German lawmakers voted to legalize same-sex marriage in their last session before the September election.
Lawmakers voted 393 for legalizing “marriage for everybody,” and 226 against with four abstentions.
The measure brought to a vote in Friday’s session was fast-tracked after Chancellor Angela Merkel said Monday lawmakers could take up the issue as a “question of conscience,” freeing members of her conservative coalition, which has been against same-sex marriage, to individually vote for the measure.
Merkel said she voted against same-sex marriage because she believes the country’s law sees it as between a man and a woman, but that the opposite view must be respected.
She said “for me marriage as defined by the law is the marriage of a man and a woman” but she continues to see the interpretation as a “decision of conscience.”
The measure, which is expected to see legal challenges, also opens the door for gay couples to adopt, which Merkel says she supports.
Germany has allowed same-sex couples to enter civil partnerships since 2001, but same-sex marriages remained illegal.
All of Merkel’s potential coalition partners after the Sept. 4 election, including the center-left Social Democrats of her challenger, Martin Schulz, have been calling for same-sex marriage to be legalized.
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