THE NEW YORK TIMES 
  
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    June 15, 2007
  
  Massachusetts Gay Marriage to Remain Legal   By PAM BELLUCK
   
    BOSTON, June 14 — Same-sex marriage will continue to be legal in 
Massachusetts, after proponents in both houses won a pitched months-long battle 
on Thursday to defeat a proposed constitutional amendment to define marriage as 
between a man and a woman.
  “In Massachusetts today, the freedom to marry is secure,” Gov. Deval Patrick 
said after the legislature voted 151 to 45 against the amendment, which needed 
50 favorable votes to come before voters in a referendum in November 2008.
   
  The vote means that opponents would have to start from Square 1 to sponsor a 
new amendment, which could not get on the ballot before 2012. Massachusetts is 
the only state where same-sex marriage is legal, although five states allow 
civil unions or the equivalent.
  Thursday’s victory for same-sex marriage was not a foregone conclusion, 
especially after the amendment won first-round approval from the previous 
legislature in January, with 62 lawmakers supporting it.
   
  As late as a couple of hours before the 1 p.m. vote on Thursday, advocates on 
both sides of the issue said they were not sure of the outcome. The 
eleventh-hour decisions of several legislators to vote against the amendment 
followed intensive lobbying by the leaders of the House and Senate and Governor 
Patrick, who, like most members of the legislature, is a Democrat.
   
  “I think I am going to be doing a certain number of fund-raisers for 
districts, and I am happy to do that,” said Mr. Patrick, who said he had tried 
to persuade lawmakers not only that same-sex marriage should be allowed but 
also that a 2008 referendum would be divisive and distract from other important 
state issues. 
   
  About 8,500 same-sex couples have married in Massachusetts since the unions 
became legal in May 2004. In December 2005, opponents, led by the Massachusetts 
Family Institute, gathered a record 170,000 signatures for an amendment banning 
same-sex marriage, a measure that was supported by Mr. Patrick’s predecessor, 
Gov. Mitt Romney, a Republican who is now running for president.
   
  Kris Mineau, president of the institute, did not indicate on Thursday whether 
opponents would start a new petition drive, but said, “We’re not going away.” 
  “We want to find out why votes switched and see what avenues are available to 
challenge those votes, perhaps in court,” Mr. Mineau said. 
   
  The vote reflected changes in the legislature, the election of Mr. Patrick, 
and lobbying by national and local gay rights groups.
   
  “This was the focus of our national community,” said Matt Foreman, executive 
director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. “Frankly, a loss today 
would have been very demoralizing.”
   
  It is difficult to know how support for same-sex marriage has changed since 
legalization because polls taken before and after have asked different 
questions. The most recent Massachusetts poll, in April 2007, found that 56 
percent of those surveyed would oppose the amendment. 
   
  One legislator who switched his vote was Representative Paul Kujawski, 
Democrat of Uxbridge, saying meetings with gay and lesbian constituents 
convinced him that “I couldn’t take away the happiness those people have been 
able to enjoy.”
  Mr. Kujawski, who said he grew up in a conservative Roman Catholic 
neighborhood and had not understood gay relationships, said, “So many people 
said, ‘I didn’t ask to be gay; I was born this way.’ ” 
   
  He added, “Our job is to help people who need help, and I feel the gay side 
of the issue needed more help than the other side.”
  Senator Gale D. Candaras, a Democrat, voted against the amendment Thursday, 
although she had supported it as a state representative in January. Ms. 
Candaras said her vote reflected constituent views in her larger, more 
progressive Senate district and her fear of a vicious referendum campaign.
   
  Most moving, she said, were older constituents who had changed their views 
after meeting gay men and lesbians. One woman had “asked me to put it on the 
ballot for a vote, but since then a lovely couple moved in,” Ms. Candaras said. 
“She said, ‘They help me with my lawn, and if there can’t be marriage in 
Massachusetts, they’ll leave and they can’t help me with my lawn.”
   
  Unlike several previous constitutional conventions on same-sex marriage with 
impassioned soliloquies, Thursday’s session took barely 10 minutes. Afterward, 
supporters of same-sex marriage, many in tears, erupted in standing ovations.
     
  Katie Zezima contributed reporting.



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