Gov. Mark Dayton made an impassioned case Thursday that same-sex couples should be allowed to marry in Minnesota, kicking off a frigid outdoor Capitol rally that intensified pressure on legislators to pass a marriage measure.
"Yes to marriage, yes to same-sex marriage, yes to the constitutional right, the American right, to marry the person you love," Dayton told hundreds of cheering supporters.
The DFL-controlled Legislature is weeks away from voting on a measure that would make Minnesota the 10th state to legalize same-sex marriage. Legislators are grappling with the issue as the U.S. Supreme Court takes a closer look at restrictions on same-sex marriage.
Dayton dismissed a last-ditch proposal by opponents of same-sex marriage to offer gay and lesbian couples the protection of civil unions.
"People don't want to be civil unioned, they want to be married," Dayton said.
The governor urged supporters to meet with legislators and "be respectful, but be persuasive."
Right now, neither side is declaring victory, and those involved believe the margin will be only a couple votes. That has both sides frantically meeting with undecided legislators.
Minnesotans United for All Families, the group leading the push to legalize same-sex marriage, held the rally as a show of force, to persuade those final few undecided legislators that momentum is on their side.