MenardSerge MenardPauline PicardLouis PlamondonDenise Poirier RivardJean Yves RoyBenoit SauvageauChristian SimardRobert Vincent 5 Robert BouchardSerge CardinRoger GaudetGilles PerronLouise Thibault 2 Stephane BergeronPierre Paquette New Democratic Party NDP NPD 17 Charlie AngusBill BlaikieEd BroadbentDavid ChristophersonJoe ComartinJean CrowderNathan CullenLibby DaviesYvon GodinPeter JulianJack LaytonTony MartinPat MartinBrian MasseAlexa McDonoughBill SiksayPeter Stoffer 1 Bev Desjarlais Independent 2 David KilgourPat O Brien Total 158 133 419 July 2005 vote in the Senate of Canada 75 Party Voted for Voted against Abstained Liberal Party LPC PLC 41 Jack AustinLise BaconGeorge BakerMichel BironJohn G BrydenCatherine CallbeckMaria ChaputMarie Charette PoulinIone ChristensenJoan CookJane CordyRomeo DallairePercy DowneArt EggletonJoyce FairbairnRoss FitzpatrickGeorge FureyJerry GrafsteinMac HarbLibbe HubleyMobina JafferSerge JoyalColin KennyRose Marie Losier CoolShirley MaheuFrank MahovlichPaul MassicotteTerry MercerLorna MilneGrant MitchellJim MunsonLandon PearsonLucie PepinRobert PetersonVivienne PoyPierrette RinguetteFernand RobichaudBill RompkeyDavid SmithClaudette TardifMarilyn Trenholme Counsell 5 Tommy BanksCeline Hervieux PayettePana MerchantGerard PhalenNick Sibbeston 2 Eymard CorbinWilfred Moore Conservative Party CPC PCC 1 Michael Meighen 15 W David AngusJohn BuchananEthel CochraneGerald ComeauAnne CoolsConsiglio Di NinoTrevor EytonMichael ForrestallLenard GustafsonJames KelleherWilbert KeonNoel KinsellaGerry St GermainTerry StrattonDavid Tkachuk 1 Marjory LeBreton Progressive Conservative Party PC 2 Norman AtkinsNancy Ruth Independent New Democratic Party NDP NPD 1 Lillian Dyck Independent 2 Marcel Prud hommeMira Spivak 1 Madeleine Plamondon Total 47 21 3Same sex marriage in the 39th Parliament Edit Main article Members of the 39th Canadian Parliament and same sex marriage The Conservative Party led by Harper won a minority government in the federal election on January 23 2006 Harper had campaigned on the promise of holding a conscience vote on a motion to re open the debate on same sex marriage 62 The motion would re open the same sex marriage debate but did not prescribe restoring the opposite sex definition of marriage A news report from CTV News on May 31 2006 showed that a growing number of Conservatives were wary about re opening the debate on same sex marriage One cabinet minister stated he just wanted the issue to go away while others including Chuck Strahl and Bill Casey were undecided instead of directly opposed 76 Foreign Affairs Minister Peter MacKay noted that not a single constituent had approached him on the issue and Minister for Fisheries and Oceans Loyola Hearn was against re opening the debate 76 By November 2006 the debate had shifted and it was the supporters of same sex marriage that were arguing for a fall vote on the issue and the opponents who were lobbying for a delay 77 78 On December 6 2006 the government brought in a motion asking if the issue of same sex marriage debate should be re opened This motion was defeated the next day in a vote of 175 nays to 123 yeas 79 80 81 Prime Minister Harper afterwards told reporters I don t see reopening this question in the future 82 83 84 Recognition of foreign legal unions Edit In Hincks v Gallardo the Ontario Superior Court of Justice decided on January 7 2013 that same sex partners who entered into civil partnerships in the United Kingdom are to be treated as married for the purposes of Canadian law 85 Marriage statistics Edit From June 2003 date of the first same sex marriages in Ontario to October 2006 12 438 same sex marriages were contracted in Canada 86 Province Date of legalization Number of same sex marriagesOntario June 10 2003 6 524British Columbia July 8 2003 3 927Quebec March 19 2004 947Alberta July 20 2005 409Nova Scotia September 24 2004 273Manitoba September 16 2004 193Saskatchewan November 5 2004 83New Brunswick June 23 2005 44Newfoundland and Labrador December 21 2004 14Yukon July 14 2004 13Prince Edward Island July 20 2005 8Northwest Territories July 20 2005 2Nunavut July 20 2005 1By 2011 21 015 same sex marriages had been performed in Canada 87 with an additional 43 560 cohabiting same sex couples According to the 2016 census there were 72 880 same sex couples residing in Canada of which 24 370 33 4 percent were married 88 In British Columbia 38 5 percent of all same sex couples were married compared to 38 2 percent in Ontario and 22 5 percent in Quebec 10 020 children were living in same sex families 89 Other same sex partner benefits in Canada EditOther kinds of partnership Edit See also Common law marriage Canada Canadian cohabiting same sex couples are entitled to many of the same legal and financial benefits as married opposite sex couples In 1999 after the court case of M v H the Supreme Court of Canada declared that same sex partners must also be extended the rights and benefits of common law relationships The province of Quebec also offers civil unions to same sex couples Nova Scotia s domestic partnerships offer similar benefits Legislative changes between 2001 and 2004 extended the benefits of common law relationships in Manitoba to same sex couples as well as those of different sex In 2003 Alberta passed a law recognizing adult interdependent