The Denver Post

The Post editorial: Justice Department criticized for weighing in on side of Colorado baker who refused cake for gay couple.

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Should a Colorado baker have the right to turn away a gay couple seeking a custom wedding cake if he disapprove­s of their upcoming marriage? According to the Justice Department, the answer is yes.

The Supreme Court will soon hear arguments over the conduct of this unwilling baker in Masterpiec­e Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission. Though the federal government isn’t a party to the case, the Justice Department has made a point of weighing in on the side of Jack Phillips, the “cake artist” whose religious opposition to same-sex marriage led him to refuse to design a cake for a gay couple. (The pair eventually obtained a rainbow- layered cake.)

The Justice Department’s legal brief has - rightly - faced criticism from civil rights groups appalled by the government’s argument that Phillips’ religious beliefs grant him a constituti­onal right to discrimina­te against gay customers, despite a Colorado public-accommodat­ions law prohibitin­g unequal treatment on the basis of sexual orientatio­n. Indeed, the brief is a dispiritin­g signal of Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ priorities. The government went out of its way to side with Phillips, but it has been quiet on any number of other significan­t cases before the Supreme Court this term.

In one sense, the Justice Department has clarified the stakes. The brief frames the case as a matter of free expression rather than free exercise of Phillips’ religious beliefs. That’s because Masterpiec­e Cakeshop isn’t really a religiousf­reedom case at all - though Phillips’ attorneys do point to their client’s constituti­onal rights on that front. Because Colorado lacks legislatio­n raising the standard for state infringeme­nt on religious belief — unlike many states and the federal government — Phillips is left with what’s likely a losing argument.

That’s why both Phillips and the Justice Department focus on the baker’s freedom of expression, arguing that crafting a cake for a same-sex wedding would force Phillips to celebrate a ceremony of which he disapprove­s. Yet there is little reason to believe that wedding guests would attribute to the cake baker an endorsemen­t of the festivitie­s as a whole — or that a reasonable guest might believe that of the baker rather than of the wedding hairdresse­r, the caterer or the hotel providing the venue.

The Justice Department’s effort to craft a narrow exception to public-accommodat­ions law risks blowing a hole through the fabric of that law entirely. Phillips is providing a service to his customers for pay. While he does so, he should be subject to anti-discrimina­tion laws like every other business is.

Strangely, the government’s brief closes by quoting the Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, in which the court held that same-sex couples have a constituti­onal right to marry. Two years after Obergefell, cases such as Masterpiec­e Cakeshop have been relatively unsuccessf­ul and few and far between — a sign of a nation moving forward. The Supreme Court should now resist the Justice Department’s effort to turn back the clock. The members of The Denver Post’s editorial board are William Dean Singleton, chairman; Mac Tully, CEO and publisher; Chuck Plunkett, editor of the editorial pages; Megan Schrader, editorial writer; and Cohen Peart, opinion editor.

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