Same-sex couples hoping to marry in Virginia could be saying “I do” as early as next week, so long as the nation’s highest court does nothing to stop it.
Two weeks after concluding that Virginia’s same-sex marriage ban violated the U.S. Constitution, a three-judge panel of the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals declined to put their ruling on hold for the duration of the appeals process. That means that gay and lesbian couples can start marrying in the state by next Wednesday, according to the Virginia attorney general’s office, and that same-sex couples who already married elsewhere can begin receiving state recognition.
The U.S. Supreme Court could still intervene, however. According to NBC News’ Pete WIlliams, lawyers for the county clerk defending the ban said they would seek an emergency order from the justices to block any same-sex marriages from taking place in the state while the case is appealed. Attorney General Mark Herring, a Democrat who successfully argued against his state’s ban in federal court, has petitioned the Supreme Court to review the case, and one of the defendants has indicated her intention to do the same.









