Lawmakers in Delaware announced a bill Thursday to legalize same-sex marriage.
If approved, Delaware would become the 10th US State to allow gay and lesbian couples to marry, AP reported.
Democrat Governor Jack Markell announced the legislation - which was filed 15 months after Delaware first began recognizing same-sex civil unions - at an afternoon press conference Thursday.
He was supported by Attorney General Beau Biden, also a Democrat, as well as other proponents to express their support of the legislation.
“The department I run, the Department of Justice, is fully committed to correcting an injustice,” Biden said, AP reported.
CBS reported the governor said marriage was the most basic of individual rights.
“It’s time that we do the right thing,” Markell said.
"To deny them this opportunity is to deny them what is, perhaps, the most basic of the inalienable rights that we as Americans cherish, the pursuit of happiness,” said Markell, CBS reported.
Nine states and the District of Columbia have legalized gay marriage, Reuters reported.
Bills are currently under consideration in three other states, Minnesota, Rhode Island and Illinois.
In Delaware, opposition to the proposal remains.
“Marriage serves a purpose and is based on the truth that men and women are complementary, the biological fact that reproduction depends on a man and a woman, and the reality that children need a mother and a father,” Nicole Theis, executive director of the Delaware Family Policy Council, said in a statement.
Please follow Politics on Twitter and Facebook.
Join the conversation about this story »