Nov 3, 2009 7:52 pm US/Pacific
The Maine Event: Gay Marriage Too Close To Call
PORTLAND, Me. (AP) ―
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Brazilians Marcelo Sales Leite (L), and his groom Roberto Fraga da Silva, hold hands as they get married during a collective gay marriage ceremony, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on June 13, 2009.
Daniel Kfouri/AFP/Getty Images
Gay marriage was put to a vote in Maine on Tuesday in a closely watched referendum that gay-rights activists across the country hoped would prove for the first time that their cause can prevail at the ballot box.
Voters had to decide whether to repeal or affirm a state law that would allow gay couples to wed. The law was passed by the Legislature in May but never took effect because of a petition drive by conservatives.
Early returns showed a close contest, as forecast. With 148 of 608 precincts reporting, each side had 50 percent of the votes.
A vote to uphold the law would mark the first time that the electorate in any state endorsed gay marriage. That could energize activists nationwide and blunt conservative claims that same-sex marriage is being foisted on states by judges or lawmakers over the will of the public.
However, repeal -- in New England, the region of the country most supportive of gay couples -- would be another heartbreaking defeat for the marriage-equality movement, following the vote against gay marriage in California a year ago.
It would also mark the first time voters had torpedoed a gay-marriage law enacted by a legislature. When Californians rejected same-sex marriage, it was in response to a court ruling, not legislation.
Maine's secretary of state, Matthew Dunlap, said turnout seemed higher than expected for an off-year election and voter interest appeared intense. Even before Tuesday, more than 100,000 people -- out of about 1 million registered voters -- had voted by absentee ballot or early voting.
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