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Same-sex marriage in Campeche


Same-sex marriage became legal in the Mexican state of Campeche on 20 May 2016. In April 2016, Campeche's Governor, Alejandro Moreno Cárdenas, submitted a same-sex marriage bill to Congress, which was approved on 10 May 2016.

On 11 April 2013, the Party of the Democratic Revolution introduced a measure to legalize civil unions in Campeche. The bill was unanimously passed on 20 December 2013, and while it covers both same-sex and opposite-sex couples, it specifically provides that it "shall not constitute a civil partnership of people living together in marriage and cohabitation." An additional distinction is that it is not filed with the Civil Registrar, but with the Public Registry of Property and Trade.

On 31 March 2014, a lesbian couple applied for a marriage license in San Francisco de Campeche but were denied in April 2014 based on a decision that same-sex couples must join via the state's civil union provisions. In July 2014, Mexico's Supreme Court declared that the current marriage laws were unconstitutional and told the local government that they must modify their Civil Code to allow same-sex marriages. It was later announced that the couple could marry after a district judge granted them an injunction, but the law must still be revised. PAN has said it will abide by the ruling. The couple married on 30 August 2014. In September 2014, the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) announced that 16 persons, 10 from San Francisco de Campeche and 6 from Ciudad del Carmen have filed for injunctions and that analysis of changing the marriage statues is in progress.

On 11 August 2015, the Mexican Supreme Court ruled, in a 9-1 decision, that Campeche's ban on same-sex couples adopting children is unconstitutional. The Supreme Court struck down article 19 of the civil union law which outlawed adoption by couples in civil unions. Children's rights were cited as the main reason for the Court's decision. The ruling set a constitutional precedent, meaning all bans in Mexico forbidding same-sex couples from adopting are unconstitutional and discriminatory. President of the Supreme Court, Luis María Aguilar Morales, voted with the majority and said the following in the ruling:

I see no problem for a child to be adopted in a society of co-existence, which has precisely this purpose. Are we going to prefer to have children in the street, which according to statistics exceed 100,000? We attend, of course, and perhaps with the same intensity or more, to the interests of the child.


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