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LBGT fagot marriage DEFEATED by Refferendum in Taiwan! Bopok Roy can jump roof tonight!

democracy my butt

Alfrescian
Loyal
Joined
Feb 20, 2010
Messages
2,818
Points
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https://tw.news.yahoo.com/反空污、反深澳電廠、反核食、婚姻限一男一女結-144604211.html

【不斷更新】全國公投結果!愛家反同3案公投過關

Yahoo奇摩(即時新聞)


16.6k 人追蹤

2018年11月24日 下午10:46


九合一選舉暨公投今天投票,根據中央選舉委員會公投開票網站顯示,愛家反同3案全部過關。通過公投包括第7案反空汙(國民黨提案)、第8案反深澳電廠(國民黨提案)、第9案反核食進口(國民黨提案)、第10案婚姻限一男一女結合(下一代幸福聯盟提案)、第11案適齡性平教育(下一代幸福聯盟提案)、第12案同性伴侶專法(下一代幸福聯盟提案),有效同意票都超過投票權人總額1/4以上者(約493萬票),公投過關。
今年公投法修正通過後,公投提案暴增,最後成案綁大選的共有10案,遠超過過去14年的6個公投案。根據中選會公布,年滿18歲具有公投投票權的人數約1976萬人,投票結果有效同意票多於不同意票,且有效同意票達投票權人總額1/4以上者(約493萬票),即為通過。
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愛家公投(中央社/資料照片)
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擷取自中選會網站


婚姻限1男1女結合 公投過關
 
https://tw.2018election.yahoo.com/#pc






已開票時間
06:45:48

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臺北市
34.54
%

新北市
47.91
%

桃園市
45.04
%

臺中市
47.58
%

臺南市
32.20
%

高雄市
45.22
%
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  • 國民黨
  • 民進黨
  • 無黨籍
  • 其他黨
  • 柯文哲









title02.png




臺北市



  • 吳蕚洋0.41%
  • 丁守中41.07%
  • 姚文智17.07%
  • 柯文哲41.01%
  • 李錫錕0.44%



新北市



  • 蘇貞昌43.03%
  • 侯友宜56.97%



桃園市



  • 朱梅雪1.74%
  • 陳學聖39.44%
  • 楊麗環4.90%
  • 吳富彤0.37%
  • 鄭文燦53.55%



臺中市



  • 宋原通1.09%
  • 林佳龍42.33%
  • 盧秀燕56.58%



臺南市



  • 黃偉哲38.29%
  • 高思博32.21%
  • 林義豐8.71%
  • 許忠信4.74%
  • 陳永和11.89%
  • 蘇煥智4.16%



高雄市



  • 韓國瑜53.77%
  • 陳其邁44.88%
  • 璩美鳳0.49%
  • 蘇盈貴0.86%







title03.png



  • 國民黨
  • 民進黨
  • 無黨籍
  • 柯文哲




臺北市



2014

2018



57.15%
40.82%
2.03%


34.49%

34.54%

14.36%

0.71%

chart_rate_btm.png





新北市



2014

2018



50.06%
48.78%
1.16%


47.91%

36.19%

chart_rate_btm.png





桃園市



2014

2018



47.97%
51%
1.03%


33.17%

45.04%

5.90%

chart_rate_btm.png





臺中市



2014

2018



42.94%
57.06%


47.58%

35.60%

0.92%

chart_rate_btm.png





臺南市



2014

2018



27.1%
72.9%


27.09%

32.20%

24.81%

chart_rate_btm.png





高雄市



2014

2018



30.89%
68.09%
1.02%


45.22%

37.74%

1.14%

chart_rate_btm.png





票數每1分鐘更新一次/開票資訊由時報資訊提供






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Faggot marriages etc is always the tyranny of the minority. A small but loud minority wants it. N why should it be leegalised? It's like legalising crime
 
https://www.sammyboy.com/threads/cc...ed-dpp-chair-cb-bravo-kmt.261690/post-2817866


Hypocrite-The
Alfrescian

Loyal




10 minutes ago
#10



Anti-gay marriage groups win Taiwan referendum battle
AFP News • Amber WANG, Sean CHANG • 50 minutes ago
Voters in Taiwan backed anti-gay marriage referendums Saturday in what LGBT activists said was a major blow to the island's reputation as a rights trailblazer.
The result came at the end of a dramatic evening which saw Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen resign as leader of the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) after her party suffered major defeats in key mid-term polls, a significant blow to her prospects for re-election in 2020.

