She herself is unmarried, despite being in a long term relationship. To paraphrase her, what she said was along the lines of "marriage is not the only model" for a successful partnership. I don't believe it was against choice, and certainly not homophobic.
Everything that I can find online says she believes that "the Marriage Act is appropriate in its current form, that is recognising that marriage is between a man and a woman" and that it carries "a special status."
I'm afraid I'm of the mindset that opposing equal civil rights for citizens because of their sexual orientation is discriminatory.
It was a great speech, but I don't find her position on marriage equality any more accetable than misogyny.
joined:11/6/06
Posted: 10/9/12 at 05:24pm