Gabriele Britz | |
---|---|
Justice of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany | |
In office 2 February 2011 –2023 | |
Nominated by | SPD |
Preceded by | Christine Hohmann-Dennhardt |
Personal details | |
Born | Gabriele Britz 1 October 1968 Seeheim-Jugenheim,West Germany (now Germany) |
Alma mater | |
Garbiele Britz (born 1 October 1968) is a German jurist who served as a justice of the Federal Constitutional Court and is a professor for Public law and European Union law at the University of Giessen. [1] [2]
On 17 December 2010 she was elected by the Bundesrat on the proposal of the SPD to succeed Christine Hohmann-Dennhardt, who retired from the first Senate in January 2011, as a judge of the Federal Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe. [3] She took up the post on 2 February 2011 and retired 2023. [4] Britz is married to Frankfurt local politician Bastian Bergerhoff (Bündnis 90/Die Grünen). They have a son together. [5] [6]
Same-sex marriage has been legal in Germany since 1 October 2017. A bill for the legalisation of same-sex marriage passed the Bundestag on 30 June 2017 and the Bundesrat on 7 July. It was signed into law on 20 July by President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and published in the Federal Law Gazette on 28 July 2017. Previously, the governing CDU/CSU had refused to legislate on the issue of same-sex marriage. In June 2017, Chancellor Angela Merkel unexpectedly said she hoped the matter would be put to a conscience vote. Consequently, other party leaders organised for a vote to be held in the last week of June during the final legislative session before summer recess. The Bundestag passed the legislation on 30 June by 393 votes to 226, and it went into force on 1 October. Polling suggests that a significant majority of Germans support the legal recognition of same-sex marriage. Germany was the first country in Central Europe, the fourteenth in Europe, and the 22nd in the world to allow same-sex couples to marry nationwide.
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