News

Ten years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court said gay couples had the right to marry. But that hasn't stopped opponents from trying to unravel the decision.
Ohioan Jim Obergefell catapulted into the national spotlight as the man who took gay marriage to the U.S. Supreme Court and won the right for millions of people like him and his husband.
Ten years after the Supreme Court legalized gay marriage, Ohioan Jim Obergefell worries the decision could be at risk. Here is what he has to say.
Greece’s Grand Plenary of the Council of State ruled by majority the right of adoption for married same-sex couples as their ...
Though marriage equality has been the law of the land for nearly a decade, lawmakers in at least nine states have recently ...
Greece’s top court, the Council of State, ruled that civil marriage and adoption by same-sex couples are constitutional, ...
It seemed as if the debate over marriage equality had run its course, but for too many Republicans, that’s apparently no ...
As Pride Month approaches, some members of the LGBTQ+ community say they feel targeted by changes the Trump administration is ...
It all begs the question: Could Obergefell v. Hodges, the 2015 Supreme Court ruling that legalized same-sex marriage, be ...
The definition of the “traditional family” has broadened considerably over the past few decades. But policymakers keep trying ...