Finnish parliament votes down efforts to reverse equal marriage

Finlandā€™s Parliament has voted down efforts to scupper plans for same-sex marriage to become legal just days before it is set to become law.

In November 2014, the Finnish Parliament passed a citizensā€™ initiative on gender-neutral marriage by a tight vote of 105-92, after a number of previous defeats.

Finnish parliament votes down efforts to reverse equal marriage

The countryā€™s President Sauli Niinistƶ signed marriage legislation into law a few months later, paving the way for weddings to begin on March 1.

But the law, which came about as a result of a public Citizenā€™s Initiative petition signed by over 167,000 voters, was under threat from a rival initiative signed by opponents of same-sex marriage which passed the 50,000 signatures required for a parliamentary debate.

The countryā€™s parliament voted down the petition on Friday with 120 votes to 48.

Advocates still expect that equal marriage will become law on 1 March.

The countryā€™s Parliament last year heard the case for blocking marriage after the ā€˜Genuine Matrimony Associationā€™ succeeded in filing an Initiative to keep marriage ā€œbetween a man and womanā€.

Members of the right-wing Finns Party rallied against the law, with MP Mika Niikko suggesting the debate over the issue of gender-neutral marriage has focused excessively on the rights of adults, not those of children.

According to YLE, ā€œseveral MPsā€ have also come to believe the 2014 parliamentary decision was ā€œa mistakeā€, in the face of prolonged opposition from some anti-LGBT groups.

However, many stood up for equality in the chamber.

Centre Party MP Mikko Karna has apologised for the fact that the issue went to a vote once again.

ā€œI personally apologise to rainbow families who will have to listen to the matter being debated once more,ā€ he said.

As a candidate in 2015, Centre Party prime minister Juha SipilƤ had indicated their party would not seek to undo the measure.

Same-sex marriage is set to become law on March 1 2017.

Until Finland legalises full same-sex marriage, after legally recognising same-sex relationships since 2002, it is the only Nordic country yet to legalise it.