SCOTUS rules web designer can refuse same-sex clients

The Supreme Court ruled Friday that an evangelical Christian web designer could not be forced to work on wedding sites celebrating same-sex couples because it would violate her First Amendment right against compelled speech.

The 6-3 decision settled the 2016 case brought by Lorie Smith, 39, who sued the Colorado Civil Rights Commission over the state’s anti-discrimination laws that barred her from advertising that she won’t create websites for couples of the same sex.

But the high court found that to compel Smith to make sites “celebrating other marriages she does not” would be “an impermissible abridgment of the First Amendment’s right to speak freely,” Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the majority.

Under Colorado’s Anti-Discrimination Act, businesses are barred from denying the public goods and services based on race, gender, sexual orientation and religion — and they can’t post notices doing so either.

The Supreme Court ruled Friday that web designer Lorie Smith can’t be forced to work with same-sex couples.
AP

But Smith — a married mother of one who owns graphic design firm 303 Creative LLC — has claimed the Centennial State law clashes with her right to refuse business that conflicts with her religious beliefs.

Smith has maintained that she doesn’t have a problem working with LBGTQ clients on projects unrelated to marriage and has done so in the past.

While anti-discrimination laws “play a vital role in realizing civil rights of all Americans,” in this case forcing Smith would set a precedent allowing “government to force all manner of artists, speechwriters, and others whose services involve speech to speak what they do not believe on pain of penalty,” Gorsuch wrote.


Lorie Smith
The evangelical Christian said it goes against her beliefs to design wedding websites for same-sex couples.
REUTERS

“The nation’s answer is tolerance, not coercion,” the justice added in overturning lower court rulings against Smith.

In her dissent, Justice Sonia Sotomayor said the decision marked “a sad day in American constitutional law.”

“By issuing this new license to discriminate … the immediate, symbolic effect of the decision is to mark gays and lesbians for second-class status,” she wrote, claiming that under the Colorado law, Smith’s “freedom of speech is not abridged in any meaningful sense, factual or legal.


US Supreme Court with an LGBTQ flag in front.
The high court found that it violated Smith’s First Amendment right to free speech to force her to design wedding sites for same-sex couples.
Getty Images

“Petitioners remain free to advocate the idea that same-sex marriage betrays God’s laws,” Sotomayor went on. “Even if Smith believes God is calling her to do so through her for-profit company, the company need not hold out its goods or services to the public at large. Many filmmakers, visual artists, and writers never do.”

Smith’s lawyer Kristen Waggoner lauded the ruling, saying the high court had “rightly reaffirmed that the government can’t force Americans to say things they don’t believe.”

The 303 Creative case expanded on another landmark Supreme Court decision out of Colorado, the 2018 ruling in Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, in which the court ruled that baker Jack Phillips could refuse to make a wedding cake for a same-sex couple on religious grounds.

On Thursday, in an unrelated case, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of another evangelical Christian, reinstating Gerald Groff’s lawsuit against the US Postal Service for forcing him to work Sundays when his beliefs required him to observe the Sabbath.

The court said businesses had to accommodate requests for religious accommodation unless it forced them to incur significant costs.

The Colorado Attorney General’s Office didn’t immediately return a request for comment Friday.

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