Germany to legalise same-sex marriage.

Germany is expected to legalise same-sex marriage, joining many other western democracies in granting gay and lesbian couples full rights, including adoption.

The election-year bill is being pushed by Chancellor Angela Merkel’s leftist rivals who pounced on a U-turn she made Monday, a manoeuvre that left many conservative politicians fuming.

Barring an 11th-hour hiccup, the lower house is expected to approve the law on Friday, hours before
the Bundestag begins summer recess.

Gay and lesbian groups cheered the push for marriage equality in Germany, where so-called civil unions were legalised in 2001.

“It’s a real recognition, so it warms the heart,” said French engineer Christophe Tetu, 46, who lives in Berlin with his partner Timo Strobel, 51.

“We’re thinking about having a party, getting married and using our new rights to protect our relationship.”

Strobel said he too was “overjoyed” the couple would be able to show family and friends “that we are committed to each other, that we will stay together and we will spend our lives together”.

If the law passes it would probably take effect before the end of 2017.

German parliamentarians vote to put the law on legalising same-sex marriage on the agenda.

Renate Künast of the Greens party, which has pushed for decades for LGBT community rights, quipped: “I would advise all registry offices in the country to boost staff numbers
Merkel, who long opposed gay marriage with adoption rights, citing “the wellbeing of the children”, replied that her thinking had shifted since she met a lesbian couple who cared for eight foster children.

She said she favoured a vote at an undefined time when all lawmakers could follow their conscience rather than a party line.

Many read the surprising comments as a move to deny opposition parties of a strong campaign issue before the elections on 24 September.

Merkel’s coalition allies, the Social Democrats (SPD), as well as the Greens, far-left Linke and pro-business Free Democrats, have declared a same-sex marriage law as a red-line demand and precondition for an alliance.

On Tuesday, after much buzz on social media, SPD chancellor-candidate Martin Schulz took Merkel at her word and broke coalition ranks to call for an immediate vote, a move the CDU condemned as a “breach of trust” after four years of joint rule.

Merkel called the political ambush and rush to vote on such a weighty issue “sad and, above all, totally unnecessary”. But her change of stance leaves the rightwing populist Alternative for Germany as the only party to oppose same-sex marriage.

The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, a conservative daily, predicted that after the vote “it will be said Angela Merkel has avoided another stumbling block to post-election coalition talks.

“But the CDU will also have lost its right to be called a conservative party – and instead now appears willing to throw any conservative values overboard in order to keep up with the times.”

Markus Ulrich of the Lesbian and Gay Federation in Germany said Merkel had long argued against gay marriage “in an emotional way and never with real arguments”.

He added: “It’s very good that she took some time to better understand the reality of same-sex families and couples, in order to get a better picture of the situation. We think it’s very good and, even if this is happening only because of the electoral campaign, it doesn’t matter.”

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