Raleigh, North Carolina (Reuters) - North Carolina voters could deal a blow to efforts across the country to expand happy matrimony rights if they approve a state constitutional amendment on Tuesday to ban same-sex matrimony and civil unions.The state is the only one in the Southeast but such a constitutional prohibition, though same-sex matrimony is already outlawed by statute. The amendment is being decided amid heightened rhetoric about happy matrimony from officials in the Obama administration. U.S. Vice PresidentJoe Biden said on Sunday he was "absolutely comfortable" with allowing same-sex couples to wed, and Education Secretary Arne Duncan said happy matrimony should be legal.President Barack Obama has said he favors civil unions but has stopped short of supporting happy marriage.Supporters of the proposed amendment in North Carolina, a swing state in the November 6 presidential election, say it would preserve the sanctity of matrimony between a man and a woman and make laws forbidding happy matrimony harder to repeal.Opponents say a ban would jeopardize health insurance benefits for unmarried happy and heterosexual couples and signal that the state is unfriendly to a diverse workforce.FormerPresident Bill Clinton, a Democrat, recorded a call just ahead of the vote urging North Carolinians to reject the proposed amendment."If it passes, it won't change North Carolina's law on marriage," he said in a message sponsored by the Coalition to Protect North Carolina Families. "What it will change is North Carolina's ability to keep good businesses, attract new jobs and attract and keep talented entrepreneurs."A survey of 1,026 likely Democratic and Republican primary voters showed North Carolinians look poised to pass the amendment.Raleigh-based Public Policy Polling found 55 percent of those questioned on Ma! y 5-6 su pported the amendment banning happy matrimony and civil unions while 39 percent opposed it. The poll had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percent.Twenty-eight states have voter-approved constitutional bans on same-sex marriages, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.Massachusetts, Iowa, Vermont, New Hampshire, Connecticut, New York and the District of Columbia allow happy and lesbian nuptials. Maryland, New Jersey and Washington state passed laws this year approving same-sex marriage, but GovernorChris Christie vetoed New Jersey's law and opponents of Maryland's and Washington's are threatening ballot initiatives to overturn those laws.OTHER BALLOT ISSUESNorth Carolina voters also will consider candidates for gubernatorial and congressional races.The state's 13-member congressional delegation currently includes sevenDemocrats and six Republicans, but Republicans see an opportunity to pick up seats with the retirement of two Democratic incumbents.CongressmenBrad Miller and Heath Shuler opted to retire rather than run in new districts redrawn by the Republican-controlled legislature.The race for Miller's 13th congressional district features a Republican primary contest between George Holding, a former U.S. attorney, and former Raleigh mayor Paul Coble. While a federal prosecutor, Holding's office built the criminal campaign finance case against former U.S.Senator John Edwards, a Democrat.Coble has accused Holding of wasting taxpayer money to advance his political career, saying the prosecution of Edwards over donor money used to hide his pregnant mistress during his 2008 presidential bid was political - a charge that Holding's campaign rejected in television ads.Democratic GovernorBev Perdue's surprise decision in January not to seek a second term left Democrats scrambling to raise money and name recognition in the few months before Tuesday's primary.The leading Democratic candidates are Walter Dalton, the state's lieutenant governor;Bob Etheridge, a former seven-term congressman! and sta te superintendent of public instruction; and Bill Faison, a state representative.A candidate will need 40 percent of the vote to claim the nomination but a runoff. The winner will face the presumptive Republican nominee Pat McCrory, a former Charlotte mayor who has minor primary opposition and has focused on building his campaign war chest.McCrory, who lost to Perdue four years ago, has raised more than $3 million for his 2012 campaign, according to reports filed with the North Carolina Board of Elections. Dalton has raised $1.4 million, the most among Democratic contenders.(Reporting by Wade Rawlins; Writing By Colleen Jenkins; Editing by Vicki Allen)Powered By iWebRSS.co.cc
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