Trump Administration Threatens Oregon Leaders With Criminal Prosecution for Letting Illega...
More Platner Grappling in the Press; An ICE Shooting Has the Bulwark Gang...
Democrats Unanimously Opposed the Working Families Tax Cuts. Now They're Trying to Take...
250 Years After Independence, New Index Asks Whether Government Is Stifling America's Char...
How Low Can She Go? As Prosecutors Lay Out Case Against Tyler Robinson,...
Here's the Problem With Modern-Day Immigration, According to Milton Friedman
It's Not Just Democrats Who Have Lost Faith in the Free Market
NH Casino Owner Pleads Guilty to Stealing $255K in COVID-19 Relief Funds
Boston Accounting Firm Owner Sentenced in $1.6 Million Under-the-Table Pay Scheme
The United States Is Still Talking to Iran After Big Strikes
West Virginia Woman Pleads Guilty to Stealing $160K From Disabled Veteran
This Canadian Woman Just Exposed the Fatal Flaws of Universal Healthcare
Boston Store Owner Sentenced After $7 Million SNAP Fraud Scheme
Susan Collins Already Defeated One of Her Possible Democrat Challengers
Talarico Has Another Tenet of His Fake Christianity
Tipsheet

Bevin Will Issue Executive Order to Remove Clerk Names from Kentucky Marriage Licenses

Bevin Will Issue Executive Order to Remove Clerk Names from Kentucky Marriage Licenses

In roughly one month, after Governor-elect Matt Bevin is sworn in, Kentucky clerks who oppose same-sex marriage will no longer have to violate their conscience in issuing marriage licenses.

Advertisement

"One thing I will take care of right away is we will remove the names of the county clerks from the marriage form," Bevin told reporters in the Capitol rotunda on Friday.

Rather than go through the state legislature to accomplish this, as Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear suggested, Bevin will instead issue an executive order.

It was unclear what effect his order would have on the case of Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis, who was jailed for five days after refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, making Kentucky a focal point in the debate over gay marriage in the United States. Davis, 50, met with Bevin the day she was released from jail.

Davis took steps to remove her name and office from the forms after she was released. She also had repeatedly urged current governor Steve Beshear, a Democrat, to remove clerk names from the form or provide another type of relief so she would not violate her Apostolic Christian beliefs.

Beshear has said he had no authority to relieve county clerks of their statutory duties by executive order and the issue could be addressed by the state legislature, which reconvenes in January.

Advertisement

Related:

KENTUCKY

One of Davis’ attorneys welcomed the news that Bevin would be “protecting the rights of conscience.”

"Gov. Elect Bevin's impending executive order is a welcome relief for Kim Davis and should be for everyone who cherishes religious freedom," Mat Staver said in a statement.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos