New York Rejects Gay Marriage In The Senate

Advocates of gay marriage suffered yet another blow yesterday, as the New York State Senate voted 24-38 to reject a proposal that would have legalized same-sex marriages in the state of New York.  Governor Patterson had pledged to sign the legislation.

This comes right on the heels of the Maine voters approving a veto that overturned a similar piece of legislation aimed at extending equal marriage rights to homosexual couples.

Indeed, the debate in the New York Senate (which, if you can believe it, is more conservative than the Maine Senate) echoed almost exactly the debate in the Maine legislature earlier this year.  The same types of testimonials, the same commentary about faith and politics, the same discussions of equal rights, and most of all, the same call for “the voters of the state to decide” rather than politicians.

But unlike Maine, this time the legislature itself put a stop to talk of same sex marriage, and after passing the New York Assembly, it died in the Senate.

So goes the nation, indeed.

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About Matthew Gagnon

Matthew Gagnon is the Editor In Chief of Pine Tree Politics. Matt grew up in Hampden, Maine and went on to study Political Science at the University of Maine. He has since moved to Washington DC, where he has worked as Deputy Director of Digital Strategy for the National Republican Senatorial Committee, and later as the Director of New Media Communications for Senator Susan Collins. He currently works for New Media Strategies, an Arlington based firm specializing in digital strategy and communications.