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Illinois lawmakers hope to OK gay marriage in Jan.

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Generally, legalized marriage for same-sex couples give them greater rights regarding taxes, insurance, freedom from privacy restrictions that heterosexual couples have.

Camilla Taylor, marriage project director for Lambda Legal, which is representing 25 couples in a lawsuit opposing the state’s gay-marriage ban, said the announcement Thursday “brought hope to thousands of same-sex couples across Illinois.”

“Illinois same-sex couples and their children need the freedom to marry now, and it’s encouraging that our elected officials agree,” Taylor said.

While backed by prominent Democrats, the issue is not strictly a partisan one. Opponents to civil unions in 2010 included some southern Illinois Democrats, while some suburban Republicans supported it.

The Rev. Bob Vanden Bosch, lobbyist for Concerned Christian Americans, predicts a close vote but said passage would surprise him.

“Marriage is not something government has instituted. Marriage is something that’s instituted by God,” Vanden Bosch said. “People, rather than conforming their lives to the law of God, want to conform the law to their lives.”

The Catholic Conference of Illinois, which represents 3.8 million Catholics in the state, has produced a “marriage toolkit” it’s distributing to churches and schools outlining the church’s position on the issue.

“Nature gives us two sexes for a reason; that’s why marriage is unique,” conference executive director Robert Gilligan said. “As much as this can be a religious issue, same-sex marriage goes against nature.”

The contest for votes in the next three weeks promises to be heated, even as the plan battles for attention among a laundry list of major issues facing lawmakers in the six-day “lame duck” session before a new General Assembly is sworn in. Among the other issues under consideration are plans to fix the pension system, provide driver’s licenses to immigrants, legalize medical marijuana and close budget shortfalls.

“We are dedicating our efforts to leaving no stone unturned in helping them” secure passage, said Bernard Cherkasov, chief executive of Equality Illinois. “Our members and supporters by the thousands will be contacting lawmakers.”

Harris claims it’s been happening already, and some formerly stubborn attitudes among his colleagues have been changed by constituents.

“One of the things that moves them is when they’ve known the family and they’ve known three generations of the family and the parents, the grandparents and the kids come in and say, ‘Why would our state treat our lesbian granddaughter with less respect than our straight grandson, and how can you support that?’” Harris said. “That’s very compelling.”

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

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