Kim Davis supporters are having a good week.
Six months after the controversial Kentucky clerk was briefly jailed for refusing to comply with a court order that she issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, lawmakers and a federal judge are taking tangible steps to accommodate her desire that county clerks’ names not appear on the Bluegrass State’s marriage license forms.
On Wednesday, a bill that would remove the names of county clerks from Kentucky’s marriage licenses passed out of the Senate State and Local Government Committee and now heads to the Republican-controlled state Senate floor for a full vote. Supporters view the measure, Senate Bill 5, as an attempt to codify an executive order issued two months ago by the newly-minted Republican Gov. Matt Bevin that shielded religious county clerks from being named on marriage licenses — an action Bevin’s predecessor, Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear, insisted could only be implemented through the legislature. But LGBT advocates worry the bill could create a marriage licensing system that discriminates against same-sex couples.
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Under the bill, county clerks would have two forms — one that includes spaces for “bride” and “groom” and another with spaces for “first party” and “second party.” LGBT advocates would prefer to see one form with checkboxes for “Bride/Groom/Spouse” to avoid any disparate treatment of couples getting one license over another.








