Hawaii will convene a special legislative session that could make the state the 14th in the country to legalize same-sex marriage.
“The decision to call a special session is based on doing what is right to create equity for all in Hawaii,” Democratic Gov. Neil Abercrombie said in a statement released Monday. “The merits of holding a special session include the opportunity for the legislature to focus squarely on this important issue, without having to divert attention to the hundreds of other bills introduced during a regular session.”
Both Hawaii’s House and Senate are ruled by Democratic legislators, but that doesn’t mean the Republican voices in the chambers will be silenced. Rep. Gene Ward, one of the seven Republican State House members, told HawaiiNewsNow that Hawaiians are not ready for the law. “I think the people out there really are not totally for this. I think it’s an exception that we have a special session for what now is for a very select, very narrow reason. There’s not a state or a federal guarantee to same-sex marriage, so why are we rushing?”









