Hong Kong to press ahead with tabling same-sex partnership bill despite pushback
Government stresses that it firmly upholds city’s monogamous and heterosexual marriage system, as major political parties oppose bill

Hong Kong authorities will push ahead with introducing a bill recognising same-sex partnerships next Wednesday, despite strong opposition from the city’s major political parties.
The bill aims to grant same-sex couples rights related to medical matters and after-death arrangements, with details of the proposal submitted to the Legislative Council on Thursday and set to be published in a government gazette the following day.
The first and second readings will take place in the legislative meeting on July 16.
“The Hong Kong government … must make it clear that same-sex partnerships registered under the alternative framework are not equivalent to marriages,” authorities said in the paper.
The government also stressed that it firmly upheld the city’s monogamous and heterosexual marriage system.
The bill is the government’s answer to a landmark court ruling in 2023 and was announced a week after authorities tabled a proposal for a Legco panel to discuss it last Wednesday.