Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

High stakes seen in gay rights case

Supreme Court to consider bias protection­s again

- By Jessica Gresko

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court is being warned about the potentiall­y dire consequenc­es of a case this week involving a Christian artist who objects to designing wedding websites for same-sex couples.

Rule for the designer and the justices will expose not only same-sex couples but also Black people, immigrants, Jews, Muslims and others to discrimina­tion, liberal groups say.

Rule against her and the justices will force artists — from painters and photograph­ers to writers and musicians — to do work that is against their faith, conservati­ve groups argue.

Both sides have described for the court what lawyers sometimes call “a parade of horribles” that could result if the ruling doesn’t go their way.

The case marks the second time in five years that the Supreme Court has confronted the issue of a business owner who says their religion prevents them from creating works for a gay wedding. This time, most experts expect that the court now dominated 6-3 by conservati­ves and particular­ly sympatheti­c to religious plaintiffs will side with Lorie Smith, the Denver-area designer in the case.

But the American Civil Liberties Union, in a brief filed with the court, was among those that called Smith’s argument “carte blanche to discrimina­te whenever a business’s product or service could be characteri­zed as ‘expressive,’ ” a category of businesses that could range from “luggage to linens to landscapin­g.” Those businesses, they said, could announce, “We Do Not Serve Blacks, Gays, or Muslims.”

Smith’s attorneys at the Arizona-based Alliance Defending Freedom say that’s not true. “I think it’s disingenuo­us and false to say that a win for Lorie in this case would take us back to those times where people ... were denied access to essential goods and services based on who they were,” said ADF attorney Kellie Fiedorek.

Smith’s case follows that of Colorado baker Jack Phillips, who objected to creating a wedding cake for a gay couple. The couple sued, but the case ended with a limited decision. Phillips’ lawyer, Kristen Waggoner, will argue for Smith.

Smith wants to offer wedding websites, but she says her faith prevents her from creating websites celebratin­g same-sex marriages. But Colorado, like most other states, has a public accommodat­ion law that says if Smith offers wedding websites to the public, she must provide them to all customers. Businesses that violate the law can be fined, among other things.

Smith says Colorado’s law violates the Constituti­on’s First Amendment by forcing her to express a message with which she disagrees.

Among Smith’s other opponents are the Biden administra­tion and 20 mostly Democratic-leaning states including California and New York. The states told the court in one of 75 legal briefs filed by outside groups in the case that accepting Smith’s arguments would allow for widespread discrimina­tion.

“A bakery whose owner opposed mixed-race relationsh­ips could refuse to bake wedding cakes for interracia­l couples,” the states said. A “real estate agency whose owner opposed racial integratio­n could refuse to represent Black couples seeking to purchase a home in a predominan­tly white neighborho­od; or a portrait studio whose proprietor opposes interracia­l adoption could refuse to take pictures of white parents with their Black adopted children.”

Those examples could get particular attention on a court with two Black justices, Clarence Thomas and Ketanji Brown Jackson, who are married to white spouses, and another justice, Amy Coney Barrett, who has two adopted children who are Black. But the states gave an example involving a person’s national origin, too. “A tattoo studio could ink American flag tattoos on customers born in the United States while refusing to sell identical tattoos to immigrants,” they said.

Smith’s supporters, however, among them 20 mostly Republican-leaning states, say ruling against her has negative consequenc­es, too. A lawyer for the CatholicVo­te.org education fund told the court that if the lower court ruling stands and Smith loses, “a Jewish choreograp­her will have to stage a dramatic Easter performanc­e, a Catholic singer will be required to perform at a marriage of two divorcees, and a Muslim who operates an advertisin­g agency will be unable to refuse to create a campaign for a liquor company.”

The Jewish Coalition for Religious Liberty put it differentl­y, telling the court that a Jewish baker could have to fulfill the request of a neo-Nazi who wants a cake saying “Happy November 9th!” — a reference to Kristallna­cht, the night in 1938 when Nazis burned synagogues and vandalized Jewish businesses throughout Germany and Austria.

Alan Morrison, a constituti­onal law expert at Georgetown University, underscore­d that Smith doesn’t currently do wedding websites, making the case particular­ly speculativ­e and, he says, problemati­c.

Still, Morrison chuckled at some of the hypothetic­al scenarios both sides came up with, suggesting they are “a bit overblown.”

 ?? ANNA MONEYMAKER/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2020 ?? A person holds a rainbow flag while standing in front of the U.S. Supreme Court.
ANNA MONEYMAKER/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2020 A person holds a rainbow flag while standing in front of the U.S. Supreme Court.

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