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Religious freedoms have been slapped down by Senate in the same-sex marriage bill

Senators in the minority started to get noticeably testy as the debate waged late into the night.
Best reactions to same-sex marriage bill passing senate
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The phrase weโ€™ve probably heard the most during the (never-ending) same-sex marriage debate has been โ€œreligious freedomsโ€.

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Although the concept is often framed as a positive, in many cases it actually diminishes existing anti-discrimination laws. Some of the requested exemptions would make it okay to discriminate against a gay couple in ways youโ€™d never be able to discriminate against a gay individual.

After a ferocious debate, which waged until 11pm, most of the conservative amendments to the same-sex marriage bill were voted down by large margins.

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The Dean Smith bill already allows priests and other religious celebrants to refuse to wed same-sex couple on the basis of their faith, but many conservatives wanted this liberty extended to civil celebrants with โ€œconscientious objectionโ€.

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That exemption was defeated 25-38, but not before Senator Ian Macdonald lost his cool and called his co-workers a bunch of โ€œnumptiesโ€.

โ€œIโ€™m exercising an informed vote on this, unlike those numpties over there, who are just doing what they are being told to do,โ€ he interjected before being told to sit down by the Chair.

Another amendment that would have extended a โ€œright of any personโ€ to โ€œmanifest his or her religionโ€ was defeated 27 โ€“ 36.

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The minority started to get testy as the night dragged on and they continued to lose vote after vote. Macdonald criticised Greens senator Peter Whish-Wilson for wearing a marriage equality badge in the Chair and Abetz nagged Greens and Labor senators for looking at the phones and leaving the chamber while he spoke.

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The fight isnโ€™t quite over yet, with the Senate still needing to vote on amendments from One Nation, the Greens and David Leyonhjelm but itโ€™s looking likely the bill will pass the Senate without a single substantive changes.

Attorney-General George Brandis gave a moving speech on what the law will mean for Australia.

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โ€œAt last, Australia will no longer be insulting gay people by saying different rules apply to you,โ€ Senator Brandis told his upper house colleagues.

โ€œAfter centuries of prejudice, discrimination, rejection and ridicule, it is both an expiation for past wrongs and a final act of acceptance and embrace.โ€

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