Commentary: MPs need to look past the vociferous minority

 
Nick Herbert4 February 2013
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Tomorrow, MPs will make a momentous decision on gay marriage. The Catholic Church and Church of England have opposed the change. But their religious freedom will be protected.

No church or mosque will be forced to conduct a gay marriage against their will. As three of the country’s leading QCs have said today, it’s “simply inconceivable” the courts would overturn safeguards in the legislation. Nor will any teacher be forced to “promote” a gay marriage. And as Rabbi Julia Neuberger has argued, religious freedom cuts both ways. Why should the law prevent liberal Jews, Quakers or Unitarian churches from conducting gay marriages, as they wish to do?

Much of the argument has been about the electoral impact on the Conservative Party. But all independently conducted polls show that a substantial majority of the public are in favour, and this number is rising fast. We must take care not to mistake vociferous pressure from a few for the quieter view of the many.

But I hope MPs will look beyond their postbags and inboxes and reflect on the real issue at stake. I think of the gay children still bullied at schools, or fearful about whether friends and families will accept them. I think of sportsmen and women, role models who still don’t feel able to come out. I know the signal Parliament sends tomorrow about whether the law fully recognises the place of gay people in our society will really matter.

Above all, I think of two people, faithful and loving, who simply want their commitment to be recognised as it is for straight couples. We can’t just keep telling them that civil partnerships will do. People choose marriage for a reason: they know that it means something special.

This is far bigger than a debate about party management. It would be terrible if MPs used this vote to register some kind of protest, or thought that it didn’t count.

Millions will be watching us: not just gay people, but those who want to live in a society where people are treated equally and accepted for who they are. They will hear our words and remember our votes. I hope that MPs will search their consciences, and do the right thing.

Nick Herbert is former police reform minister and Tory MP for Arundel and South Downs.

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