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Supreme Court

Why SCOTUS Ruled 8–1 Against Colorado's 'Conversion Therapy' Ban

Understanding the Supreme Court’s decision in Chiles v. Salazar.

Damon Root | 4.7.2026 7:00 AM

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4-6-Colorado-ConversionTheraphy | Credit: Midjourney
(Credit: Midjourney)

Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against a Colorado law that prohibits mental health professionals from providing "conversion therapy" to minors, which the state defined to include "any practice or treatment…that attempts…to change an individual's sexual orientation or gender identity, including efforts to change behaviors or gender expressions or to eliminate or reduce sexual or romantic attraction or feelings toward individuals of the same sex." To the surprise of many observers, the decision was 8–1, a strikingly one-sided result in such a politically and socially divisive dispute. What happened?

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Kaley Chiles, a licensed mental health counselor whose practice focuses on "talk therapy," challenged the Colorado law on First Amendment grounds, arguing that the ban, as applied to her, unlawfully infringed on her constitutional right to speak freely with her clients.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit disagreed, however, holding that the state law was a permissible regulation of "professional conduct" that only "incidentally" affected speech. According to the 10th Circuit, the Colorado ban should be understood as part of "a long-established history of states regulating the healthcare professions," and was therefore entitled to the most deferential form of judicial review, a lenient standard known as the rational-basis test.

But the Supreme Court took a different view. Writing for the majority in Chiles v. Salazar, Justice Neil Gorsuch held that the 10th Circuit "failed to apply sufficiently rigorous First Amendment scrutiny in this case." The state law "does not just regulate the content of Ms. Chiles's speech," he wrote. "It goes a step further, prescribing what views she may and may not express." And a law of that kind must always be reviewed under the Court's most aggressive standard of review, which is known as strict scrutiny. The Supreme Court therefore reversed the 10th Circuit and remanded the case "for further proceedings consistent with this opinion."

In other words, the Court ordered the 10th Circuit to revisit the case and rereview the law under the far tougher strict scrutiny test, rather than the more lenient rational-basis test that it used the first time around.

That may sound like a lot of unsatisfying legalese, but it effectively amounts to a judicial death sentence for the state law in this case. "Colorado may regard its policy as essential to public health and safety. Certainly, censorious governments throughout history have believed the same," Gorsuch wrote. "But the First Amendment stands as a shield against any effort to enforce orthodoxy in thought or speech in this country. It reflects instead a judgment that every American possesses an inalienable right to think and speak freely, and a faith in the free marketplace of ideas as the best means for discovering truth. However well-intentioned, any law that suppresses speech based on viewpoint represents an 'egregious' assault on both of those commitments."

Those words should leave little doubt in anyone's mind that the Colorado law's application to Chiles will be ruled unconstitutional by the current Supreme Court if the lower court fails to take the none-too-subtle hint and do so itself on remand.

As noted above, this ruling was a lopsided 8–1. The sole dissenter was Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson. She thought the Colorado law was entitled to broad judicial deference and should be upheld as part of the state's traditional regulatory authority over the medical field. "The conclusion that a State can regulate the provision of medical care even if, in so doing, it incidentally restricts the speech of some providers, fully comports with the First Amendment's animating principles," Jackson asserted.

Yet no other member of the Court, including no other member of the Court's "liberal" wing, was willing to sign on to that assertion. In fact, in a separate concurrence, Justice Elena Kagan, joined by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, announced their full endorsement of Gorsuch's opinion. "The Court today decides that the Colorado law challenged here, as applied to talk therapy, conflicts with core First Amendment principles because it regulates speech based on viewpoint," Kagan wrote. "I agree."

Sometimes, a highly controversial political or social issue will lead to a highly fractious Supreme Court decision. Chiles v. Salazar is a reminder that even the most contentious issues do not always raise equally difficult legal questions for the Supreme Court to answer.

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NEXT: Brickbats: May 2026

Damon Root is a senior editor at Reason and the author of A Glorious Liberty: Frederick Douglass and the Fight for an Antislavery Constitution (Potomac Books). His next book, Emancipation War: The Fall of Slavery and the Coming of the Thirteenth Amendment (Potomac Books), will be published in June 2026.

Supreme CourtFree SpeechFirst AmendmentConstitutionLaw & Government
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  1. Mickey Rat   2 months ago

    One expects that Kagan and Sotomayor can think strategically enough to realize they cannot give the states police authority to regulate speech for public health reasons and protect transing minors in GOP controlled states. Brown cannot see past the moment to vote against progressive ideology here.

    1. Minadin   2 months ago

      Kagan's concurring opinion, which Sotomayor joined, even attacked Brown's legal logic.

      https://x.com/greg_price11/status/2038982643987910719

    2. mad.casual   2 months ago

      Brown cannot see past the moment to vote against progressive ideology here.

      And why exactly do you think Kagan and Sotomayor can "see two moves" ahead and KBJ can't? [drink]

      1. Mickey Rat   2 months ago

        She was not nominated for her fine legal mind, that is for certain.

