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Public
strongly supports including siblings in Civil Partnership Bill
Over 80 per cent of the public believe the Civil Partnership Bill should
be fairer to ordinary families, according to a new opinion poll. The
Bill gives special house-sharing rights to gay couples but to no one
else. Poll findings show that 84% of people think if gay couples are
to be given these rights then two sisters who share a home long-term
should get them too; and 91% think the same for a daughter and a mother
who live together long-term.
Tomorrow (Tuesday 9 Nov) the House of Commons will debate whether the
Bill should be extended to siblings who live together for 12 years or
more. A full-page advert will appear in tomorrow’s Times showing
the results of the poll. The advert has been placed by The Christian
Institute.
Under the Civil Partnership Bill all the legal rights and privileges
of marriage will be extended to homosexual couples who register their
partnership. The house-sharing rights that are proposed for homosexual
couples will include exemption from inheritance tax. The poll shows
that almost one in ten (8%) people know someone who had to sell the
family home in order to pay an inheritance tax bill. This will include
many siblings who live together. But under the Bill, they will have
no opportunity to gain exemption from inheritance tax.
The poll shows that 86% of Labour voters think two sisters who live
together long-term should be included in the Bill; 91% of Liberal Democrat
voters and 79% of Conservative voters agree. This shows there is strong
support across the political spectrum for making the Bill fairer to
ordinary families.
Colin Hart, Director of The Christian Institute, said, “These
poll results shows there is strong public support for making the Civil
Partnership Bill fairer to ordinary family relationships. People of
different political allegiances all agree that if homosexual couples
are to be given house-sharing rights then family members who share a
home should have them too. Why should two elderly sisters who have lived
together for 20 years have fewer rights than a homosexual couple? If
one of the sisters died, the other could be forced to sell the house
to pay an inheritance tax bill. The Bill creates more injustice, not
less. It enshrines blatant discrimination against family members. It
must be changed to be fairer to ordinary families.”
Note for Editors:
The opinion poll was carried out by CommunicateResearch. They interviewed
a random sample of 1011 UK adults by telephone 22nd – 24th October
2004.
For
more information contact: Mike Judge on 0191 281 5664
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The
Christian Institute, Registered Charity No 100 4774 seeks to promote
the Christian faith in the UK
Registered Office: First Floor, Cathedral Buildings, Dean Street, Newcastle
upon Tyne, NE1 1PG
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