After being released from jail last week for refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, Kentucky Clerk Kim Davis returned to work Monday and announced that saying she will neither authorize nor block such licenses from being issued by the deputies in her office.
The Kim Davis rally featured the song "Eye Of The Tiger" by Survivor. But they used it without permission and band frontman Frankie Sullivan is outraged. See the details and the video here.
The county clerk who is refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples has received little sympathy from U.S. District Judge David Bunning or Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear, but Kim Davis seems to have found an ally in presidential hopeful Ted Cruz.
Kentucky county clerk Kim Davis, who defied federal courts on same-sex marriage and has been jailed in contempt of court since Thursday, has filed an appeal with U.S. District Judge David Bunning, who last week had remanded her into the custody of U.S. Marshals
2016 Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz has publicly declared his support for Kentucky clerk Kim Davis and her refusal to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples due to her religious beliefs.
A Kentucky county clerk who has defied numerous court orders to begin issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples is due in federal court today after the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) asked for her to be held in contempt.
A Kentucky county clerk compelled to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples again defied court orders on Tuesday, telling applicants she was acting "under God's authority."
A federate appellate court on Wednesday ordered a Kentucky county clerk who has refused to defer to the Supreme Court's landmark ruling legalizing same-sex unions and issue marriage licenses to gay and lesbian couples.
A convoluted order issued by a federal judge on Monday means that two same-sex couples in eastern Kentucky still cannot obtain marriage licenses, even though the outcome will "prolong the likely violation of their constitutional rights."
A Kentucky county clerk is being sued for refusing to issue marriage licenses following the landmark Supreme Court ruling that legalized same-sex unions across the nation.
The display of rainbow colors to celebrate the Supreme Court's landmark ruling legalizing same-sex marriage across the nation turned into a political hot-button issue on Monday as the White House took heat for its diversity-inspired colors and Facebook users reacted to altered profile pictures.
TV personality and newly announced presidential hopeful Donald Trump has described his criticism of the Supreme Court's landmark ruling on same-sex unions as support for "traditional marriage" - a phrase that invited some questioning from CNN host Jake Tapper.
Republican presidential hopeful Rand Paul on Monday broke his silence on the Supreme Court's landmark ruling on same-sex marriage, suggesting that the easiest way to end the debate on the issue would be for the federal government to no longer recognize any kind of marriage.
The top law-enforcement official in Texas on Sunday defied the U.S. Supreme Court and told the state's county clerks and magistrates that they could refuse marriage licenses to same-sex couples if they felt that issuing them would violate their "religious liberty."
A recent Pew Research survey shows that Latinos continue to favor same-sex marriage as the Supreme Court's decision on marriage equality approaches. Overall, support for same-sex marriage has increased among all demographics.
North Carolina's Republican-led state Senate on Monday voted to override Gov. Pat McCrory's veto of a bill that would allow some court officials to refuse to perform same-sex marriages.
Just days after officially launching his second presidential campaign, former Sen. Rick Santorum announced that he would fight against a Supreme Court ruling that legalized same-sex marriage if he became president.
Australia's main opposition party on Monday proposed to legalize same-sex marriage, making Labor leader Bill Shorten the first head of a major political force in the country to back a bill to overturn a national ban on such unions.
Hours after state lawmakers approved the bill, North Carolina's governor on Thursday vetoed legislation that would allowed some court officials to refuse to perform same-sex marriages.