Two days after the U.S. Supreme Court ducked the chance to potentially legalize marriage equality once and for all, the nation seems to be doing it anyway.
As evening fell Wednesday in Kansas, a judge ordered the state’s most populous county to begin issuing marriage licenses to gay and lesbian couples. Kansas belongs to the same federal appeals court circuit, the 10th, as Utah and Oklahoma, two states with marriage equality cases that the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hear on Monday.
By declining to review those cases, as well as similar suits out of Indiana, Virginia and Wisconsin, the justices gave the last word to federal appeals courts covering those states — the 4th, the 7th, and the 10th circuits — all of which found same-sex marriage bans to be unconstitutional. Essentially, the Supreme Court’s inaction on the matter doomed same-sex marriage bans throughout those three circuits, clearing the way for gay and lesbian couples to marry in 11 more states.
Related: Five questions about marriage equality, answered









