Gay marriage supporters in Maine will announce on Monday, January 23 whether they will return to the ballot box this year or wait, Bloomberg reported.

Equality Maine, the state's largest gay rights group, has collected nearly twice the number of signatures needed to put the question on the ballot.

“We wouldn't want to move forward with a campaign that we don't think we are well-positioned to win,” said Betsy Smith, the group's executive director. “We have to look at our current level of support, what we accomplished last year and our plans for this year and make a decision.”

In 2009, gay marriage foes narrowly (53%) repealed a gay marriage law approved by lawmakers with a “people's veto” at the ballot box, known as Question 1. Now, backers hope to make Maine the first state to legalize the institution through the same democratic process.

“Until we finally win marriage at the ballot, opponents will always claim that marriage is supported only by the courts and legislatures, but not by the people,” Smith added.

Support for marriage equality has grown since 2009 in the Pine State. A survey released late last year shows a narrow majority of Mainers (51%) now support the institution.