Slovak referendum on same-sex marriage ban fails

Low turnout scuppers vote to strengthen country’s ban on marriages and adoptions by same-sex couples

One of the leaders of the Alliance for the Family, Anton Chromik, speaks to the media after the preliminary referendum result. Photograph: EPA/Jakub Gavlak
One of the leaders of the Alliance for the Family, Anton Chromik, speaks to the media after the preliminary referendum result. Photograph: EPA/Jakub Gavlak

Slovak conservatives did not turn out anywhere near the 50 percent of voters needed on Saturday to approve a referendum that would have strengthened the country’s ban on marriages and child adoptions by same- sex couples.

Votes counted from 99.9 percent of the central European country’s voting districts showed turnout of just 21.4 percent, the statistics office said, well below expectations.

The EU member state does not allow gay marriages or civil unions, nor adoptions by same- sex couples. The conservative movement that backed the referendum sought to make it more difficult to change those bans through legislation.

Around 90 percent of those who took part in the referendum voted “yes” to three questions: whether marriage can only be a union of a man and a woman; whether same-sex couples should be banned from adoptions; and whether children can skip classes involving education on sex and euthanasia.

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Liberals, gay rights activists and some media outlets had advised voters to defeat the referendum by not taking part, a strategy that worked.

The very low turnout pleased the country’s gay community, which sees a better chance to push for change.

Failure to mobilise

“The result shows that a campaign full of prejudice . . . failed to mobilise people, which is very good news for

Slovakia

, ” said activist

Lucia Plavakova

.

“The Slovak society seems ready for granting equality for gays and lesbians.”

The group behind the referendum, Alliance for the Family, argued that the traditional family is under threat with more countries, including neighbouring Austria and the Czech Republic, allowing forms of same- sex unions, or child adoption by gay couples. It said holding the referendum was a success in itself.

“The most important thing is that the family became the topic of the day and perhaps the topic of the year,” the alliance’s Anna Veresova said.

The referendum was backed by the Catholic Church, a powerful institution in the country. – (Reuters)