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Thursday, May 24, 11:59 a.m.
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Maine to vote on gay marriage in Nov.

Maine has another chance to weigh in on the issue of same-sex marriage.

On July 1, one day before the deadline, nearly 100,000 signatures opposing the new law were submitted to Secretary of State Matthew Dunlap, almost double what is needed for a people’s referendum. After certifying more than 60,000 signatures, Dunlap agreed Sept. 3 to add the referendum to the Nov. 3 ballot.

Gov. Baldacci signed the law May 6, an hour after the Maine Senate passed the bill. Sept. 12 would have been the first day same-sex couples in Maine could legally marry, according to Dunlap, but because of the people’s veto it has been indefinitely postponed.

Question No. 1 will read: “Do you want to reject the new law that lets same-sex couples marry and allows individuals and religious institutions to refuse to perform these marriages?”

C.J. Bearce, the University of Maine campus organizer with League of Young Voters, an organization that encourages young people to engage in the democratic process, anticipated the law would be met with resistance.

“We hit the ground running with the assumption that they [opposition groups] would [resist],” Bearce said.

Bearce is one of three campus organizers for League of Young Voters in Maine. He started out volunteering and has since decided to dedicate more of his time to the organization.

“We’re trying to get a lot of local donations and raise money the grass roots way,” Bearce said.

Groups such as Equality Maine, a coalition partner with League of Young Voters, began campaigning around the same time the opposition first circulated petitions.

Equality Maine works closely with the Rainbow Resource Center — a resource center for the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community at UMaine — and has received support from university clubs like Wilde Stein, Progressive Student Alliance and the Student Women’s Association.

UMaine College Republicans member Timothy Woodman plans to vote for overturning Maine’s gay marriage law this fall. He is in favor of No. 1 because “religious organizations will no longer be forced to perform same sex marriages,” he said.

“The College Republicans as a whole do not have a stance,” said College Republicans Vice President Joe Grace. “It doesn’t need to be made into a partisan issue.”

According to Mary Conroy, a volunteer coordinator and deputy communications director at Stand for Marriage Maine, the group that organized the people’s veto, it is supported financially by four national sources: the National Organization for Marriage, the Maine chapter of Focus on the Family, the Portland Roman Catholic Diocese and Family Resource. A full list of Stand for Marriage Maine supporters is available on its Web site: standformarriagemaine.com.

In July, with two months of campaigning behind them, Stand for Marriage Maine members had raised $350,000.

“I have friends who are homosexual. … They don’t think [the law] is a big deal. It’d be a big deal to get rid of it,” said Lindsey James, a fourth-year psychology student.

Mary Emmi contributed to this report.

FOR THE RECORD: A previous version of this article mistated the name of the Student Women’s Association — not the Student Women’s Alliance — and used the word transexual in place of the word transgender.

  • boarderthom

    Economic issues matter and marriage is an economic issue. Studies show that married people are slightly healthier (less costs) and wealthier (pay more taxes) than their single counterparts and this is true for gay people as well. Therefore, it is in the state’s best economic interest to grant marriage equality. This is because there are thousands of rights and responsibilities that come with the legal contract of marriage (yes, marriage is a legal contract). Gay people deserve these rights and responsibilities.

  • Lynn

    Maybe someone can clarify this for me…

    “UMaine College Republicans member Timothy Woodman plans to vote for overturning Maine’s gay marriage law this fall. He is in favor of No. 1 because “religious organizations will no longer be forced to perform same sex marriages,” he said.”

    And…

    “…and allows individuals and religious institutions to refuse to perform these marriages”

    *sigh*

  • http://truthabout1.org/ Matt

    College Republican Timothy Woodman is misinformed: no religious organization, under any circumstances, will ever be forced to perform any marriage it doesn’t want to. There is already a “religious freedom” clause built into the law; so even if gay couples are allowed to get married, no religious group will ever be forced to officiate.

    Lots of religious organizations oppose Question 1, since it would limit the marriages that they are allowed to perform. Lots of Republicans oppose it, too, because it’s government interference in our personal lives.

    College Republican leaders should educate themselves about what’s at stake before they start making assumptions about the ballot measure.

  • Nate Barton

    “UMaine College Republicans member Timothy Woodman plans to vote for overturning Maine’s gay marriage law this fall. He is in favor of No. 1 because “religious organizations will no longer be forced to perform same sex marriages,” he said.”

    Well, UMaine College Republicans member Timothy Woodman should get an “F”. He flunks.

    Maines same-sex marriage law explicitly affirms religious freedom and guarantees that NO church will be required to recognize or perform same-sex marriages.

  • http://justicesofthepeace.blogspot.com Joe Mustich, JP

    Jeez Maine.

    But kudos to most of New England and Iowa for supporting marriage.

    Couples are coming to CT to wed this summer from all around the country, and they are bringing their families and friends. Congrats to all!

    Joe Mustich, Justice of the Peace,
    Washington, Connecticut, USA

    Marriage is firstly a civil matter, as marriage license are issued by and recorded in town halls not church halls, or mosques or temples in America.

    And to the marriage foes and sexually phobic, please find something else to do with your time because life’s just too short. Find love.

  • Dave

    Maine, if you don’t vote No on 1, you are going to be losers like Rhode Island… the only states in New England to not have marriage equality.

  • Melanie

    That is exactly what I was going to comment on! His reasons for being against it don’t seem to make sense based on the text of the Law…

  • alex

    homosexuality is crime and must be punished.