Are they going to overturn gay marriage

Such concerns are on the minds of many as Pride Month gets underway. As the Supreme Court mulls over whether or not to take a case asking them to overturn the historic ruling, we’ve documented every step that has been taken in the past five years to threaten gay marriage in the U.S.

Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito says he doesn't like the decision legalizing gay marriage. They want to make the case a judgment on Obergefell itself. I wouldn't be surprised if same-sex marriage was on the docket. Hodges decision anytime soon. Then came Election Day: Tuesday, Nov.

A few weeks later, Michael got a text from his partner: "We need to talk. They met online in one lived in Pennsylvania, the other in Arizonamet in person in and by December they were a couple. Gay married couples, this year, are worried about things that might have seemed fanciful just a year ago.

So did the Dobbs decision overturning the constitutional right to abortion. Legal experts say the Supreme Court is unlikely to overturn its landmark Obergefell v. It all begs the question: Could Obergefell v. There are laws in place, both at the state and national levels, to make it harder for them to happen.

There are rumblings. Sounds unlikely? Michael and Jacob clicked. But who could say, in light of the anti-DEI policies of the new administration, and the past actions of the Supreme Courtthat they couldn't happen? Still, he says, it's precedent.

If Obergefell were overturned, it could become illegal for gay couples to marry in the 32 states that still have bans on the books. Justice Amy Coney Barrett was pressed in an interview with CBS News on concerns that the Supreme Court may overturn its landmark Obergefell same-sex marriage ruling fromresponding by saying.

Those things haven't happened yet. They had talked of getting married inor There was no hurry. Which is why, as Pride Month launches with the usual parades, celebrations, festivals and music events, it is also looking nervously over its shoulder.

They may not happen. But her lawyers plan to go further. Could the federal recognition of gay marriage go away, just as the federal right to abortion did? Until it happened. Hodges, the Supreme Court ruling that legalized same-sex marriage, be simply overturned by the court's current conservative majority, as Roe v.

Wade was in ? Such a test-case — that, or another like it — could end up, sooner or later, in the Supreme Court. 10 years after the Supreme Court extended marriage rights to all same-sex couples, it will consider whether to take a case asking it to overturn the decision.