This is where we’ll leave our live coverage of tonight’s long and fiery Cumberland Council meeting, where councillors debated a divisive ban on a children’s library book about same-sex parenting.
If you’re just tuning in, here’s a rundown of how the marathon meeting – and protests outside the council’s chambers – unfolded:
- The western Sydney council’s ban on the same-sex parenting book has been overturned after four hours of debate at a rowdy meeting on Wednesday night, as protesters clashed outside.
- The council faced national and global outrage from across the political spectrum for banishing the book, Same-Sex Parents by Holly Duhig. The book was part of a series depicting diverse family structures for a younger audience, and features two men and a child on the front cover.
- The majority of councillors voted in support of a motion to move the book to the junior non-fiction section. Our Local Community councillor Steve Christou, who was a vocal supporter of the ban, was one of two councillors to vote against making the book available again in libraries.
- More than 200 protesters clashed as they chanted and yelled outside the council’s chambers in Merrylands amid a heavy police presence before and during the meeting. The crowd included members of the left-wing Pride in Protest group, and a group of older local men.
- Inside the meeting, councillors traded insults, members of the community made impassioned pleas for the council to dump the ban, and rowdy spectators in the public gallery were repeatedly urged to keep quiet as Mayor Lisa Lake was forced to eject several people.
- Speaking outside the meeting, Christou said he was “disappointed by some colleagues that held a firm position and … with pressure put on by the media, that they changed their position”.
Thanks for joining us, enjoy the rest of your evening.