The Columbus Dispatch

Just issue the marriage license, most now say

- By Laurie Kellman and Emily Swanson ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Linda Massey opposes gay marriage. But she was incensed last summer to see that Kim Davis, a Kentucky county clerk, was refusing to issue marriage licenses to gay couples.

“If the government says you have to give out those marriage licenses, and you get paid to do it, you do it,” says the 64-yearold retiree from Lewiston, Mich. “That woman,” she said of Davis, “should be out of a job.”

Americans like Massey are at the heart of a shift in public opinion, an Associated Press-GfK poll has found. For the first time, most Americans expect government officials to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples even over religious objections.

It’s partly a matter of expecting public servants to do their jobs. But more broadly, the issue touches on a familiar dispute over which constituti­onal value trumps which: religious freedom, or equality under the law?

The question in recent months has entangled leaders with political sway, among them Pope Francis and the 2016 presidenti­al contenders. But it’s not a new conflict for a nation that has long wrestled with the separation of church and state.

Where Davis’ answer was the First Amendment’s protection of religious freedom — and she served jail time to back it up — a majority of respondent­s don’t buy that argument when it comes to public officials issuing marriage licenses. That’s a shift since an AP-GfK survey in July, when Americans were about evenly split. Then, 49 percent said officials with religious objections should be exempt from issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples, and 47 percent said they should be required to issue them.

Now, just 41 percent favor an exemption and 56 percent think they should be required to issue the licenses.

That shift was especially stark among Republican­s. A majority of them — 58 percent — still favor religious exemptions for officials issuing marriage licenses, but that’s down 14 points since 72 percent said so in July.

In June, the Supreme Court effectivel­y legalized gay marriage nationwide.

The cultural change has influenced the governing bodies of some of the most conservati­ve religions, including the Catholic Church under Pope Francis and the Mormon Church, which last week called for compromise­s between protecting religious liberties and prohibitin­g discrimina­tion.

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