relationships These relationships provide specific financial benefits to interdependent adults including blood relations 90 Recognition in other provinces and territories Edit Main article Same sex marriage in Alberta The legal status of same sex marriages in provinces and territories that did not perform them was uncertain prior to the passage of the Civil Marriage Act One of the couples that brought suit in Nova Scotia acted so that their Ontario marriage would be recognized Premier Ralph Klein wanted to prevent same sex marriages from being performed or recognized in Alberta but eventually admitted that the province s chances of doing so were slim to none and said Alberta would obey the legislation 91 By contrast the other remaining province without same sex marriage Prince Edward Island announced that it would voluntarily bring its laws into compliance with the federal legislation In October 2003 Premier Paul Okalik announced that Nunavut would recognize same sex marriages performed in other provinces and territories Immigration Edit Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada IRCC acknowledges same sex marriages contracted in Canada between immigration applicants and Canadian citizens or permanent residents Canadians may also sponsor their same sex common law or civil union partners for family class immigration provided they meet various requirements including proof of legitimacy and cohabitation for at least one year After the enactment of the Civil Marriage Act IRCC adopted an interim immigration policy which did not recognize same sex marriages conducted outside of Canada For example a Canadian citizen legally married in the Netherlands to his or her same sex Dutch partner could not sponsor his or her Dutch partner for immigration as a spouse despite the fact that both Dutch law and Canadian law made no distinction between opposite sex and same sex civil marriages and despite the fact that IRCC did recognize a Dutch opposite sex marriage On December 12 2006 New Democratic Party MP Bill Siksay introduced a motion in the House of Commons of Canada Standing Committee on Citizenship and Immigration calling on the IRCC to immediately rescind the interim policy and recognize legal marriages of gay and lesbian couples performed in jurisdictions outside Canada for purposes of immigration in exactly the same way as the legal marriages of heterosexual couples are recognized the committee voted to recommend that the government do this 92 In late January 2007 Citizenship and Immigration Minister Diane Finley informed the committee that this would be done 93 In February 2007 the IRCC website was updated to reflect the fact that the policy had been updated 94 Military Edit See also Same sex unions and military policy Canada Since September 2003 military chaplains have been allowed to bless same sex unions and to perform these ceremonies on a military base 95 Survivor benefits Edit On December 19 2003 an Ontario court ruled that survivor benefits for Canadians whose same sex partners died should be retroactive to April 1985 the date the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms came into effect The federal government appealed On March 1 2007 the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that the federal government must pay Canada Pension Plan benefits to surviving same sex spouses 96 Initial news reports indicated that the court limited retroactive benefits to only 12 months worth but in fact some survivors may be entitled to benefits dating back to 2000 97 98 Same sex divorce in Canada EditOn September 13 2004 a lesbian couple known as M M and J H the initials of their respective lawyers in Ontario were granted Canada s first same sex divorce Their initial divorce application had been denied based on the fact that the federal Divorce Act French Loi sur le divorce defined spouse as either of a man or a woman who are married to each other However Madam Justice Ruth Mesbur of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice ruled in M M v J H that the definition of spouse in the Divorce Act was unconstitutional 99 100 In June 2005 a lesbian couple residing in British Columbia obtained a similar ruling 101 The Civil Marriage Act in 2005 amended the Divorce Act to permit same sex divorce However prior to 2013 a married couple same sex or opposite sex could file for divorce in Canada only if at least one spouse was then residing in Canada and had been for at least one full year when the divorce was filed 102 In 2012 after the Attorney General of Canada Rob Nicholson suggested in a divorce case brought in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice that non residents of Canada did not have valid marriages if such marriages were not recognized by their home jurisdictions 103 the Conservative government announced that they would fix this legislative gap 104 A government bill the Civil Marriage of Non residents Act French Loi sur le mariage civil de non residents positively declaring such marriages legal in Canada and allowing non residents to divorce in a Canadian court if prohibited from doing so in their home jurisdictions was introduced and received first reading on February 17 2012 and passed third and final reading on June 18 2013 The bill then received a quick passage through the Senate and passed third and