Updated, May 14, 7:30 p.m.
Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton signed a bill Tuesday that legalizes gay marriage, making the state the 12th to do so.
Marriage equality gained an important foothold in the Midwest on Monday, as the Minnesota Senate voted to approve a historic measure extending marriage rights to gay and lesbian couples.
Hundreds of supporters at the Capitol erupted in cheers as lawmakers passed the bill by a vote of 37-30 in the state Senate, where Democrats hold a 39-28 majority.
Twelve states and the District of Columbia will now allow any two people to marry regardless of sexual orientation, but only one other state in the Midwest–Iowa–is part of that group. The Hawkeye state began recognizing same-sex marriages in 2009 through a state Supreme Court order, not through a legislative initiative.
For LGBT advocates, marriage equality’s expansion into the middle of the country marks a significant, though not entirely surprising achievement, given the momentum the gay rights movement has built in recent years.
“Victory for the LGBT community in the Midwest isn’t totally shocking,” said Paul Guequierre, deputy press secretary of Human Rights Campaign, to msnbc.com Monday. “What some people may not be aware of is the progressive nature of some of those Midwestern states,” he added, noting that Wisconsin was actually the first state to pass a gay rights law in 1982 banning workplace discrimination.
“But it’s great to see marriage equality expand in the middle of the country, there’s no doubt about that,” said Guequierre. “It’s a big deal, and it shows where this country is going.”
Hundreds of gay marriage advocates gathered on the steps of the state Capitol in Saint Paul Monday in what Outfront Minnesota communications director Jean Heyer described as “a very excited” mood. State Sen. John Hoffman high-fived happy supporters on his way into the building, while openly gay Sen. Scott Dibble, the bill’s architect, stopped to cheer before the massive crowd.
The bill passed the Minnesota House on Thursday in a 75-59 vote, largely along party lines. Democratic Gov. Mark Dayton said he would sign the bill into law as early as Tuesday.
Just six months ago, however, marriage equality was facing a very different outcome. After a Republican-controlled legislature put forward a ballot measure that would have enshrined a ban on gay marriage in the state’s constitution, Minnesota voters narrowly defeated the amendment. The fact that the legislature has now voted to enact the exact opposite on gay marriage illustrates just how quickly public opinion can turn on the issue.









