Texas
attorney general says county clerks can refuse gay couples
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[June 29, 2015]
(Reuters) - County clerks in Texas
who object to gay marriage can refuse to issue marriage licenses to
same-sex couples despite last week's landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling
requiring states to allow same-sex marriage, Texas Attorney General Ken
Paxton said on Sunday.
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The nation's top court said on Friday that the U.S. Constitution
provides same-sex couples the right to wed, handing a victory to the
American gay rights movement.
Paxton said in a statement that hundreds of public officials in
Texas were seeking guidance on how to implement what he called a
lawless and flawed decision by an "activist" court.
The state's attorney general said that while the Supreme Court
justices had "fabricated" a new constitutional right, they did not
diminish, overrule, or call into question the First Amendment rights
to free exercise of religion.
"County clerks and their employees retain religious freedoms that
may allow accommodation of their religious objections to issuing
same-sex marriage licenses," Paxton wrote, adding that the strength
of any such claim would depend on the facts of each case.
"Justices of the peace and judges similarly retain religious
freedoms and may claim that the government cannot force them to
conduct same-sex wedding ceremonies over their religious
objections," Paxton wrote.
He noted that officials who refuse to issue marriage licenses to gay
couples could expect to be sued, but he said they would have ample
legal support.
"Numerous lawyers stand ready to assist clerks defending their
religious beliefs, in many cases on a pro-bono basis, and I will do
everything I can from this office to be a public voice for those
standing in defense of their rights," Paxton wrote.
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Last week's 5-4 ruling by the Supreme Court was the culmination of a
long legal fight by gay rights advocates. It unleashed a torrent of
emotions, both for and against the decision.
The ruling was the high court's most important expansion of marriage
rights in the United States since its landmark 1967 ruling in the
case Loving v. Virginia, which struck down state laws barring
interracial marriages.
(Reporting by Daniel Wallis; Editing by Toni Reinhold)
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