The Republican presidential field has started to take positions on Kentucky county clerk Kim Davis, who’s scheduled to appear in court on Thursday for refusing to issue marriage licenses in the state against the order of a federal judge. The Supreme Court on Monday rejected an appeal from Davis, who continued to refuse to issue marriage licenses on Tuesday. Davis’ lawyers on Wednesday again asked a judge to allow her to refuse to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples.
A handful of candidates weighed in on Tuesday and Wednesday, but only after they were asked for comment. Candidates who responded so far have done so along predictable lines, with social conservatives expressing outspoken support for Davis, and more moderate-minded candidates dismissing her move.
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee defended Davis on religious freedom grounds.
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Jindal’s spokeswoman, Shannon Dirmann, said that “the governor believes every person should be able to follow their conscience, and clerks who cannot in good conscience participate in same sex marriage should not be forced to violate their beliefs.”
Huckabee offered the loudest praise for Davis, saying in a statement that he called her to offer his “prayers and support” and that he was “proud” of her for “showing more courage and humility than just about any federal office holder in Washington.”
He also offered a dubious interpretation of the Supreme Court’s gay marriage ruling that asserted Davis’ refusal was perfectly legal.
“The Supreme Court cannot and did not make a law. They only made a ruling on a law. Congress makes the laws. Because Congress has made no law allowing for same sex marriage, Kim does not have the constitutional authority to issue a marriage license to homosexual couple,” Huckabee said.
Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, meanwhile, said her protest is “part of the American Way.”
“I think people who do stand up and are making a stand to say that they believe in something is an important part of the American way,” he told Boston Herald Radio on Tuesday.
Paul said, however, the solution to the controversy surrounding gay marriages would be for the states “just to get out of the business of giving out licenses.”
Notably, the situation in Kentucky has become a flashpoint in the state’s competitive gubernatorial race. GOP gubernatorial nominee Matt Bevin is using it to attack Democrat Jack Conway, the state’s attorney general, who Bevin says has “failed” in his duty as attorney general in refusing to defend the state’s same-sex marriage ban in court.
South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham and former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina panned the clerk’s move, with Graham telling conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt Davis should “follow the law or resign.”
“The rule of law is the rule of law,” he said. “I appreciate her conviction, I support traditional marriage, but she’s accepted a job in which she has to apply the law to everyone.”
Fiorina made a similar argument on Hewitt’s show on Tuesday, saying that when someone takes a job as a government employee, “you are agreeing to act as an arm of the government.”








