In a legal development in which British Quakers
were vocally involved, equal marriage has been achieved in Great
Britain – with separate laws in Scotland and in England &
Wales, of course. Since 2014, it has been possible for two people to
marry regardless of gender. Northern Ireland, for complex cultural
and political reasons, has yet to follow suit, although they
recognise same-sex marriages as civil partnerships, and civil
partnerships can be entered into in that part of the United Kingdom.
As well as the campaign on the long road to equal
marriage, along which the introduction of civil partnerships is
generally considered a stop, there have also been those arguing for
opposite-sex civil partnerships. I have known Friends who have been
involved in this action, including those who stated their wish to
form a civil partnership rather than a marriage, despite not being a
same-sex couple. That campaign has now, thanks in large part to a
supreme court judgement (the Steinfeld-Keidan
judgement), led to a change in law in England and Wales and
opposite-sex civil partnerships are expected to be available before
the end of the year.
