I love that polyamorous activists are finally coming out and
making their arguments in public. The sudden wave of positive publicity for polyamory is a pleasant surprise.
In March I submitted the following question to Green Party leader Natalie Bennett for the Pink News Q&A:
“At present those in a ‘trio’ (a three-way relationship) are denied
marriage equality, and as a result face a considerable amount of legal
discrimination. As someone living with his two boyfriends in a stable
long-term relationship, I would like to know what your stance is on
polyamory rights. Is there room for Green support on group civil
partnerships or marriages?”
Bennett’s response this weekend that she is ‘open’ to discussion on the topic
has since made national news, with the BBC, Independent, Buzzfeed,
Telegraph, and even the Daily Mail picking up on the story. It has been
met by both sympathy and outrage: as I write this a Metro poll shows public support for polyamorous unions to be at 42%, the Mirror at 52%,
whereas fundamentalist Christians have (predictably) announced it as a
sign of the end times. Regardless of the response, it is the first time
the prospect of legal polyamorous unions has been discussed by leading
politicians and the mainstream press.
As a polyamorous activist and author, it’s an issue I’m very familiar
with, and for me and my family, it’s one which affects many aspects of
our lives. Our trio is happy and stable, but lacking basic legal
protections the home we have built together could easily come under
threat—unconventional families face discrimination in employment,
services, and housing. If one of the men I love and have built my life
with were to fall ill, I would have no right to visit him in hospital.
At the centre of the issue lies a fundamental inequality: monogamous
relationships have legal rights and protections whilst nonmonogamous
ones do not. Yet we have the opportunity for a straightforward solution:
why not take the now-defunct concept of civil partnerships, and open
them to polyamorous households? Each registered family would receive the
same partnership rights as any other form of union, and be subject to
the same obligations. Most importantly, it would provide legal
recognition and protection to the increasing number of alternative
households in Britain today.
For many this seems like a radical concept, and perhaps
unsurprisingly, many of the arguments against it closely mirror those
against same-sex relationships in general: that we’re unnatural, that
our relationships are unstable and unhealthy [...], even that our love will invoke the wrath of a
furious God. Simply replace ‘same-sex’ with ‘polyamorous’, and the whole
debate looks painfully familiar.
In fact, LGBT communities have a long history of polyamory—one dating
all the way back to Lord Byron and the Shelleys, continuing through to
Harvey Milk and the Radical Faeries. A 2006 study
showed that 28% of lesbians, a third of bisexuals, and almost two
thirds of gay men are open to nonmonogamous relationships. As any
polyamorous bond will automatically involve at least two men or two
women, all feature some form of same-sex relationship. Polyamorous
families are queer families.
At the same time, the arguments in favour of marriage for same-sex
couples also apply to trios. Parents should not face losing custody of
their children because they’re in a nonmonogamous relationship. Families
shouldn’t risk losing their home because inheritance rights favour
‘traditional’ couples. No-one should suffer being barred from their
partner’s funeral because their love isn’t recognised.
All loving, adult relationships are valid. As has often been argued
during the long struggle for marriage rights, none of us choose whom we
fall in love with. Our only choice lies in whether we stand up to
discrimination, or ignore it. Gay or straight, lesbian or bi, monogamous
or polyamorous, all of us deserve to live and love equally to one
another. All of us deserve recognition under the law.
Yes, this will be a battle, but we’ve battled before. Yes, it seems a
long way away, but twenty years ago the prospect of two husbands or two
wives legally wedding one another seemed equally remote. Each new
generation grows more open-minded, tolerant, and accepting than the one
before, and I believe that we are sympathetic and capable enough to
provide the legal protections polyamorous families need.
Right now we have a historic opportunity to ensure that equality is
for all of us. Love is love, regardless of how many share it. A family
is a family, whether it has two members or five. In the end, monogamous
or not, all LGBT people deserve equal rights—and if the past decades
have proved nothing else, it’s that we are very good at fighting for
them.
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