Pete Buttigieg Slams SCOTUS 303 Creative Ruling: A 'Solution Looking for a Problem'
The Transportation Secretary discussed the case on CNN's "State of the Union."
July 3, 2023
By continuing to use our site, you agree to our Private Policy and Terms of Use.
The Transportation Secretary discussed the case on CNN's "State of the Union."
The Supreme Court justice will hear a case from a client represented by the anti-LGBTQ+ Alliance Defending Freedom, where Barrett has been part of a lecture program.
Lawyers for Lorie Smith and the state agreed to work together on an order stating she won't be punished under Colorado's antidiscrimination law.
This court has ruled that businesses open to the public can discriminate against LGBTQ+ people.
The conservative Christian baker argued that creating a cake celebrating Autumn Scardina's transition went against his religion and violated his free speech rights.
The law at the center of the case is the same as the Masterpiece Cakeshop Supreme Court case from 2018.
He's voiced support of SCOUTS also reviewing decisions on marriage equality and contraception use.
The conservative-majority court announced the decision on the last day of its session before justices jetted off on their summer vacation.
Web designer Lorie Smith claimed anti-discrimination laws violated her First Amendment rights; a conservative U.S. Supreme Court majority agreed.
The court's conservative majority seemed to sympathize with a designer who argues she has a legal right to turn away same-sex couples who seek wedding websites.
From their gilded perch, the ‘segregationist six” create an America only accessible to white, straight, wealthy Christians.
Robert Ingersoll and Curt Freed sued Barronelle Stutzman, who refused to provide flowers for their wedding, and won in state courts; Stutzman has now ended her appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.
The attorney had filed the lawsuit against the organization after the group said it had rejected his application for a job due to its code of conduct, which "excludes homosexual activity."
The court has set the date to hear the case of a Colorado web designer who says creating wedding websites for same-sex couples would violate her free speech rights.
LGBTQ+ rights face a major setback in the United States, all because one woman wants to deny queer people a service that may have not been actually asked for in the first place.
Chris's natural talent for dressing drag queens finally gets a chance to breathe freely as the designers make stripper gear for lady wrestlers.
Dianne Hensley says performing such marriages is incompatible with her religious faith, and her lawsuit is heading to the Texas Supreme Court.