The Jerusalem Post

Top US court weighs Colorado man’s refusal to bake wedding cake for gays

- • By LAWRENCE HURLEY

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The US Supreme Court on Tuesday was set to hear arguments in a major case on whether certain businesses can refuse service to gay couples, if they oppose same-sex marriage on religious grounds, in a dispute involving a conservati­ve Christian baker in Colorado who declined to make a wedding cake for two men.

The nine justices were due to hear an appeal brought by Jack Phillips, a baker who runs Masterpiec­e Cakeshop in the Denver suburb of Lakewood, of a state court ruling that his refusal violated a Colorado anti-discrimina­tion law.

In one of the biggest cases of the conservati­ve-majority court’s nine-month term, the justices must decide whether the baker’s action was constituti­onally protected, meaning he would avoid punishment under the Colorado law.

Phillips contends that law violated his rights to freedom of speech and free exercise of religion under the US Constituti­on’s First Amendment. The Supreme Court arguments will focus on his freespeech claim, based on the idea that creating a custom cake is a form of expression.

The couple, David Mullins and Charlie Craig, called the baker’s refusal a simple case of unlawful discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n.

The Supreme Court legalized gay marriage in a landmark 2015 ruling written by Justice Anthony Kennedy, one of the court’s five conservati­ves. The 81-year-old Kennedy, who has joined the court’s four liberals in major decisions on issues such as abortion and gay rights, could cast the deciding vote. Kennedy also is a strong proponent of free-speech rights.

A ruling favoring Phillips could open the door for businesses that offer creative services to spurn gay couples by invoking religious beliefs, as some wedding photograph­ers, florists and others already have done. Conservati­ves have filed other lawsuits seeking to limit the reach of the 2015 gay-marriage ruling.

Hundreds of demonstrat­ors on both sides of the dispute rallied outside the white marble courthouse. Supporters of Phillips waved signs that read, “We got your back Jack.” As Mullins and Craig made their way into the courthouse, the two men led their supporters in chants of “love wins.”

The case highlights tensions between gay-rights proponents and conservati­ve Christians.

“Religious liberty is the most important right we have been given in the Constituti­on, and this case exemplifie­s it,” said Paula Oas, 64, a Maryland resident. “I believe Jack is not harming others.”

Sherrill Fields, 67, a Virginia lesbian, said she feared that if the court sides with the baker, different types of businesses will turn away gay customers.

“This kind of thing will come out of the woodwork,” Fields said. “People and businesses of all sorts will deny us service. Restaurant­s, hairdresse­rs, doctors, tow-truck drivers, anybody that provides a service.”

The legal fight broke out in 2012, when Phillips told Mullins and Craig that due to his Christian beliefs he would not be able to make a cake to celebrate their wedding.

The two men married in Massachuse­tts but wanted to celebrate their nuptials with friends in Colorado. At the time, Colorado allowed civil unions but not marriage between same-sex couples.

The couple turned to the American Civil Liberties Union, which filed a complaint on their behalf, saying Phillips had violated Colorado state law barring businesses from refusing service based on race, sex, marital status or sexual orientatio­n.

The Colorado Civil Rights Commission found that Phillips had violated the law, and ordered him to take remedial measures including staff training and the filing of quarterly compliance reports. The Colorado Court of Appeals also ruled against him.

The Colorado Supreme Court refused to hear the case, prompting Phillips to appeal to the US Supreme Court.

The ACLU said Phillips’s legal team at the conservati­ve Christian group Alliance Defending Freedom is advocating for a “license to discrimina­te.” Those lawyers said creative profession­als should not be forced to engage in expression that goes against their conscience­s.

 ?? (Rick Wilking/Reuters) ?? BAKER JACK PHILLIPS decorates a cake at his Masterpiec­e Cakeshop in Lakewood, Colorado, in September.
(Rick Wilking/Reuters) BAKER JACK PHILLIPS decorates a cake at his Masterpiec­e Cakeshop in Lakewood, Colorado, in September.

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