LGBTIA Pride Parade Takes Place In Taichung

2016.12.18 | 20:10 PM    編譯 │ 破土 New Bloom    報導地點 │ 臺中市    瀏覽次數 │ 2,819 檢舉文章
Photo Credit: Tongzhi Hotline Association Facebook
Author: Brian Hioe

The fifth annual Taichung LGBTIA Pride Parade took place yesterday, bringing thousands onto the streets of Taichung to demonstrate for a “diversified rainbow city”. Participants numbered in the thousands, although crowd estimates ranged from 6,000 individuals to 20,000 individuals.

While the pride parade is an annual event in Taichung, the issue of marriage equality is critically at stake this year, with continued contestation within the Legislative Yuan regarding the possibility of legalizing marriage equality in Taiwan. Although LGBTQ activists and their allies had previously expected marriage equality to pass into law fairly easily, given majority support for gay marriage as indicated by polling, and president Tsai Ing-Wen having made it a campaign pledge to legalize marriage equality.

Nevertheless, an unexpected show of force by anti-marriage equality demonstrators, primarily Christian fundamentalist groups, led the DPP to backslide on promises of legalize marriage equality and suggest that it might push for “separate but equal” civil partnerships instead. This still denies gay couples the legal status of marriage, but is conciliatory towards anti-marriage equality demonstrators who claim that if the legal definition of marriage were changed, this would lead to a breakdown in social order as founded upon the heterosexual family as the basic social unit.

Given the strong presence of the Presbyterian Church within the DPP, which itself is divided on the issue of marriage equality, very probably some factions within the DPP were never in favor of legalizing marriage equality to begin with. The pushback against marriage equality has been led by Legislative Yuan majority speaker Ker Chien-Ming. While the DPP should have no problem forcing marriage equality into law, given that it controls the Legislative Yuan, Executive Yuan, Judicial Yuan, and presidency, this may be a case of Tsai being unable to hold her party in check.

Unsurprisingly, Tsai has in recent days been evasive on the issue of marriage equality, stating that she continues to support it on social media, but not doing so in an especially public manner. Very likely, Ker Chien-Ming and other DPP legislators intend to try and pass off civil partnerships as marriage equality, seeing as they would like for Taiwan to still be recognized as the “first Asian country to legalize gay marriage,” something which would raise Taiwan’s profile in the international sphere, and also serve to distinguish Taiwan from China.
Photo Credit: Hung Tzu-Yung Facebook
LGBTQ advocate groups and their supporters would respond on December 10th, with a demonstration of 250,000 in Taipei. While anti-marriage equality demonstrators had been able to mobilize 100,000 in Taipei, 40,000 in Kaohsiung, and 50,000 in Taichung, this was more than all of these demonstrations combined.

But if yesterday’s pride parade was not as large as the previous demonstration of 50,000 anti-marriage equality demonstrators in Taichung, it remains to keep up high levels of participation to remind the DPP that marriage equality is supported by the majority of Taiwanese society and that this has been demonstrated consistently in multiple polls.

If anti-marriage equality groups have suggested that a nationwide referendum be held on the issue, with claims that they have the support of the “silent majority” of Taiwanese society, very probably anti-marriage equality demonstrators do not actually aim to push for a public referendum on marriage equality, but merely to construct this perception of majority disapproval of marriage equality in the media. Apart from the high benchmarks on holding public referendum which anti-marriage equality groups would have difficulty reaching, because marriage equality actually has majority support in Taiwan, it is also highly possible that anti-marriage equality groups would lose such a hypothetical referendum.

However, LGBTQ advocate groups should also keep in mind that to force action from the DPP, the DPP may need to be threatened with a loss of votes in upcoming elections. Otherwise, it may simply continue to string along LGBTQ voters on the issue of marriage equality, with the expectation that because the KMT is the party more opposed to gay marriage, relatively speaking, LGBTQ voters and their allies will continue to vote DPP because there is a higher likelihood of it pushing for gay marriage.

The next crucial date for the push to realize marriage equality is on December 26th, with plans for another large-scale demonstration to take place outside of the Legislative Yuan during another reading of the marriage equality bill. Without large numbers that day, it seems very likely that efforts within the Legislative Yuan to legalize marriage equality will stall.
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LGBTIA Pride Parade Takes Place In Taichung

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