'The View' Co-Host Says She Agrees With SCOTUS Ruling in Gay Wedding Website Case
Alyssa Farah Griffin voiced her opinion during a charged discussion on The View.
July 13, 2023
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Alyssa Farah Griffin voiced her opinion during a charged discussion on The View.
A Colorado web designer says she will not provide wedding website creation services to same-sex couples.
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.
The law at the center of the case is the same as the Masterpiece Cakeshop Supreme Court case from 2018.
So it begins: The Supreme Court orders a review of the discrimination finding against Aaron and Melissa Klein, who turned away a lesbian couple.
The Transportation Secretary discussed the case on CNN's "State of the Union."
Supreme Court-backed case of a Colorado web designer, aided by Alliance Defending Freedom, ignited fervent LGBTQ+ rights debate, spotlighting a larger quest to dismantle anti-discrimination laws.
The conservative-majority court announced the decision on the last day of its session before justices jetted off on their summer vacation.
The fear that the owners of an Idaho wedding chapel would be forced to host same-sex weddings is much ado about nothing.
Lorie Smith said she couldn’t design wedding websites out of fear of retaliation for her beliefs, but it turns out she designed at least one before making a legal challenge.
No gay couples have actually asked Lorie Smith to make wedding websites for them yet.
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.
The Texas wedding circuit just got a little gayer, thanks to the Dallas Voice's new event, the Wedding Party and Expo.
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.
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.