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This Article is From May 21, 2013

Gay marriage in Britain 'could lead to lesbian queen'

Gay marriage in Britain 'could lead to lesbian queen'
Anti-gay marriage demonstrators gather outside the Houses of Parliament in London
London: The debate in Britain over legalising gay marriage took a surreal turn on Tuesday after a senior politician said it could result in a lesbian queen giving birth to an heir by artificial insemination.

Norman Tebbit, a member of Prime Minister David Cameron's Conservative party who sits in the House of the Lords, also joked that it could see him marry his own son to escape inheritance tax.

Tebbit's intervention comes amid fevered debate in parliament over a bill to legalise same sex marriage, which is opposed by many of Cameron's Conservative lawmakers.

"I said to a minister I know: have you thought this through? Because you're doing the law of succession, too," Tebbit, 82, told The Big Issue magazine.

"When we have a queen who is a lesbian and she marries another lady and then decides she would like to have a child and someone donates sperm and she gives birth to a child, is that child heir to the throne?

"It's like one of my colleagues said: we've got to make these same sex marriages available to all.

"It would lift my worries about inheritance tax because maybe I'd be allowed to marry my son. Why not? Why shouldn't a mother marry her daughter? Why shouldn't two elderly sisters living together marry each other?"

The comments by Tebbit, a minister in Tory prime minister Margaret Thatcher's government in the 1980s, sparked derision on Twitter.

But they indicate the opposition awaiting the gay marriage bill when it goes to the House of Lords for consideration.

The legislation looks set to be approved by MPs in the House of Commons, but it must also pass through the unelected Lords before becoming law.

A majority of the public back the idea of gay marriage, but critics say marriage should only be between a man and a woman.

Civil partnership for gay couples were introduced in Britain in 2005.

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