Supreme Court strikes down Colorado's ‘conversion therapy' ban for LGBTQ kids

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Supreme Court strikes down Colorado's ‘conversion therapy' ban for LGBTQ kids
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The Supreme Court has sided with a Christian counselor challenging Colorado's ban on LGBTQ+ “conversion therapy” for kids, ruling the law is a violation of…

An 8-1 high court majority found Colorado's law regulates speech based on viewpoint. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was the lone dissenter.has sided with a Christian counselor challenging Colorado's ban on LGBTQ+ “conversion therapy” for kids, ruling the law is a violation of her First Amendment rights.

In an 8-1 opinion from Justice Neil Gorsuch, the majority of the justices found Colorado's law regulates speech based on viewpoint and and sent it back to a lower court to decide if it meets a legal standard that few laws pass. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was the lone dissenter.administration, against laws passed in Colorado and more than 20 U.S. states that she argues wrongly bar her from offering voluntary, faith-based therapy for kids. Colorado, on the other hand, says its measure simply regulates licensed therapists by barring a practice that’s been scientifically discredited and linked to serious harm. During oral arguments in October, the court's conservative majority didn't seem convinced that states can restrict talk therapy aimed at changing feelings or behavior while allowing counseling that affirms kids identifying as gay or transgender. Justice Samuel Alito said the law “looks like blatant viewpoint discrimination."Chiles is represented by Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative legal organization that has appeared frequently at the court in recent years. The group also represented a Christian website designer who doesn’t want to work with same-sex couples and successfully challenged a Colorado anti-discrimination law in 2023.Colorado has not sanctioned anyone under the 2019 law, which exempts religious ministries. State attorneys say it still allows any therapist to have wide-ranging, faith-based conversations with young patients about gender and sexuality. “The only thing that the law prohibits therapists from doing is performing a treatment that seeks the predetermined outcome of changing a minor’s sexual orientation or gender identity because that treatment is unsafe and ineffective,” Colorado state attorneys wrote. Therapy isn't just speech, they said — it's health care that governments have a responsibility to regulate. Violating the law carries potential fines of $5,000 and license suspension or even revocation. Linda Robertson is a Christian mom of four from Washington state whose son Ryan underwent therapy that promised to change his sexual orientation after he came out to her at age 12. The techniques led him to blame himself when it didn’t work, leaving him ashamed and depressed. He died in 2009, after multiple suicide attempts and a drug overdose at age 20. “What happened in conversion therapy, it devastated Ryan’s bond with me and my husband," she said. “And it absolutely destroyed his confidence he could ever be loved or accepted by God.” Chiles contends her approach is different from the kind of conversion therapy once associated with practices like shock therapy decades ago. She said she believes “people flourish when they live consistently with God’s design, including their biological sex," and she argues evidence of harm from her approach is lacking. Chiles says Colorado is discriminating because it allows counselors to affirm minors coming out as gay or identifying as transgender but bans counseling like hers for young patients who may want to change their behavior or feelings. “We're not saying this counseling should be mandatory, but if someone wants the counseling they should be able to get it,” said one of her attorneys, Jonathan Scruggs. The Republican administration said there are First Amendment issues with Colorado's law that should make the law subject to a higher legal standard that few measures pass.

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Supreme Court rules against Colorado ban on LGBTQ ‘conversion therapy’Supreme Court rules against Colorado ban on LGBTQ ‘conversion therapy’The Supreme Court has ruled against a law banning “conversion therapy” for LGBTQ+ kids in Colorado, one of about two dozen states that banned the discredited practice. The high court majority sided Tuesday with a Christian counselor who argues the law banning talk therapy violates the First Amendment.
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Supreme Court rules against Colorado's ban on conversion therapy aimed at LGBTQ youthSupreme Court rules against Colorado's ban on conversion therapy aimed at LGBTQ youthLawrence Hurley is a senior Supreme Court reporter for NBC News.
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