Latino leaders support the freedom to marry in Illinois
Sun. February 24, 2013 1:18 PM
Chicago, IL -
As a crucial vote in the Illinois House of Representatives approaches, 23 prominent Latino leaders today announced their support for extending the freedom to marry to gay and lesbian couples in Illinois. The leaders affirmed their support in an open letter urging lawmakers to approve the Religious Freedom and Marriage Fairness Act, proclaiming, "no member of anyone's family, whether they're gay or straight, should face discrimination when they hope to marry the person they love."
Notable supporters signing the letter include former City Clerk of Chicago Miguel Del Valle, Executive Director of the Latino Policy Forum Sylvia Puente, and Jesse H. Ruiz, Vice President of the Chicago Board of Education.
"As Latinos, we know our families are stronger when we stay together. We never turn our backs on family," the leaders stated. "That includes supporting the freedom to marry for our gay and lesbian sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, cousins, aunts and uncles."
The backing from Latino leaders comes at a time of strong support for marriage equality in Illinois: a Crain's/Ipsos poll released Tuesday shows Illinoisans supporting marriage equality, with 50 percent in favor and only 29 percent opposed. Of the 50 percent in support, 37 percent "strongly" support the freedom to marry, according to the poll.
The Illinois House's Executive Committee is scheduled to take up the bill – Senate Bill 10 – this Tuesday.
"Relationships between Latino same-sex couples have existed for generations, built on trust, loyalty, and love," today's letter stated. "Marriage equality would grant legal recognition to these existing committed relationships. These couples want to marry for the same reason straight couples do – to make a lifetime commitment to the person they love, so that they can care for and protect one another through marriage."
The support also comes at a time where every major newspaper serving Illinois has endorsed the marriage equality bill, including the Chicago Tribune, the Chicago Sun-Times, the Daily Herald, the Peoria Journal Star, the Springfield Journal-Register, and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. In its edition last Sunday, the Daily Herald editorialized, "the Illinois Senate has done its part to advance the notion of human rights in Illinois. Now it's up to the state House."
"Imagine if your spouse got sick, but you were not allowed to take time off of work because your employer did not treat you as married," the letter states. "That is what gay and lesbian couples face in our state today. Without the freedom to marry, it is harder for them to take care of each other."
Illinois Unites for Marriage – a coalition led by Equality Illinois, Lambda Legal and the ACLU of Illinois – is continuing its statewide campaign in support of the bill, marshaling support and urging allies to step up contacts with their legislators. The coalition supporting the freedom to marry for all loving, committed couples – already strong with business, labor and community leaders, civic organizations, faith institutions and members of the clergy, African-American leaders, Republicans and Democrats – continues to grow.
"The Illinois General Assembly should act now and give same-sex couples the freedom to marry. It is the right thing to do," the open letter concludes.
From a news release
Notable supporters signing the letter include former City Clerk of Chicago Miguel Del Valle, Executive Director of the Latino Policy Forum Sylvia Puente, and Jesse H. Ruiz, Vice President of the Chicago Board of Education.
"As Latinos, we know our families are stronger when we stay together. We never turn our backs on family," the leaders stated. "That includes supporting the freedom to marry for our gay and lesbian sons, daughters, brothers, sisters, cousins, aunts and uncles."
The backing from Latino leaders comes at a time of strong support for marriage equality in Illinois: a Crain's/Ipsos poll released Tuesday shows Illinoisans supporting marriage equality, with 50 percent in favor and only 29 percent opposed. Of the 50 percent in support, 37 percent "strongly" support the freedom to marry, according to the poll.
The Illinois House's Executive Committee is scheduled to take up the bill – Senate Bill 10 – this Tuesday.
"Relationships between Latino same-sex couples have existed for generations, built on trust, loyalty, and love," today's letter stated. "Marriage equality would grant legal recognition to these existing committed relationships. These couples want to marry for the same reason straight couples do – to make a lifetime commitment to the person they love, so that they can care for and protect one another through marriage."
The support also comes at a time where every major newspaper serving Illinois has endorsed the marriage equality bill, including the Chicago Tribune, the Chicago Sun-Times, the Daily Herald, the Peoria Journal Star, the Springfield Journal-Register, and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. In its edition last Sunday, the Daily Herald editorialized, "the Illinois Senate has done its part to advance the notion of human rights in Illinois. Now it's up to the state House."
"Imagine if your spouse got sick, but you were not allowed to take time off of work because your employer did not treat you as married," the letter states. "That is what gay and lesbian couples face in our state today. Without the freedom to marry, it is harder for them to take care of each other."
Illinois Unites for Marriage – a coalition led by Equality Illinois, Lambda Legal and the ACLU of Illinois – is continuing its statewide campaign in support of the bill, marshaling support and urging allies to step up contacts with their legislators. The coalition supporting the freedom to marry for all loving, committed couples – already strong with business, labor and community leaders, civic organizations, faith institutions and members of the clergy, African-American leaders, Republicans and Democrats – continues to grow.
"The Illinois General Assembly should act now and give same-sex couples the freedom to marry. It is the right thing to do," the open letter concludes.
From a news release