The Beijing-friendly main opposition Kuomintang (KMT) made gains in the face of China's increasing pressure on the island.
As well as voting for seats from village to city level, there were 10 referendums on the ballot, including pro- and anti-gay marriage proposals.
A referendum calling for marriage to only be recognised as between a man and a woman in Taiwan's Civil Code won more than seven million votes, while another calling for same-sex unions to be regulated under a separate law gained over six million.
Gay rights activists had proposed that the Civil Code should give same-sex couples equal marriage rights, but only garnered three million votes.
"Pro-family" group the Coalition for the Happiness of our Next Generation said the win was a "victory of all people who treasure family values".
Jennifer Lu, a spokeswoman for Marriage Equality Coalition Taiwan, said they were saddened by what she described as the "absurd referendums" and blamed government "incompetence" for allowing the anti-gay marriage votes to go ahead.
Taiwan's top court legalised same-sex marriage in May 2017, the first place in Asia to do so, and ruled that it must be brought in within two years, but the government has made little progress in the face of opposition from conservative groups.
Although the government has clearly stated that the referendum results will not impact the court's original decision to legalise gay marriage, LGBT campaigners worry that their newly won rights will be weakened.
With the conservative vote passing the threshold of 25 percent of eligible electors, under referendum law the government must take steps to reflect the result.
- Tsai's future in doubt -
Tsai and her Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) have faced a mounting backlash over domestic reforms as well as concerns about deteriorating ties with China, which still sees self-ruling Taiwan as part of its territory to be reunified.
Tsai told reporters that she would take "complete responsibility" for the defeat as she resigned as chair of the party.
The KMT, which oversaw an unprecedented thaw with Beijing before Tsai took office in 2016, declared victory in 15 of 22 city and county seats, up from just six going into the election.
The DPP, which had 13 seats, won only six and lost its traditional stronghold in Kaohsiung city for the first time in 20 years.
The Taipei mayoral seat is still to be announced.
Beijing has intensified pressure on Taiwan under Tsai, upping military drills, poaching diplomatic allies and successfully convincing international businesses to list the island as part of China on their websites.
The DPP is traditionally pro-independence and Tsai has refused to acknowledge Beijing's stance that Taiwan is part of "one China", unlike her KMT predecessor Ma Ying-jeou.
Ahead of the vote, Tsai and DPP officials repeatedly accused China of meddling in the lead-up to the elections by operating a "fake news" campaign. Beijing has denied the allegations.
Taiwan's Investigation Bureau also said it is probing Chinese influence on the elections through campaign funding of candidates.
The KMT -- which lost the leadership and its majority in parliament two years ago as the public feared it had moved too close to Beijing -- framed the election as a vote of no confidence in Tsai ahead of the vote, vowing to boost the economy and promote peaceful relations with China.
Some analysts said the defeat ruled Tsai out as a candidate for the presidency in 2020.
But others said she may still run, in the absence of an obvious successor.
Observers put the results down to anger over pension cuts and labour reforms, including slashing the number of public holidays, as well as concern that tensions with Beijing are damaging local business.
"The defeat certainly harms Tsai's chances in 2020," said Shih Cheng-feng, a political analyst at Taiwan's National Dong Hwa University, who attributed the results to "widespread public discontent" over the domestic reforms.
A referendum proposing to change the name under which Taiwan competes at international sports events that has already angered China was defeated by 5.5 million votes, with 4.6 million in favour.
 
It's good to see the tyranny of the minority being stopped in its tracks...

Taiwan's same-sex couples put future on hold after vote defeat
AFP News • Sean CHANG • 6 hours ago
After more than three decades together, Wang Tien-ming and Ho Hsiang finally decided to tie the knot when Taiwan's top court ruled last year that same-sex marriage must be legalised.

But those wedding plans are on hold after conservative groups won a referendum battle over equal marriage which couples fear could water down their newly won rights.


The original landmark court decision in May 2017 made Taiwan the first place in Asia to legalise same-sex marriage -– it ruled the change must be implemented within two years and sparked a wave of optimism in the LGBT community.

But almost 18 months have already passed as the government drags its feet in the face of conservative opposition.

A referendum on whether marriage should only be recognised as between a man and a woman in Taiwan's Civil Code won more than seven million votes Saturday, as did another calling for same-sex unions to be regulated under a separate law.

Gay rights activists had proposed that the Civil Code should give same-sex couples equal marriage rights, but only garnered three million votes.

Ho said that after the original court ruling he believed he and Wang would be granted rights given to heterosexual married partners, including recognition as next of kin.

This made the couple think they could at last buy a house together, Wang told AFP, assured that if one of them died the other would inherit.

Wang, 57, is also the main carer for Ho, 75, who suffers from Parkinson's disease. He describes their relationship as "love at first sight".

"I want to get married because I want to say to the world: 'I don't want to be deprived of what is my basic right'," Wang said.

- 'Second class citizens' -

Although the government has made clear the referendum results would not impact the court's original decision to legalise gay marriage, which should automatically be implemented next May, pro-gay marriage campaigners worry that their newly won rights will be weakened.

The court did not specify how it wanted gay marriage to be brought in, leaving room for conservative groups to call for separate regulations.

As Saturday's conservative referendums passed the threshold of 25 percent of eligible voters, the government must by law take steps to reflect the result.

Ho said he would not accept anything less than the amendment of the existing marriage law as laid out in the Civil Code to put gay couples on an equal footing with heterosexual couples.

"Having a special marriage law (for gay couples) means we are like second class citizens," he told AFP, adding that having a two-tier system would dent Taiwan's reputation as a trailblazer for equal marriage rights on the international stage.

"The Taiwanese value equality and freedom. If the gay community is been treated like second class citizens, where's the equality? This is our soft power," he said.

Taiwan's government has not yet responded to the referendum result and what impact it will have.

Kuo Huai-wen and her partner of 13 years had also been hoping to marry on the first day that the court's decision was implemented -- a day that is yet to come.

Kuo, 40, said she was "saddened and disappointed" over the referendum result, but still felt encouraged that three million people had backed the pro-gay marriage vote.

Kuo is pregnant with the couple's second child and said they would be forced to accept a union under a separate law for the sake of their children, even though they do not agree with it and want equal marriage rights.

"We have to be practical as we have kids and we can't afford to have all or nothing," said Kuo.

"We will register even if it's under a separate law, not because we are satisfied with that but because we need immediate protections."
 
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