Tens of thousands of people marched through Mexico City on Saturday in opposition to Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto’s push to legalize same-sex marriage.
Organizers of the National Front for the Family estimated at least 215,000 people participated, and while that number could not be immediately confirmed, it was clearly one of the largest protest marches in Mexico in recent years.
Dressed mainly in white and carrying white balloons, the marchers held banners warning against same-sex marriage and demanding parents’ right to control sex education in schools.
“We are not against anybody’s [sexual] identity,” said Abraham Ledesma, an evangelical pastor who traveled from the border city of Reynosa, across the border from McAllen, Texas, to participate in Saturday’s march.
“What we are against is the government imposition ... of trying to impose gender ideology in education. As religious leaders, we don’t want to be forced to marry same-sex couples and call it marriage,” he said.
Others carried signs saying: “An adopted child deserves a mother and a father.”
On the other side of a police barricade separating the two sides at Mexico’s Independence Monument, a far smaller crowd of same-sex marriage supporters — perhaps 200 — listened to music and speeches.
“They may be the majority, but just because they are the majority doesn’t mean they can take rights away from minorities,” said Felipe Quiroz, a gay activist and school teacher.
“That would lead us to a dark period, to fundamentalism,” he said.
Many saw the massive march as the Roman Catholic Church flexing its political muscle in a country where about 80 percent of people identify as nominally Catholic. In May, Pena Nieto proposed legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide. It is currently legal only in some places such as Mexico City, Coahuila and Quintana Roo on the Caribbean coast.
However, Pena Nieto’s party in June suffered unprecedented losses in midterm governorship elections, and his party has since put the proposal on the back burner.
Activists say opposition to same-sex marriage played a role.
Jose Medrano, a university professor, attended Saturday’s march after traveling from Chihuahua, where the ruling party lost the governorship in June to the conservative, pro-Catholic National Action party.
“We might have influenced this, because the proposal [for same-sex marriage] was presented just a few weeks before the elections, and a lot of people were against it,” Medrano said.
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