Home » News » Supreme Court rules for designer who won’t make wedding websites for gay couples

By The Associated Press, published on June 30, 2023

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Lorie Smith, a Christian graphic artist and website designer in Colorado, right, accompanied by her lawyer, Kristen Waggoner of the Alliance Defending Freedom, second from left, speaks outside the Supreme Court in Washington, Dec. 5, 2022, after her case was heard before the Supreme Court. AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, file

By JESSICA GRESKO, Associated Press

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — In a defeat for gay rights, the Supreme Court’s conservative majority ruled June 30 that a Christian graphic artist who wants to design wedding websites can refuse to work with same-sex couples.

 

The Court ruled 6-3 for designer Lorie Smith despite a Colorado law that bars discrimination based on sexual orientation, race, gender and other characteristics. Smith had argued that the law violates her free-speech rights.

 

Smith’s opponents warned that a win for her would allow a range of businesses to discriminate, refusing to serve black, Jewish or Muslim customers, interracial or interfaith couples or immigrants. But Smith and her supporters had said that a ruling against her would force artists — from painters and photographers to writers and musicians — to do work that is against their beliefs.

 

Smith’s lawyer, Kristen Waggoner, said the Supreme Court was right to reaffirm that the government cannot compel people to say things they do not believe.

 

“Disagreement isn’t discrimination, and the government can’t mislabel speech as discrimination to censor it,” she said in a statement.

 

Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the Court’s six conservative justices that the First Amendment “envisions the United States as a rich and complex place where all persons are free to think and speak as they wish, not as the government demands.”

 

Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote a dissent that was joined by the Court’s other liberals. “Today, the Court, for the first time in its history, grants a business open to the public a constitutional right to refuse to serve members of a protected class,” Sotomayor wrote.

 

The decision is a win for religious rights and one in a series of cases in recent years in which the justices have sided with religious plaintiffs. Last year, for example, the high court ruled along ideological lines for a football coach who prayed on the field at his public high school after games.

 

The decision is also a retreat on gay rights for the Court. For two decades, the Court has expanded the rights of LGBTQ people, most notably giving same-sex couples the right to marry in 2015 and announcing five years later that a landmark civil rights law also protects gay, lesbian and transgender people from employment discrimination. That civil rights law decision was also written by Gorsuch.

 

Even as it has expanded gay rights, however, the Court has been careful to say those with differing religious views needed to be respected. The belief that marriage can only be between one man and one woman is an idea that “long has been held — and continues to be held — in good faith by reasonable and sincere people here and throughout the world,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in the Court’s gay-marriage decision.

 

The Supreme Court returned to that idea five years ago when it was confronted with the case of a Christian baker who objected to designing a cake for a same-sex wedding. The Court issued a limited ruling in favor of the baker, Jack Phillips, saying there had been impermissible hostility toward his religious views in the consideration of his case. Phillips’ lawyer, Kristen Waggoner of the Alliance Defending Freedom, also brought the most recent case to the Court.

 

Smith, who owns a Colorado design business called 303 Creative, does not currently create wedding websites. She has said that she wants to but that her Christian faith would prevent her from creating sites celebrating same-sex marriages. And that’s where she ran into conflict with state law.

 

Colorado, like most other states, has a law forbidding businesses open to the public from discriminating against customers. Colorado said that under its so-called public accommodations law, if Smith offers wedding websites to the public, she must provide them to all customers, regardless of sexual orientation. Businesses that violate the law can be fined, among other things. Smith argued that applying the law to her violates her First Amendment rights. The state disagreed, and won its case at the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

 

The Supreme Court case is 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis, 21-476.

 

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