Lorie Smith Goes to Washington Fighting to ‘Create and Design’ Consistent With Her Faith

Mary Margaret Olohan /

WASHINGTON — The United States Supreme Court took up a momentous free speech case on Monday, one dealing with graphic designer Lorie Smith and her desire to speak and work consistent with her faith.

Smith spoke with The Daily Signal outside the Supreme Court following Monday’s oral arguments.

“I am a graphic and website designer from Colorado,” she shared. “I want to create and design for weddings. And I want to do that consistent with my faith.”

“But the state of Colorado is censoring and compelling my speech and forcing me to create custom artwork, custom expression, that goes against the core of who I am and what I believe,” Smith continued. “So the court heard the case today, I’m hopeful that the Supreme Court will stand to protect everyone’s right to create and speak consistent with their own beliefs.”

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Asked how she was feeling after the momentous morning, she responded: “I’m feeling incredible, I’m just so grateful for this opportunity.”

“My hope and prayer is that the court will protect everyone’s right to speak freely, whether your views are similar to mine on marriage or perhaps different, the right to speak freely is guaranteed to each of us, and I am hoping the court protects that right,” Smith added.

Smith is represented by Alliance Defending Freedom. The organization’s president, Kristen Waggoner, told The Daily Signal on Monday that Smith’s case “involves whether all of us have the right of free speech.”

“Colorado has taken the position that it can compel all kinds of artists and speakers to say things they don’t believe,” she said. “That includes Lorie.”

Lorie Smith, left, the owner of 303 Creative, a website design company in Colorado, walks with her family to greet supporters outside of the U.S. Supreme Court on Dec. 5. (Photo: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

“I hope the court issues a broad decision that protects all speakers,” Waggoner continued. “Many states have public accommodation laws and some states have up to 20 different categories in those laws. They’re sweeping, and a number of government officials are using them to compel people to say things that they just don’t believe.”

This is not only a threat to the personal rights of Americans, the Alliance Defending Freedom president warned — “it’s actually a threat to the principle of fundamental government and allowing authoritarian governments to tell people what ideas are worthy of celebration.”

Like Colorado Masterpiece Cakeshop owner Jack Phillips, who was taken to court for declining to create a wedding cake for a same-sex wedding, Smith’s faith causes her to hold to a traditional view of marriage between one man and one woman.  

Smith is the owner of 303 Creative near Denver. She filed a lawsuit challenging a Colorado law that would force her to create custom wedding websites for same-sex nuptials, the same law used to punish  Phillips.  

Smith’s case, Phillips’ case, and other similar court battles are “about the government’s responsibility to respect the right of each of us,” Phillips shared with The Daily Signal during a rally outside the Supreme Court Monday morning.

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The Daily Signal’s Virginia Allen contributed to this report.

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