final reading on June 21 receiving royal assent by Governor General David Johnston on June 26 105 106 The law came into effect on August 14 by Order of the Governor General in Council made the previous day 107 Church and state EditBased on the 2001 census 80 percent of the Canadian population were initiated into one of the three main Abrahamic religions Judaism Islam and Christianity 108 109 All three have texts interpreted by some to declare sexual relations between people of the same sex as forbidden and sinful and have been opposed to the recognition of same sex unions However some major religious groups spoke in favour of legalizing same sex marriage The largest Protestant denomination in the country the United Church of Canada offers church weddings to same sex couples and supports same sex marriages testifying to this effect during the cross country Justice Committee hearings Unitarian Universalist congregations also solemnize same sex marriages as do the Religious Society of Friends Quakers the Metropolitan Community Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada Some progressive Jewish congregations have also supported same sex marriage The General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada passed an initial motion in July 2016 to perform same sex marriages in their churches The measure had to be approved a second time at the next General Synod in 2019 to come into force 110 The Anglican Church of Canada does not specifically prohibit same sex marriage On July 12 2019 the General Synod did not approve the motion at its second reading In spite of support by the laity and clergy the motion did not pass because it was not supported by a full two thirds of the bishops Director of Communications Meghan Kilty said that many dioceses have been performing same sex marriages including the dioceses of Toronto Ottawa British Columbia and others Kilty added that many dioceses would continue to perform such services since there is no specific prohibition by the Church 111 In July 2003 the hierarchy of the Catholic Church in Canada protested the Chretien government s plans to include same sex couples in civil marriage This was significant because Catholicism has a larger number of adherents in Canada than any other religion or denomination with 43 6 percent of the population identifying themselves as Catholic in 2005 112 The church criticisms were accompanied by Vatican claims that Catholic politicians should vote according to their personal beliefs rather than the policy of the government Amid a subsequent backlash in opinion the Church remained remarkably quiet on the subject at least in public until late 2004 when two Catholic bishops clearly stated their opposition to same sex marriage The Bishop of Calgary Frederick Henry in a pastoral letter urged Catholics to fight against the legalization of same sex marriage calling homosexual behaviour an evil act 113 Bishop Henry s letter also seemed to urge the outlawing of homosexual acts saying Since homosexuality adultery prostitution and pornography undermine the foundations of the family the basis of society then the State must use its coercive power to proscribe or curtail them in the interests of the common good 113 Two human rights complaints were filed against Henry soon afterward under the Alberta Human Rights Act one of which was dropped at the conciliation stage The Hutterite Brethren spoke out against same sex marriage in a letter written to Prime Minister Martin in February 2005 114 The group has historically not involved themselves with politics The Humanist Association of Canada which endorses a non theistic non religious ethical philosophy to life and full separation of church and state has been supportive of same sex marriage Local affiliate groups of the Humanist Association offer officiancy services across Canada Representatives of the World Sikh Organization testified before the Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs in favour of the Civil Marriage Act 115 Public opinion EditA 1996 Angus Reid Institute Southam News opinion poll conducted across Canada found that 49 percent of Canadians supported same sex marriage while 47 percent were opposed Support was highest in Quebec 58 percent and among 18 34 year olds 67 percent and lowest in Alberta 38 percent and people over the age of 54 25 percent 116 In 1999 the group found support at 53 percent with 44 percent opposed 116 An April 2001 Environics Research Group survey showed that 45 percent of Canadians supported same sex marriage 29 percent strongly and 16 percent somewhat while 41 percent opposed 30 percent strongly and 11 percent somewhat 116 A June 2002 survey conducted by Focus on the Family Canada a group opposed to same sex marriage found that 46 percent of Canadians agreed same sex marriage should be legalized whereas 44 percent disagreed 116 A poll conducted by the Centre for Research and Information on Canada in October 2002 showed that 53 percent of Canadians supported same sex marriage while 41 percent were opposed 116 A November 2002 Ekos CBC poll asked respondents if they would vote yes or no in a referendum on the issue of same sex marriage 47 percent answered no and 45 percent answered yes while 8 percent did not know 116 A 2005 opinion poll taken shortly before Parliament voted on the Civil