NEWS
RELEASE
September
17, 2003
For Immediate Release
LIBERALS AND NDP VOTE AGAINST THE TRADITIONAL DEFINITION OF MARRIAGE
“The
family is the natural and fundamental group unit of society and is entitled to
protection by society and the state.”
OTTAWA
–Garry Breitkreuz, Member of Parliament for Yorkton-Melville, expressed great
disappointment as the Canadian Alliance motion to preserve the traditional
definition of marriage as a union of one man and one woman was narrowly defeated
last evening in the House of Commons by a vote of 137-132.
In 1999, a nearly identical motion was passed with Liberal Cabinet and
backbench support by a vote of 216-55 and was a commitment by the government to
preserve traditional marriage.
“This
vote is a flip-flop by the Liberals, but it is also a broken election promise
and a violation of an international agreement they signed.
The United Nations’ Declaration of Human Rights that Canada signed onto
clearly states: 'The family is
the natural and fundamental group unit of society and is entitled to protection
by society and the state.' Why
has the Liberal government suddenly decided the traditional family no longer
needs state protection?" asked Breitkreuz.
The
outcome of the vote confirms that the Chrétien-Martin Liberals never had any
intention of defending the traditional definition of marriage.
The Liberals ran the 2000 election on their commitment to Canadians.
Their failure to appeal lower court decisions, bring forth legislation
defending the traditional definition of marriage, and yesterday’s vote all
demonstrate that the Chrétien-Martin Liberals have not been honest with the
Canadian public.
The Canadian Alliance firmly believes that
Members of Parliament should have a free vote to clearly reflect the views of
their constituents on fundamental social issues such as same-sex marriage; but
not all parties agreed. "The
New Democratic Party (NDP) did not allow this to be a free vote.
Consequently, a number of NDP Members of Parliament voted contrary to the
wishes of their own constituents on one of the most important issues affecting
Canadian society. Why should voters
support a party that doesn't even allow their own MPs to vote freely and in
accordance with their constituents’ firmly held beliefs?" demanded
Breitkreuz.
“While
the Liberals and NDP have chosen to hide behind the courts, the Canadian
Alliance will continue to honour its commitment to Canadians to defend the
traditional definition of marriage by ensuring that this law is written where
laws are meant to be written – in Parliament – and not the courts!”
concluded Breitkreuz.
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