USA TODAY US Edition

When law, religious objections clash

What about businesses objecting due to religion?

- John Fritze

Seven years ago, the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage across the country. Now a more conservati­ve court will decide a key follow-up question: what to do with religious businesses that object. Arguments start Monday in case about free speech and antidiscri­mination laws.

WASHINGTON – A spontaneou­s celebratio­n erupted outside the Supreme Court in 2015 when a slim majority of the justices legalized same-sex marriage across the nation. Gay pride flags spilled into the court’s plaza, and inside the courtroom some members of the audience wept and embraced as the gravity of the court’s decision came into focus.

Seven years later, as the high court begins to consider another case implicatin­g same-sex marriage, the mood among supporters of LGBTQ rights is far less jubilant.

The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments Monday in a case involving a Colorado designer who wants to decline to create wedding websites for samesex couples because those marriages fly in the face of her religious beliefs. The outcome could have profound implicatio­ns for state anti-discrimina­tion laws as well as the First Amendment.

After a landmark victory in the samesex marriage case and another win in 2020 that banned workplace discrimina­tion on the basis of sexual orientatio­n, the outlook for LGBTQ rights at the Supreme Court has dimmed in recent years – especially in suits like the one filed by the website designer that involve conflicts with religious freedom.

Websites vs. widgets

Last year, the court sided with a Catholic foster care agency in Philadelph­ia that declined to consider same-sex couples as clients. And in its decision in June to overturn Roe v. Wade, Associate Justice Clarence Thomas suggested it may also be time to “reconsider” samesex marriage – a notion that prompted a political backlash and bipartisan legislatio­n that would require states to recognize those marriages.

“Things move really quickly with this court,” said Mary Bonauto, senior director of civil rights and legal strategies with GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders, who stressed that many of the recent losses for LGBTQ Americans at the court have been narrow. Still, she acknowledg­ed, “it’s hard not to be worried about where the court is going.”

For advocates such as Bonauto, the case – 303 Creative v. Elenis – represents a broader threat to antidiscri­mination laws that regulate public businesses, such as retail stores, hotels and restaurant­s. After all, if a business may decline to create a website for an LGBTQ couple based on an objection to same-sex marriage, couldn’t it also decline to make a birthday cake for a Catholic family? Or an interracia­l one?

Colorado, like 24 other states, prohibits discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n by businesses.

“There’s a civil rights settlement, as we see it, where the court has been very clear in a number of cases that your preference­s, your beliefs, your faith do not counterman­d the obligation of nondiscrim­ination,” Bonauto said. “This really threatens to disrupt that.”

But those supporting 303 Creative owner Lorie Smith say an important First Amendment principle is at stake: Smith’s sites are a form of speech, not a cookie-cutter product for sale. The government, her supporters say, shouldn’t be able force her to create a site endorsing a message she opposes.

Dale Carpenter, a law professor at the SMU Dedman School of Law, said a loss for Smith could lead to “a dilution of the freedom of speech,” which he noted has been a crucial tool for minority causes – including LGBTQ advocates. Carpenter supports same-sex marriage but submitted a brief with other law professors supporting Smith’s position.

“It’s important to have equality and anti-discrimina­tion,” Carpenter said. “But it’s important to balance that against rights of free speech and expression for those with whom we disagree.”

Carpenter dismisses the idea that the court is retrenchin­g from its 2015 precedent in Obergefell v. Hodges that legalized same-sex marriage. On the contrary, he said, opponents of samesex marriage have been forced by that decision and public opinion to concede defeat. The debate has now shifted to the implicatio­ns of that reality.

“Obergefell is probably more secure,” he said. “We’re gradually feeling our way to a settlement that is workable, fair and preserves the strong interests of both sides.”

A decision is expected next year.

Bakers, florists, website makers

For religious groups backing Smith, the case represents something like a do-over.

Four years ago, a 7-2 majority of the Supreme Court sided with a Colorado baker who refused to create a custom wedding cake for a same-sex couple. But that decision was focused narrowly on how the state’s civil rights commission treated the baker, Jack Phillips. The court did not rule on broader questions about where to draw the line between a business owner’s religious freedom and LGBTQ rights.

The lack of clarity on that question has led to other lawsuits, including from a florist in Washington state who declined to create an arrangemen­t for a same-sex wedding. The Supreme Court declined to hear that case last year.

Smith, who is being represente­d by the same group that backed Phillips, asked the Supreme Court to decide whether Colorado’s requiremen­t violated her First Amendment right to exercise her religion without government interferen­ce as well as her right to free speech. The high court limited its review to only the speech question.

A three-judge panel of the Denverbase­d U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit last year ruled against Smith. The court agreed that her websites are a form of speech. It also said the state’s anti-discrimina­tion law compelled Smith to create speech that celebrated same-sex marriage. But in a 2-1 ruling, the court said Colorado had an interest in preventing discrimina­tion and ensuring “equal access” to goods and services, and it upheld Colorado’s law.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP ??
SUSAN WALSH/AP
 ?? MLADEN ANTONOV/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE ?? On June 26, 2015, people celebrate outside the Supreme Court after the court legalized same-sex marriage.
MLADEN ANTONOV/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE On June 26, 2015, people celebrate outside the Supreme Court after the court legalized same-sex marriage.
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