Registration of Same-Sex Partnerships Act 2005 A comprehensive
registered partnership bill passed its
first reading in Parliament in July 2004, but was rejected at second reading in March 2005. The bill would have provided for all of the rights of
marriage except for joint
adoption. A law establishing partnerships, The law covered only
property rights, the obligation to support a socially weaker partner and some
inheritance rights. It did not grant any rights in the areas of
social security,
health insurance and
pension, and it did not confer the status of a
next-of-kin to the partner. The adoption of this law sparked considerable political debate in the
National Assembly, with deputies from the
Slovenian National Party opposing the recognition of same-sex unions. The opposition
Social Democrats and
Liberals argued that the proposed law was too weak and refused to take part in the voting. The bill was passed with 44 votes for and 3 against on 22 June 2005. It was published in the
government gazette on 8 July, and became effective on 23 July 2006. The
Registration of Same-Sex Partnerships Act 2005 was repealed upon passage of the
Partnership Act 2016, and ceased to be operational on 24 August 2017. In response, the Minister of the Interior,
Katarina Kresal, announced that the government of
Borut Pahor would prepare a new law to legalise same-sex marriage. The announcement stirred some level of public controversy, mainly because it provided grounds for
same-sex adoption. The bill went through a period of
public consultation until 1 November 2009. In December 2009, the government considered amendments to the bill, and gave final approval to the measure on 17 December 2009. It was submitted to the National Assembly on 21 December 2009. On 2 March 2010, the bill was approved by the Assembly in its first reading. On 24 January 2011, due to the difficulty of passing the bill, the government announced its intention to amend it before final passage in the National Assembly. The amended bill would have granted same-sex registered partnerships all the rights of marriage except for joint adoption—though
stepchild adoption would have been permitted—and retained the definition of marriage as a "union between a man and a woman". On 3 March 2010, the
Supreme Court of Slovenia ruled that a male couple with dual Slovenian-American citizenship, who adopted a baby girl in the
United States, were to be recognised as the child's legal parents in Slovenia as well. On 17 July 2011, the Ministry for Work, Family and Social Affairs allowed a woman to adopt her same-sex partner's biological child. This raised the possibility that such an adoption would be possible even if the 2011 Family Code were to be repealed in a referendum. On 7 April 2011, the National Assembly approved the amended bill in its second reading. It passed its final reading on 16 June 2011. The new law was challenged on 1 September 2011 by a conservative popular movement called "The Civil Initiative for the Family and Rights of Children", which called for a national
referendum on the issue, and started gathering the requisite signatures. In response, the government asked the Constitutional Court to declare whether such a referendum would be constitutional. On 26 December 2011, the Constitutional Court ruled that holding a referendum on this issue was constitutional. A
referendum on 25 March 2012 led to the rejection of the bill.
Partnership Bill 2014 On 14 April 2014, the Ministry of Labour, Family, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities, Anja Kopač Mrak, presented a bill to grant partnerships all the rights of marriage, except for adoption and
artificial insemination. It underwent a public consultation process until 5 May 2014. However, the bill's fate was uncertain due to
early parliamentary elections on 13 July 2014, which were held following the resignation of
Prime Minister Alenka Bratušek. On 15 October 2014, the Ministry announced another public consultation on the draft, which lasted until 15 November. In January 2015, Minister Anja Kopač Mrak said that the bill would be put on hold while a proposal to legalise same-sex marriage was to be considered by Parliament.
Partnership Act 2016 On 22 December 2015, following the
20 December 2015 referendum, which prevented same-sex marriage from being legalized in Slovenia, Deputy Jani Möderndorfer introduced a bill to grant same-sex couples all the rights of marriage, except for joint adoption and
in vitro fertilisation. The bill would also repeal the
Registration of Same-Sex Partnerships Act 2005, and all partnerships would have to be converted to a new institution, called
partnerska zveza () in
Slovene, within the first six months after the bill's date of application. On 5 April, the bill was approved by the Committee on Labour, Family, Social Policy and Disability of the National Assembly. On 21 April, it was approved by the Assembly in a 54–15 vote. The
National Council did not require the Assembly to vote on the bill again. On 28 April, the Trade Union of Migrant Workers (SDMS; ) filed a motion, with 2,500 signatures, in order to be allowed to proceed with a petition for a referendum. However, on 5 May, the Speaker of the National Assembly,
Milan Brglez, refused to set a thirty-five-day deadline during which the proposers could collect 40,000 valid signatures to force a referendum, arguing that this and several other SDMS referendum initiatives constituted an abuse of the referendum laws. He sent the bill for
promulgation the next day. It was promulgated by
President Borut Pahor and published in the official gazette on 9 May 2016. The law took effect on the fifteenth day after publication (i.e. 24 May 2016) and became operational nine months later (i.e. 24 February 2017). On 10 May, the SDMS challenged Brglez's decision to the Constitutional Court, which rejected the challenge on 21 July 2016. The ability to enter into a partnership was closed off following the legalization of same-sex marriage in Slovenia. Partners could convert their union into a recognized marriage until 31 July 2023.
Statistics According to Slovenia's official statistics agency, SiStat, 284 same-sex partnerships had been performed in Slovenia under both the 2005 and 2016 laws up to the end of 2018. A majority of partnerships were between men, and most were performed in 2017 and 2018. ==Same-sex marriage==