A Colorado Court of Appeals judge ruled against Christian baker Jack Phillips Thursday after he appealed an earlier court decision requiring him to bake a cake for an individualâs gender transition.
Phillips won a previous case at the Supreme Court in 2018 after he declined to make a wedding cake for a gay couple, but was sued again in March 2021 after a transgender individual wanted Phillips, who owns Masterpiece Cakeshop, to make a cake that was blue on the outside and pink on the inside.
Alliance for Defending Freedom announced in a press release Thursday that the Colorado Court of Appeals had ruled against Phillips, but said that a plan was already in motion to appeal the ruling.
The court determined that Phillipsâ right to religious freedom did not fall under First Amendment protection.
âTurning to the constitutional issues presented, the division concludes that the act of baking a pink cake with blue frosting does not constitute protected speech under the First Amendment,â the court wrote. âAdditionally, the division concludes that CADAâs prohibition against discrimination based on a personâs transgender status does not violate a proprietorâs right to freely exercise or express their religion.â
Autumn Scardina, a transgender woman and attorney, attempted to order a cake for a gender transition party on the same day the Supreme Court announced it would hear Phillipsâ case regarding his refusal to bake a cake celebrating a gay wedding, according to ADFâs press release. Phillips said he could not make the cake because it would force him to violate his religious beliefs.
The Colorado court further argued that there is âno inherent meaning or expressed messageâ from Scardinaâs cake request, the opinion read. Additionally, the court ruled that Phillipsâ right to an accommodation due to his religious beliefs failed to supersede Scardinaâs âprotected statusâ since the requested cake did not have an explicit message, âwhether secular or religious.â
Scardinaâs attorney, John McHugh, told the Daily Caller News Foundation that the ruling was a âvictoryâ for his client and the âgreater LGBTQ community.â
âThe court held that Masterpiece Cakeshop broke the law when it refused to sell a birthday cake to Ms. Scardina because she is a transgender woman,â McHugh said. âIn doing so, the court rejected the defendantsâ free speech argument because, as defendants admitted at trial, a pink cake with blue frosting does not have any inherent meaning and the act of selling a cake is not speech. Similarly, the Court held, consistent with U.S. Supreme Court precedent, that Mr. Phillipsâ religious beliefs do not exempt him from anti-discrimination laws.â
Jake Warner, ADF senior counsel, told the Daily Caller News Foundation that the courtâs arguments ignore Supreme Court precedent, and that despite the cake having no written message, protection of âsymbolic speechâ is within the rights granted by the First Amendment.
âWhat we have here is a cake that symbolically expresses the message and the Supreme Court in many cases throughout history has recognized that symbolic speech is protected speech,â Warner said. âJust because speech is symbolic does not mean itâs not protected, quite the opposite, the First Amendment says the government canât force you to promote even symbolic speech that you disagree with.â
Warner also said that this courtâs latest ruling had not deterred their team from defending Phillipsâ right to religious freedom, noting that they planned to start the appeal process soon.
âJack serves everyone regardless of their background,â Warner said. âHe just canât promote every message through his custom cakes and heâs being punished for that.â
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