PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — Cecelia Burnett and Ann Swanson had already set their wedding date. When they joined about 1,000 other gay marriage supporters for an election night party in a Holiday Inn ballroom, they hoped to celebrate the vote that would make it possible.
Instead, they went home at midnight, dejected and near tears after a failed bid to make Maine the first state to approve same-sex marriage at the ballot box.
"I'm ready to start crying," said Burnett, a 58-year-old massage therapist, walking out of the ballroom with Swanson at her side. "I don't understand what the fear is, why people are so afraid of this change.
"It hurts. It hurts personally," she said. "It's a personal rejection of us and our relationship, and I don't understand what the fear is."
With 87 percent of precincts reporting, gay-marriage foes had 53 percent of the vote in a referendum that asked Maine voters whether they wanted to repeal a law allowing same-sex marriage that had passed the Legislature and was signed by Democratic Gov. John Baldacci.
"The institution of marriage has been preserved in Maine and across the nation," said Frank Schubert, the chief organizer for Stand for Marriage Maine, which lobbied for the repeal.
For the gay rights movement, which has gained a foothold in New England, it was a stinging defeat. Gay marriage has now lost in every state — 31 in all — in which it has been put to a popular vote. Gay-rights activists had hoped to buck that trend in Maine, framing same-sex marriage as a matter of equality for all families in a campaign that used 8,000 volunteers to get out the message.
Five states have legalized gay marriage — Iowa, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire and Connecticut — but all did so through legislation or court rulings, not by popular vote.
Portland resident Sarah Holman said she was torn, but decided — despite her conservative upbringing — to vote in favor of letting gays marry.
"They love and they have the right to love. And we can't tell somebody how to love," said Holman, 26.
While the gay marriage opponents claimed victory, Jesse Connolly, campaign manager for No on 1/Protect Maine Equality, held off conceding until early Wednesday, when he issued a statement vowing to continue to press the issue.
The fight for marriage equality will continue, he told supporters at the Holiday Inn ballroom, where a buffet table included a three-tiered wedding cake — with two grooms standing side by side, two brides standing side by side and the inscription: "We all do!"
"We're not short-timers. We're here for the long haul and whether it's just all night and into the morning, or it's next week or next month or next year. We will be here. We'll be here fighting. We'll be working. We will regroup."
For Burnett and Swanson, the July 10 wedding date — and a reception cruise on Casco Bay — is off.
Breaking News
Dejection fills Maine ballroom after marriage vote
- Breaking News
-
-
Woman found in "house of horrors" in Navarro County
- Police chase ends at Holly Oaks apartment complex
-
Suburban strikes school bus on Fort Worth Highway
A woman was taken by air ambulance to a Metroplex hospital around 4 p.m. this afternoon after she drove into the back of a school bus.
-
Winter blast on the way
Parker County residents are bracing for one of the coldest winter storms this year.
Today, Tuesday and Wednesday will mark one of the coldest days this winter with a wind chill factor reaching 0 degrees Matt Mosier, metrologist for the National Weather Service, said. -
Jack Borden Dies
-
City rescinds boil water notice
The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality has given the City of Weatherford approval to discontinue the boil water notice issued Monday due to the pipe failure at the water plant.
“Our system has taken the necessary corrective actions to restore adequate pressure, disinfectant levels, and bacteriological quality, and has provided TCEQ with the testing results that indicate the water no longer requires boiling,” states a release from the city.”
-
Restaurants given OK to open for business
Restaurants and hotels were given the go-ahead to open today at 3 p.m. provided they have enough water pressure to flush toilets and boil water for consumption.
Hotels were given instructions not to use ice machines.
“We’re keenly aware of the burden we placed on businesses, especially with the downturn in the economy,” Assistant City Manager Robert Hanna said in a 4 p.m. press conference. “The more people work with us to refrain from using water, the quicker we can lower the restrictions.”
- Partial water service anticipated, press conference set
-
Water runs out across city
Homes and businesses across Weatherford are losing their water supply as the result of a major water line break.
Around midnight city officials were alerted that a 24-inch water pipe in the clear well at the water treatment plant had pulled loose. While city crews were on hand immediately to start working on the break, the expert engineers needed for this type of incident could not be reached until around 6 a.m., said Assistant City Manager Sharon Hayes.
- Pipe failure will cause water outage
- More Breaking News Headlines
-





