You're Probably Going to Laugh at the Latest Update Regarding the Somali Daycare...
‘Seize the Streets’: Exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi Issues Bold Call as Iran...
Guess Who Hakeem Jeffries Blamed Once Again for the End of Obamacare Subsidies
Independent Journalist Cam Higby Uncovered More Somali Daycare Fraud in Washington
'Then It Is War:' Elon Musk Responds to Somali TikToker's Death Threat
Mamdani's Disastrous Block Party Is a Glimpse Into NYC's Socialist Future
There Was Another Freudian Slip at the Minnesota Daycare Fraud Press Conference
Los Angeles Fire Victims Were Silenced During Peaceful Rose Bowl Parade Protest
The FBI Thwarted Another New Year's Eve Terror Plot, This Time in North...
Newsom Delays Crackdown on Illegal Immigrant CDLs As Duffy's Jan. 5 Deadline Approaches
Minnesota Fraud is Just the Tip of the Iceberg
Zohran Mamdani Begins Sweeping Housing Overhaul Hours After Being Sworn in
San Francisco Mayor Signs Bill Establishing Reparations Fund
Guess What Mamdani Did on Day One As NYC Mayor
Why Paying Off Debt Matters More Than Ever in 2026
Tipsheet

Kentucky Clerk to be Freed From Jail, Huckabee and Cruz Pay Her Supportive Visits

Kentucky county clerk Kim Davis' jail sentence was short-lived. Taken to prison for refusing to issue same-sex marriage licenses, the Christian clerk has now been released by Judge David L. Bunning:

Advertisement

Hundreds of supporters are at a rally in Grayson, KY waiting for Davis to emerge from the Carter County Detention Center. She received visits from presidential candidates Gov. Mike Huckabee (R-AR) and Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), both of whom were spotted arriving at the prison.

Although Obergefell v. Hodges declared that same-sex marriage was now the law of the land in June, Davis refused to comply because of her religious convictions. Bunning ordered her to jail as a result of her resistance. 

His reversal now comes after receiving word that her deputies had begun issuing licenses to same-sex couples. However, today her lawyer insisted her name will not be on those licenses. So, time will soon tell if she will be making the march back behind bars. 

Advertisement

Related:

KENTUCKY

The controversial debate over Davis's jailing has two main arguments: One) the clerk has a duty to fulfill her role and follow federal mandates regardless of her religious beliefs and Two) Her Christian tenets are worth defending because God's law is more important than any decision made by five unelected justices.

Regardless of whose side you're on, perhaps you'd agree with me in thinking you'd never see the day when an American could be thrown in jail for daring to believe that marriage is a sacred bond between a man and a woman.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos