Source:
https://scmp.com/news/asia/australasia/article/2119528/australian-crocodile-hunter-unlikely-gay-rights-champion
Asia/ Australasia

Australian crocodile hunter is unlikely gay-rights champion

Liberal member of parliament for Leichhardt, Warren Entsch. Photo: AP

As a self-described straight crocodile hunter from the country’s rugged and socially conservative far north, Australian lawmaker Warren Entsch doesn’t fit many people’s mould of a gay-rights activist.

But if results of a nationwide postal survey this week reveal that most Australians want same-sex marriage legalised, it is Entsch – from the country’s leading conservative party, no less – who plans to introduce legislation that could make it a reality as early as December.

Entsch, 67, emerged as an unlikely champion for gay rights back in 2004, when he complained that the government had changed federal laws to make clear that marriage exists only between a man and a woman.

He was the only lawmaker from his conservative Liberal Party or the centre-left opposition Labor Party to speak out, earning him the moniker “progressive redneck” from bemused media outlets.

Warren Entsch. Photo: AP
Warren Entsch. Photo: AP

“I got literally thousands and thousands of communiqués, not from the gays, but from the broader community – family, friends and relatives of gays – saying that if a healthy heterosexual, far north Queensland crocodile-farming, bull-catching Liberal can speak out on behalf of my gay friend or relative, we want to come out too,” Entsch said.

Gay-rights advocates say Entsch’s championing of the issue was instrumental in getting Australia to change around 100 federal laws almost a decade ago.

Under the changes, gay couples in long-term relationships were treated the same as married couples on issues such as tax, pensions and social security. But removing discrimination against gays from the Marriage Act was a step too far for most lawmakers.

Rodney Croome, a veteran gay-rights campaigner, said no lawmaker deserves more credit than Entsch for pushing the issue – even though parliament has several openly gay lawmakers.

“A key to Warren’s success is that he’s an unlikely champion,” Croome said. “It’s meant that his fellow Liberals are less able to dismiss him as having a personal interest in it, and it effectively means that they have to think of the principles involved.”

Australian gay activist Rodney Croome. Photo: Reuters
Australian gay activist Rodney Croome. Photo: Reuters

But Entsch has not managed to win over much of his own party, which has long opposed same-sex marriage.

Fellow Liberal lawmaker Craig Kelly, a vocal same-sex marriage opponent, sees Entsch as a political maverick.

“We don’t want to make jokes about our far north Queensland cousins, but often they’re an unusual bunch,” Kelly said.

Entsch said his interest in gay rights was sparked by an Outback ranch cook he knew in the 1970s who moved to Sydney for gender reassignment surgery and became a female doctor.

Entsch retired from politics in 2007 but returned for 2010 elections, where he unseated the Labor Party candidate.

“Everybody told me I was taking a risk up here. It’s a place full of rednecks,” he said, referring to his 149,000 sq km electoral district, which extends from the city of Cairns, where he lives, north to islands off Papua New Guinea. “I don’t do it for politics. I do it because it’s right.”

In 2015, the prime minister at the time Tony Abbott – a same-sex marriage opponent – committed his conservative government to holding a compulsory nationwide vote to decide whether the unions should be legal.

Australian street artist Scottie Marsh painting a mural of former Australian prime minister Tony Abbott as the bride of Tony Abbott, in Sydney. Photo: AFP
Australian street artist Scottie Marsh painting a mural of former Australian prime minister Tony Abbott as the bride of Tony Abbott, in Sydney. Photo: AFP

He was replaced weeks later by current Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who supports marriage equality and opposed the public vote but eventually agreed to it in a deal with party power brokers.

The Senate refused to fund a compulsory vote, however, so the government opted for a voluntary postal ballot.

Almost 79 per cent of more than 16 million Australian voters posted ballots before the two-month survey closed.

Supporters of gay marriage march near Victoria Park in Sydney. Photo: AP
Supporters of gay marriage march near Victoria Park in Sydney. Photo: AP

The result will be announced on Wednesday. If a majority calls for marriage equality, parliament will vote on a bill in the final two-week session of the year.

Passage is by no means certain even if a vote goes ahead.

Kelly said he would vote against it in parliament if a majority of responses in his outer-Sydney electoral division opposed reform.

A child holds a banner at an anti-same-sex marriage rally in Sydney. Photo: AFP
A child holds a banner at an anti-same-sex marriage rally in Sydney. Photo: AFP

Other opponents have said they would vote against legalising gay marriage in parliament regardless of the survey result.

The United Nations Human Rights Committee on Friday accused Australia of putting gays and lesbians “through an unnecessary and divisive public opinion poll”. The committee called on Australia to legalise gay marriage regardless of the survey’s outcome.

Warren Entsch near the United Nations headquarters in New York. Photo: AP
Warren Entsch near the United Nations headquarters in New York. Photo: AP

Entsch said the A$122 million (US$94 million) being spent on the survey was an “appalling waste of money”. He and most gay-rights advocates wanted parliament to vote on legislation straight away.

Entsch said with opinion polls in recent years showing most Australians support gay marriage, no one should accept the result of the postal survey if the answer is “no.”

“If the answer is ‘no’, we need to analyse it, because I believe it would be flawed,” he said.