Marriage Act found that 42 percent of Canadians favoured the nationwide legalization of same sex marriage while 40 percent were opposed and 18 percent did not respond or were undecided 117 A June 2006 poll conducted by Ekos asked respondents if the debate on same sex marriage should be reopened 62 percent considered same sex marriage settled 27 percent wanted to reopen the issue and 11 percent either had no opinion or did not respond 118 In 2012 a poll by Forum Research showed that 66 4 percent of Canadians approved of legalized same sex marriage while 33 6 percent were opposed Support for same sex marriage was highest in Quebec 72 percent and British Columbia 70 2 percent while lowest in Alberta 45 6 percent 119 A May 2013 Ipsos poll of residents of 16 countries found that 63 percent of respondents in Canada were in favour of same sex marriage and another 13 percent supported other forms of recognition for same sex couples 120 After same sex marriage in the United States was legalized by their Supreme Court in Obergefell v Hodges in June 2015 a poll by Forum Research showed that 70 percent of Canadians approved of same sex marriage while 22 percent disapproved 121 In May 2016 members of the Conservative Party of Canada voted 1 036 462 to change the party s political platform from defining marriage as a union between one man and one woman to a neutral stance As a compromise the party did not elect to support the right to same sex marriage allowing members the freedom to hold personal opinions against same sex marriage 122 A 2017 CROP poll showed that 74 percent of Canadians found it great that in Canada two people of the same sex can get married while 26 percent disagreed Support for same sex marriage was higher among women 79 percent than men 70 percent and higher among French speakers 82 percent than English speakers 73 percent Those with a higher income a university degree or who were born in Canada were also more likely to support same sex marriage When divided by age young people were overwhelmingly in support 82 percent among 18 24 year olds and 86 percent among 25 34 year olds and while people over 65 were less likely to be in favour same sex marriage still enjoyed 66 percent popular support among people of that age group The most supportive province was Quebec 80 percent followed by 78 percent in the four Atlantic provinces 75 percent in British Columbia 73 percent in Ontario 70 percent in Manitoba and Saskatchewan and 68 percent in Alberta 123 124 The 2017 AmericasBarometer showed that 76 percent of Canadians supported same sex marriage 125 A 2020 Research Co poll found that 67 percent of Canadians supported same sex marriage remaining legal 126 A 2022 Research Co poll found that number had remained quite stable at 66 percent 127 See also Edit Canada portal LGBT portalLGBT rights in Canada Marriage in Canada Members of the 38th Canadian Parliament and same sex marriage Members of the 39th Canadian Parliament and same sex marriage Religion in Canada Timeline of LGBT history 2005 in LGBT rights Recognition of same sex unions in the Americas He never marriedReferences Edit Canada passes bill to legalize gay marriage The New York Times June 29 2005 Archived from the original on September 5 2014 Retrieved November 3 2013 First same sex marriage in the world now recognized Samesexmarriage ca Archived from the 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Are you in favour of same sex marriage 74 of Canadians and 80 of Quebecers support it www crop ca Archived from the original on April 6 2019 Retrieved April 28 2018 Cultura Politica de la Democracia en La Republica Dominicana y en Las Americas 2016 17 PDF Archived PDF from the original on April 19 2019 Retrieved February 15 2019 Canseco Mario December 4 2020 Canadians and Americans Would Ban Conversion Therapy Research Co Archived from the original on December 4 2020 Retrieved December 12 2020 Carrillo Eliana April 29 2022 Most Canadians Agree with Nationwide Conversion Therapy Ban Research Co Archived from the original on April 29 2022 Retrieved April 29 2022 Bibliography EditHull Kathleen 2006 Same sex marriage the cultural politics of love and law Cambridge Univ Press ISBN 0521672511 Lahey Kathleen A Alderson Kevin 2004 Same sex marriage the personal and the political Insomniac Press ISBN 1 894663 63 2 Larocque Sylvain 2006 Gay Marriage The Story of a Canadian Social Revolution Toronto James Lorimer amp Company ISBN 1 55028 927 6 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Same sex marriage in Canada Website of Egale Canada Website of Canadians for Equal Marriage Website of Marriage Vote Canada Website of Defend Marriage Canada Archived June 16 2006 at the Wayback Machine Redefining Marriage A Case for Caution Archived July 23 2020 at the Wayback Machine Brief to the Parliamentary Justice Committee CBC News Indepth Same Sex Marriage in Canada Archived June 10 2008 at the Wayback Machine Full text of NFO CF Group survey PDF Archived September 10 2008 at the Wayback Machine Supreme Court OK s same sex marriage CBC News December 10 2004 Archived from the original on October 16 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Same sex marriage in Canada amp oldid 1149983695, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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