Pennsylvania Marriage Amendment

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On January 24, 2006, Pennsylvania State Representative Scott Boyd (R-Lancaster) proposed an amendment to the Pennsylvania Constitution defining marriage between one man and one woman. The language of the proposed constitutional amendment would also prevent the legislature or judiciary from creating civil unions or domestic partnerships, stating:

Only a marriage between one man and one woman shall be valid or recognized as a marriage in this Commonwealth, and neither the Commonwealth nor any of its political subdivisions shall create or recognize a legal status identical or substantially equivalent to that of marriage for unmarried individuals." [1]

On 2006-06-06, the House of Representatives approved the amendment by a vote of 136-61.[2] As of June 2006, the amendment still needed approval from the Pennsylvania State Senate and approval by both the House of Representatives and the Senate in the next legislative session before it could go to a voter referendum.

[edit] Co-sponsors & Supporters

State Representatives:
Scott Boyd (R-Lancaster)
Daryl Metcalfe (R-Butler)
Katie True (R-Lancaster)
Tom Yewcic (D-Cambria)

State Senators:
Chip Brightbill (R-Lebanon)
Bob Regola (R-Westmoreland)

Federal Legislators:
Joe Pitts (R-Lancaster)

Advocacy Groups:
-

[edit] See also



Same-sex marriage in the United States
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Flag of the United States
Legalized: Massachusetts
Law proposed: Connecticut - Illinois - Maine - New Jersey - New York - Rhode Island

 Civil unions permitted:

Connecticut - New Jersey - Vermont

 Domestic partnerships permitted:

California - District of Columbia - Hawaii - Maine
Prohibited by statute: Arizona - Connecticut - Delaware - Florida - Illinois - Indiana - Iowa - Maryland - Minnesota - New Hampshire - New York - North Carolina - Pennsylvania - Puerto Rico - Washington - West Virginia - Wyoming
Prohibited by constitutional amendment: Alabama - Alaska - Arkansas - Colorado - Georgia - Hawaii - Idaho - Kansas - Kentucky - Louisiana - Michigan - Mississippi - Missouri - Montana - Nebraska - Nevada - North Dakota - Ohio - Oklahoma - Oregon - South Carolina - South Dakota - Tennessee - Texas - Utah - Virginia - Wisconsin
Marriage undefined: New Mexico - Rhode Island