The Senate photograph

The Senate

Use attributes for filter !
Active from 2002
Active until 2009
Members Nick Drummond
Andrew Pulkrabek
Oliver Franklin
Alex Ligertwood
Bob Mather
Music groups Jessica Bartley
Taj Mahal
A. C.
M-Dizzle and Toasty
AlbumsSock It to You One Time
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2047535
Send edit request

About The Senate


The Senate was a Scottish white soul cover band active in Europe in the mid-late 1960s. This group included the now late drummer Robbie McIntosh, who would later be a member of The Average White Band, ...

Wilders Dutch vote: Centre-right VVD rules out role in cabinet

Wilders Dutch vote: Centre-right VVD rules out role in cabinet
Nov 24,2023 10:21 am

... Mr Wilders badly needs the support of New Social Contract, formed only in August by whistleblower MP Pieter Omtzigt, and the BBB Farmer Citizens Movement, which has a strong representation in the upper house, The Senate...

French Senate to debate anti-gay law apology

French Senate to debate anti-gay law apology
Nov 22,2023 3:21 am

... Even if passed by The Senate, it would also need to be approved by the National Assembly before becoming law...

Is it time for America's elder statesmen to retire?

Is it time for America's elder statesmen to retire?
Nov 19,2023 9:11 pm

... Derived from the Latin word senex, which means old and old man , The Senate has always been home to some of the country s most elder statesmen and women...

Dutch election promises new era and shake-up in politics

Dutch election promises new era and shake-up in politics
Nov 15,2023 9:41 pm

... Caroline van der Plas: In March, her right-wing populist BBB Farmer-Citizen Movement stormed to victory in provincial elections and became the biggest party in the Dutch upper house of parliament, The Senate...

US House Speaker passes bill to avert shutdown with Democratic support

US House Speaker passes bill to avert shutdown with Democratic support
Nov 14,2023 7:51 pm

... The stopgap measure must be approved by The Senate and President Joe Biden before it takes effect...

US Supreme Court takes on ethics row with first-ever code of conduct

US Supreme Court takes on ethics row with first-ever code of conduct
Nov 13,2023 8:21 pm

... Last week, Democrats on The Senate Judiciary Committee considered issuing subpoenas for Mr Crowe and another conservative judicial activist, Leonard Leo, for a list of all benefits they provided to Supreme Court justices and their relatives...

FBI director warns antisemitism in US reaching 'historic levels'

FBI director warns antisemitism in US reaching 'historic levels'
Oct 31,2023 10:41 pm

... " This is a threat that is reaching, in some way, sort of historic levels, " Mr Wray told The Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee...

US presidential election 2024: The Republicans challenging Donald Trump

US presidential election 2024: The Republicans challenging Donald Trump
Oct 30,2023 11:21 pm

... The only black man to ever serve in both chambers of Congress, the 57-year-old has represented his home state in The Senate since 2013...

French Senate to debate anti-gay law apology

Oct 28,2023 8:11 pm

By Ido Vock and Matthias ColbocBBC News

" It was catastrophic for me. It was shameful. "

Bernard Bousset recounts The Events which changed his life in a clear voice, but he is visibly still deeply troubled, all these years later.

In 1964, A Man he had spent The Night with stole his watch and some money. After reporting The theft, The Police charged Mr Bousset with sexual activity with a minor, under a discriminatory law inherited from The Nazi collaborator authorities of Vichy France which imposed different ages of consent for homosexual and heterosexual sex.

Mr Bousset, today 82, was eventually issued a " significant" fine. But what was more disastrous was The Press 's reporting of The Conviction - which made it Public Knowledge to everyone around him. The consequences were calamitous, he recalls. " At The Time , homosexuality was so negatively perceived. I was ostracised from My Family . I was so ashamed. "

" You could lose your job and your home for being gay. You had no rights. "

Mr Bousset is one of an estimated 10,000 People - mostly gay Men - who were convicted between 1942 and 1982 under laws used to target homosexuals.

On Wednesday, The French Senate - The upper house of The French Parliament - will debate a bill which would offer a formal apology to The Victims of The homophobic legislation.

If passed, The Bill would financially compensate victims of two discriminatory laws. One was The Vichy-era legislation, which set The Age Of consent for homosexual sex at 21, compared to 13 for opposite-sex relationships. After The Nazi occupation ended in 1945, The new authorities did not repeal The Law .

A second law, adopted in 1960, criminalised homosexuality as a " social scourge, " alongside alcoholism, drug use and prostitution. Judges were given wide leeway to target homosexuals under existing laws criminalising public indecency, says Antoine Idier, an associate professor at Sciences Po Saint-Germain-en-Laye, a political sciences university.

Victims of The discriminatory legislation frequently had their lives ruined, says Mr Idier. People could be fined or jailed for several months. On release, many faced social ostracism. Some lost their jobs or were forced to move cities. " In a few cases, we even see cases of suicide, " he adds.

People convicted under The laws included Charles Trenet , The Singer of classic ballads La Mer and Douce France, who spent 28 Days in prison after being accused of soliciting Young Men in 1963. Though The charges were eventually dropped, The high-profile case publicly highlighted Mr Trenet's homosexuality, about which he was discreet.

Hussein Bourgi , a Socialist lawmaker who proposed The Bill , said: " It is High Time to bring justice to The Living victims of legislation which served as The basis for a politics of repression with brutal and punishing social, professional and familial consequences. "

If The proposed law passes, it would bring France into line with other European countries, which in recent years have officially apologised to The Victims of homophobic legislation.

The UK's " Turing Law, " which received Royal Assent in 2017, pardoned gay Men convicted under some discriminatory legislation. In The same year, Germany apologised to The Victims of anti-gay laws adopted under The Nazis and maintained by The Authorities of post-war West Germany .

" France is later than other countries on this issue, " says Régis Schlagdenhauffen, an assistant professor at The School for Advanced Studies in The Social Sciences (EHESS) who has researched The persecution of gay People in France. " But it should officially recognise The injustice while some victims are Still Alive . "

" France will be greater for it, " he adds.

The Bill is not certain to pass. In its initial stages, it received a mixed reception from senators, who were sceptical of proposals to pay living victims €10,000 (£8,730). Even if passed by The Senate , it would also need to be approved by The National Assembly before becoming law.

Mr Idier says The Bill as it stands does not go far enough. He argues The Law should also recognise People who were convicted under pre-1942 laws, which did not explicitly target homosexuals but gave judges discretion to enforce them against gay People .

As for Mr Bousset, though welcoming of The Bill , he says The attempt to reckon with France's past has come Too Late .

" It will not erase [The Pain ] I lived with and which many homosexuals Still Live with, " he says. " It is incredible to say, but even today, I Am still ashamed when I Am in straight environments. "

" I never could erase this Conviction . It lives within me. "

Related Topics

Source of news: bbc.com

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