Australian prime minister promises gay marriage ‘in 100 days’ if re-elected
Kevin Rudd says he will introduce legislation ‘as a mark of decency’
Australian
prime minister Kevin Rudd (left) and opposition leader Tony Abbott
shake hands at the beginning of the leaders’ debate at the National
Press Club in Canberra yesterday. Photograph: AP Photo/Andrew Meares
The Australian
prime minister has used the first election debate to promise legislation
on gay marriage within 100 days were he to be re-elected, “as a mark of
decency to same-sex couples across the country”.
Kevin Rudd and opposition leader Tony Abbott
discussed the economy and immigration in the first televised debate
before the September 7th election, facing about an hour of questions
from journalists at the National Press Club in Canberra.
Mr
Rudd said he supported legalising same-sex marriage to recognise
couples “who wish the same loving, caring relationship that, for
example, I have had with Therese, my wife, now for the last 32 years,
and for that to be formalised”.
He promised Labor MPs a free vote on the
issue and appealed to Mr Abbott to do the same “because folk out there
want this to happen”. Mr Abbott said same-sex marriage was “a very
important issue”, acknowledging his gay sister, Christine Forster, who
was in the audience with her partner.
He said the
matter had been recently debated by the parliament and would not be a
high priority for an incoming Liberal-National coalition. Mr Abbott said
it would be up to the coalition to decide whether its MPs should get a
conscience vote.
Same-sex marriage arose in the
final minutes of an encounter that was dominated by economic policy. The
leaders were fairly evenly matched – two of the voter reaction “worms”
run by commercial television stations gave the debate to Mr Rudd and one
to Mr Abbott, but many commentators thought the coalition leader had
come out narrowly ahead.
The Guardian’s worm gave Mr Rudd a comprehensive win.
On
climate change, Mr Abbott refused to countenance emission reductions
beyond 5 per cent by 2020, despite having signed up to the same higher
targets as Labor under the same conditions for action by other
countries.
He did not deal in “hypotheticals” and
implied there was no need to move further because fewer countries were
meeting their emission reduction obligations with a carbon tax.
Mr
Rudd said Labor would honour Australia’s international obligations and
took a dig at Mr Abbott’s previous doubts about climate science. “We
will be doing a disservice to our kids and grandkids if we do not act . .
.
“We never doubted the science, unlike some. What really frightens the hell out of me – to be frank – in my home state of Queensland is the effect on the Great Barrier Reef.”
On economics, Mr Rudd’s attack centred on the allegation that Mr Abbott was favouring big corporations over families.
He
said he was offering “tax cuts that benefit very large corporations in
the main – there’s not a lot in it for families”. Mr Abbott said his
company tax cuts were all about economic growth to protect people’s
jobs.
However after Mr Rudd had again recited his
plan to deal with an end to the mining investment boom by improving
productivity, Mr Abbott delivered his most cut-through attack line,
saying Mr Rudd had “said exactly the same thing in this debate six years
ago” when he was competing against former prime minister John Howard. – (Guardian service)
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