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Advocates: Ill. could approve gay marriage

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And as they did with civil unions, opponents will be actively fighting any effort to change the law.

The Catholic Conference of Illinois, which opposes same-sex civil unions or marriage, is distributing a toolkit to churches and schools that outlines the church’s position that marriage between a man and a woman is what’s best for society, and that anything else would undermine the sanctity of such unions.

In 2011, the organization created a new Defense of Marriage Department to lead the charge against changing state laws, and they are lobbying lawmakers.

“There obviously has been some kind of change [in public opinion]. What it means and where it’s going in Illinois is yet to be seen,” said Zach Wichmann, who heads the department. “We have a position, and that isn’t changing.”

Supporters say allowing gay marriage would provide practical benefits that same-sex couples don’t get from civil unions, and that marriage is a much more commonly understood term than civil union. It’s also a matter of principle.

“There should be one set of rules for everybody,” Garcia said.

Peter Breen is an attorney for the Thomas More Society, who is representing two downstate county clerks who are defending the state’s gay marriage ban against a lawsuit filed by 25 gay couples. Breen believes same-sex marriage proponents are over-stating the significance of the Nov. 6 ballot measures, which he says were in left-leaning states – Maine, Maryland, Minnesota and Washington – and where gay rights advocates outspent opponents on political advertising.

“There is no great change as a nation on this issue,” he said.

Advocates hope to prove him wrong.

They note that President Barack Obama came out in support of gay marriage earlier this year — a position that didn’t seem to hurt his re-election bid — and Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel recently said it should be one of the state’s top legislative priorities.

In September, a poll for Southern Illinois University’s Paul Simon Public Policy Institute found 44 percent of those polled said they believe gay and lesbian couples “should be allowed to legally marry.” That’s a 10-point increase from 2010, when only 34 percent backed gay marriage in a poll by the same institute.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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