June is finals month. After a long journey, multiple ups and downs, and a lot of hard work, merits are tested one last time and a winner is crowned. Students and NBA fans know this. Lawyers like me do, too: In one of its final opinions of the term, the U.S. Supreme Court decided 303 Creative v. Elenis — holding that government can’t force people to say things they don’t believe. This is a win for free speech. And unlike an exam grade or NBA title, it’s a big win for all Americans.
But things were a little bumpy early on. Lorie Smith is a Denver-area graphic artist. She launched 303 Creative to love her neighbors while promoting causes close to her heart. Like most artists, Lorie works with all people but can’t express all messages. For Colorado officials, that was a problem. Lorie learned that officials would misuse state law to force her to say things about marriage she doesn’t believe if she were to start making wedding websites with marriage stories that she reported and wrote.
This is the norm in Colorado. For some years, state officials and others have been trying to punish cake artist Jack Phillips, owner of Masterpiece Cakeshop, for refusing to create art inconsistent with his beliefs. Lorie feared the same punishment, so she faced a grueling choice: curb her business, change her beliefs, or challenge an unjust law. She chose to protect free speech both for herself and those who disagree with her. And it’s a good thing she did.
Now, the Supreme Court has held that the government can’t force Lorie to express things she doesn’t believe. The ruling protects all people — including those who disagree with Lorie’s views. As the opinion notes, the state of Colorado’s position “would allow the government to force all manner of artists, speechwriters, and others whose services involve speech to speak what they do not believe on pain of penalty.” The ruling ensures that speakers—not the government—choose what they say.
But not everyone is cheering. Critics say this win will take us back to dark times in our nation’s past. That’s a lie. States will continue to apply public-accommodation laws to stop discrimination based on who someone is. The ruling protects only people speaking–people like Lorie who decide which projects to take based on what they will express, not who requests them. Lorie’s win ensures only that states do not misuse their laws to punish speakers they disagree with.
As our nation has matured, its commitment to free speech has enabled our most significant progress — from abolishing slavery and securing women’s right to vote to passing the Civil Rights Act and protecting equal opportunities for women and girls. Some may think these advances were inevitable, but those movements flourished because our nation refuses to coerce people whose speech the government disagrees with. Without the freedom to speak, we shutter diverse views, meaningful debate, and the condition for progress.
Protecting free speech is also rooted in love for our neighbors. It extends the same freedom for others that we seek to enjoy ourselves. No matter whether you agree with Lorie’s view on marriage, President Biden’s view on Ukraine, or Governor Polis’ view on gun control, all Americans should cheer Lorie’s win because it ensures that government cannot compel views it disagrees with. You can disagree with Lorie’s views yet celebrate her freedom to express them — because it’s the same freedom that ensures you can say what you believe without punishment.
This June has made many winners. Congratulations to Nuggets fans, who are celebrating their team’s first NBA title, and to students who finished the academic year strong. But unlike an NBA title or final grade, where some win and others fail, 303 Creative is a win for all Americans. Free speech came out on top. So take up the pen, load the camera, and clean the paintbrush — you can now speak. Freely.
Jake Warner is senior counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom (@ADFLegal), which represents Lorie Smith and 303 Creative.
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