Barnaby Joyce worries about Asians thinking Australia 'decadent' if gays marry

The battle over same-sex marriage is taking on a strange nature.

Federal Minister for Agriculture Barnaby Joyce.

Barnaby Joyce has withdrawn from an appearance on the ABC show Q&A on the Prime Minister's advice. (AAP) Source: AAP

, University of Canberra

When Leader of the House Christopher Pyne told the Black Hand dinner – a get together of moderates at the recent Liberal federal council – that a bill for gay marriage would go forward to Parliament in the second half of this year, people present cheered.

A little over a week later, the moderates might be wondering whether, in their optimism that they were making progress on marriage equality, they had got ahead of themselves, or indeed had been naive. There will be a cross party private member’s bill, but so far Tony Abbott is looking to bury it rather than have it brought to a vote.

Meanwhile, Pyne is believed to have told people he was referring to Bill Shorten’s bill - which the government has condemned - and any other construction is wrong.

The battle over same-sex marriage is taking on a strange nature.

Those Liberals on the yes side have largely been quiet, with a few exceptions. Pyne that ministerial supporters of gay marriage should resign; backbencher, Ewen Jones , and of course Abbott’s sister Christine Forster, a Sydney City councillor, has .

Then there is this invoking by the no side of how a change in our marriage law would be regarded in Asia.

It started with Senate leader Labor and journalists “tell us time and time again that we are living in the Asian century - tell me how many Asian countries have redefined marriage?”

Inevitably, when Agriculture Minister Barnaby Joyce was out spruiking his white paper on Sunday he was asked about Abetz’s comment – and actually went further.

“I think that what we have to understand is that when we go there, there are judgements, whether you like it or not, that are made about us, and they see in how we negotiate with them whether they see us as – whether they see us as decadent,” Joyce said.

Asked “so they’d see us embracing gay marriage as decadence?”

Joyce replied, “I think that in some instances, they would”.

His argument is improbable and even if it were not, it would be irrelevant.

An obvious riposte is to note that Australia doesn’t worry too much about what an Asian country might think when it suits it to pursue a policy that nation mightn’t like – notably the boat turnbacks policy.

A second point is that some Asian countries have polygamy – for example Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore. This is unacceptable in Australia but does not affect our relations with these countries.

A third counter is to ask if we would be apply the yardstick of “what will Asian countries think?” to other social areas – the divorce law, for example?

The arguments about likely Asian reaction are bizarre. Are Asian countries going to have a different attitude to the United States now its Supreme Court has upheld gay marriage?

Opponents are driven to take this “Asia” path presumably because the countries they would normally compare Australia with – the United Kingdom, America, New Zealand – have embraced gay marriage.

Some Liberals in the yes camp believe a surge of support for same-sex marriage will show up over the next few weeks in Coalition MPs' electoral offices. But the grass roots “no” campaign is likely to be as highly organised to bring pressure on the MPs, and we can see its “scare” will be formidable.

It is notable that the two Liberals among sponsors of the bill, Warren Entsch and Teresa Gambaro have so far been unwilling to throw themselves into the fray. Entsch argues it would be counter-productive to talk before parliament sits; Gambaro faces a preselection challenge (driven by other factors rather than this issue). But they need to break cover to advocate their own bill. And where, one might ask, is Malcolm Turnbull, who has previously been the most articulate Liberal advocate of same-sex marriage and a conscience vote for his party?
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4 min read
Published 5 July 2015 9:58pm
Updated 6 July 2015 7:24am
By Michelle Grattan
Source: The Conversation


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