Swiss vote 'yes' to same-sex marriage

Authored by dw.com and submitted by clayagds99

Switzerland has voted by a wide margin in favor of allowing same-sex couples to get married and adopt children, in a referendum held on Sunday.

The Alpine nation has now become the latest Western European country to recognize LGBTQ+ marriages.

Official results show 64.1% voted "yes" to legalizing same-sex marriages, while 36% voted "no," according to initial results from the gfs.bern polling agency.

However, supporters have said it could take months before such marriages could take place, mainly because of the country's administrative and legislative procedures.

Swiss parliament backs 'marriage for all'

Ahead of the vote, the government and lawmakers had urged voters to back "marriage for all" and eliminate the current "unequal treatment" of LGBTQ+ couples.

Swiss lawmakers had voted in December to legalize same-sex marriage.

But conservative politicians opposed to the law managed to secure the required 50,000 signatures to put the issue to a referendum.

Members of some Christian congregations and the right-wing Swiss People's Party (SVP) — Switzerland's largest political party — were some of the strongest opponents of marriage equality.

Switzerland decriminalized homosexuality in 1942, but local and regional police forces were known to have maintained "gay registers" until the 1990s.

Since 2007, same-sex couples have only been able to enter into a civil partnership.

While about 700 such partnerships are registered each year, this does not grant the couples the same rights as marriage does, such as citizenship and joint adoption of children.

In December, lawmakers had voted to allow lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer and intersex people to marry, instead of just acquiring civil unions.

They also backed amendments to the Swiss Civil Code, replacing words such as "bride" and "groom" with either "two people" or "the engaged."

The result of the referendum, if confirmed, would allow the marriage bill to become law.

Same-sex couples will be able to jointly adopt children, and foreign spouses could become eligible to apply for citizenship through a simplified procedure.

macskiman on September 26th, 2021 at 17:05 UTC »

Here’s a list I’ve been keeping: (Corrections appreciated)

1st Netherlands (was first in 2001, other source says 2000). 2nd Belgium - 2003. 3rd Spain - 2005. 4th Canada - 2005 (entire country). 5th South Africa - 2006. 6th Norway - 2009. 7th Sweden - 2009. 8th Portugal - 2010. 9th Iceland - 2010. 10th Argentina - 2010. 11th Denmark -2012. 12th Uruguay - 2013 (signed May 3rd effective Aug 5). 13th New Zealand - 2013 (late August). 14th Brazil (Supreme Court ruling 14 May 2013). 15th France (signed May 18th; effective May 28, 2013). 16th England & Wales - 2013. 17th Scotland - late 2014. 18th Luxembourg - 2015 (other source says 2014). 19th Ireland - 2015. 20th USA - 2015 (SCOTUS ruling). 21st Colombia - 2016 (court ruling). 22nd Slovenia - February 24, 2017. 23rd Finland (March 2017). ***Bermuda (May 2017) Ended Dec 2017. Now Domestic Partnerships. 24th Germany (July 2017). 25th Malta (July 2017). 26th Australia (December 2017). 27th Austria (January 1, 2019). 28th Taiwan (2019). 29th Ecuador (June 12, 2019). 30th Andorra (2020) ?? Pending. 31st Costa Rica (2020). 32nd Switzerland (2021).

Mexico in some areas. Israel, Mexico - recognize marriages performed in other countries. Australia ACT Oct 2013 (couple days only).

Edited to try to improve on lost formatting.

MycologistPutrid7494 on September 26th, 2021 at 15:20 UTC »

TIL that same sex marriage wasn't already allowed in Switzerland.

explicitlarynx on September 26th, 2021 at 12:21 UTC »

To preemptively answer the question: yes, it really took this long. The process was started in 2013 with a parliamentary initiative. Swiss democracy is just very, very slow.

Germany approved it in 2017, without all the timely extra steps that are needed in Switzerland and without a popular vote, so I don't even think we're terribly late to the party.

It's going to get around 66% approval, too, which is pretty good.

Edit: there is so much negativity in this thread. Can't we just be happy that LGBTQ+ people in Switzerland can now get married?