In another surprising move from the U.S. Supreme Court this week, Justice Anthony Kennedy granted an emergency request Wednesday from Idaho officials to delay a federal appeals court ruling that struck down same-sex marriage bans in that state and in Nevada. Later on Wednesday, Kennedy lifted that hold only as it applied to Nevada, allowing same-sex nuptials to go forward there. Nevada officials declined to defend their state’s ban before the 9th Circuit, and did not seek a stay from the Supreme Court.
The action comes two days after the high court denied seven requests (known as petitions for writ of certiorari) to hear challenges against same-sex marriages bans in Indiana, Oklahoma, Utah, Virginia, and Wisconsin. That move immediately legalized marriage equality in those five states, which are part of the 4th, 7th, and 10th circuits. It also doomed bans in six others — Colorado, Kansas, North Carolina, South Carolina, West Virginia, and Wyoming — which are bound to the same appellate rulings that were put on hold pending Supreme Court review. Since the Supreme Court declined to review, those holds were lifted and marriage equality became law of the land throughout those three circuits.
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Already, Colorado Attorney General John Suthers has directed county clerks to begin issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples. And though South Carolina officials have vowed to uphold the state’s same-sex marriage ban, the Charleston County Probate Court announced on Wednesday it would begin issuing marriage licenses to gay and lesbian couples as well. In North Carolina, a federal judge on Wednesday lifted his hold on legal proceedings in two challenges to the state’s same-sex marriage ban, signaling his intention to strike it down. Gay and lesbian couples could be marrying in that state as early as Wednesday afternoon or early Thursday, a spokesman for the ACLU of North Carolina told WNCN. And as evening fell in Kansas Wednesday, a state judge in Johnson County ordered the clerk’s office to begin issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples there as well.
On Tuesday, one day after the Supreme Court cleared to the way for marriage equality’s expansion to 30 states plus the District of Columbia, a three-judge panel from the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals declared same-sex marriage bans in Idaho and Nevada unconstitutional, and put its ruling into immediate effect. Same-sex couples were due to begin marrying in those states on Wednesday morning.









