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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Anti-gay marriage group airs TV advertisements

Rachel La Corte Associated Press

OLYMPIA – The group fighting to overturn Washington’s gay marriage law started running its first TV ads in the state on Thursday.

The 30-second ad from Preserve Marriage Washington is running statewide on both broadcast and cable channels.

Referendum 74 asks voters to either approve or reject the state’s gay marriage law that was passed by the Legislature and signed by Gov. Chris Gregoire earlier this year. That law is on hold pending next month’s vote.

The ad says that because gay and lesbian couples already have all of the same legal rights of married couples under the state’s current domestic partnership law, that R-74 should be rejected.

“You can oppose same-sex marriage and not be anti-gay,” the ad says.

The ad, which opens with a picture of a rainbow flag, also warns of potential lawsuits or fines for those opposed to same-sex marriage if the referendum is approved.

Preserve Marriage spokesman Chip White pointed to a recent lawsuit settlement in Vermont between an inn and two New York women over an accusation it refused to host the couple’s wedding reception. He cited cases from other states that have civil unions or domestic partnerships that have seen similar lawsuits.

But Andy Grow, a spokesman for Washington United for Marriage, said discrimination based on sexual orientation is already illegal under the state’s anti-discrimination law, which was expanded in 2006 to cover gays and lesbians. And, he notes, no known lawsuits like White points to have occurred in Washington under the state’s current “everything but marriage” domestic partnership law that grants gay and lesbian couples all the state-granted rights and benefits that married couples have.

Washington United for Marriage, the campaign working to uphold the law, issued a statement saying the ad’s sole intention was to mislead and scare voters.

“Simply put, our law hurts no one, and better protects all loving couples and their families,” wrote campaign spokesman Zach Silk.

Preserve Marriage has raised more than $1.7 million in opposition to the law. Washington United for Marriage has raised more than $8.9 million.