        1. Hickamore   2 months ago

          On the contrary, hers is the finest legal mind on the court. Although even she missed the elephant in the room, which is that the therapist's case was based on free exercise of religion. As her brief concedes (or perhaps boasts), she sees state-licensed therapy as an opportunity to "share" her Christian faith (that is, Old Testament dogma that "god created them male and female," which is true except this fine lord of theirs also creates intersex babies in 1 of 1200 births; and that homosexuals must be put to death, so you'd better ungay quick). Gorsuch's majority opinion ignores this entirely, for the obvious reason that, as a theocrat, he looks for ways to smuggle religion into state-sponsored activity sub silentio, so that nobody notices.

          1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

            Wow. New contender for the molly award.

          2. Clipton   2 months ago

            The fact that the therapist claims her consultations were based on her religious beliefs strengthens her First Amendment claim, not weaken it as you seem to think, because freedom of religion is part of the First Amendment. And you're just plain making shit up with your claim that a private therapist's treatment plan is "state sponsored activity."

          3. Bloodaxe   2 months ago

            "except this fine lord of theirs also creates intersex babies in 1 of 1200 births"

            Based on what definition? Certainly not ambiguous genitalia, which is at most 0.05% (1 in 2000). Furthermore, disorders of sexual development don't imply that these people are some new sex. Most of them just require additional testing to figure out what sex they are. Humans have 2 sexes because we create 2 gametes, there is no 3rd sex. Even if it were possible to have a true human hermaphrodite, this is not known to have ever happened, this person would be both male and female, not some new sex.

          4. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

            Retards who think KBJ is the best justice dont deserve to post.

            https://reason.com/2026/04/07/why-scotus-ruled-8-1-against-colorados-conversion-therapy-ban/?comments=true#comment-11437512

    3. BYODB   2 months ago

      You realize, of course, that they can contort themselves into a position that prohibits conversion therapy but allows trans conversion if they so choose.

      Jackson shows us the way by being perhaps the biggest idiot to ever sit on the Supreme Court. When Democrats were talking about packing the court, they meant another few Jacksons not a few more Thomases.

      1. Mickey Rat   2 months ago

        I am merely trying to speculate on why they ruled with the majority on this case, instead of ruling in lockstep with progressive ideology. My best answer is that it is strategic.

        1. Zeb   2 months ago

          This may be an unpopular take, but it's just possible that they have some shred of integrity sufficient to make the obviously correct ruling in clear cut cases like this.

          1. Mickey Rat   2 months ago

            That is a good one, but I have seen how they usually rule.

            1. rswallen   2 months ago

              How they usually rule on clear cut cases, or how they usually rule in general?

              1. Social Justice is neither   2 months ago

                If they only step out of proggy sync in the most clearcut cases then you could argue that's strategic. They must preserve some respect for the instances they can make a change. It's cynical because it forecloses on them doing the right thing for the right reasons but they're progressives so they have no problem applying that yo others.

      2. Hickamore   2 months ago

        Jackson is far superior to Thomas. Are you a lawyer? Clarence has a handful of indefensible pet dogmas, nothing more.

        1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

          Dammit. Fine.

          Hickamore is the new scale.

          Hickamore +5

        2. Restoring the Dream   2 months ago

          Like the Constitution mean what it says?

  2. Mickey Rat   2 months ago

    The use of the term "conversion therapy" is particularly pernicious with regards to diagnoses of gender dysphoria in minors, as there is evidence that they are hardly "locked" into that condition and talk therapy can help in reconciling them into integrating their identity with their biological sex. The Colorado ban would lock them into transitioning in some form or another when a diagnosis is made, regardless of what would be actually helpful in treating such patients.

    1. Minadin   2 months ago

      Which, ironically, is more 'conversion' therapy than conversion therapy.

    2. Social Justice is neither   2 months ago

      When it comes to children it's more cult deprogramming and less conversion therapy.

      1. TrickyVic (old school)   2 months ago

        DEI, Anti-racism and white frugality are forms of conversion therapy.

        Liberals are upset about conversion when it's moving away from their goals.

        1. Ersatz   2 months ago

          ^This

        2. Rossami   2 months ago

          white frugality? I'm not familiar with that one. Did you intend "fragility"? Or is this a new variant of the all traditional values must be racist theme?

          1. mad.casual   2 months ago

            I only play my race card when I know it will pay off rather than playing it for everything up to and including cutting the speaker line at the NDP leadership convention. Otherwise it loses it's value. I'm white frugal.

    3. Zeb   2 months ago

      It is fairly perverse that they want to make this the same as gay conversion therapy (which also shouldn't be banned, though I personally think it's usually not great). The merits of being gay are certainly debatable, but it's pretty clear that that's just how some people are and people can live fairly normal lives that way. Trans is a whole other thing and is obviously mental illness at best. What's being called "conversion therapy" here should be the first line of treatment for people with gender dysphoria.

  3. Minadin   2 months ago

    It's because you have 1 judge who is an unmitigated retard, and while the others may have wild political biases that can show at times, they aren't on the same plane of stupidity.

    1. Fu Manchu   2 months ago

      Alito is more than happy to rule against free speech when it's convenient to him.

      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

        Poor retarded sarc.

      2. rswallen   2 months ago

        "while the others may have wild political biases that can show at times"

        Seems like that covers this.

    2. mad.casual   2 months ago

      you have 1 judge who is an unmitigated retard

      And what *exactly* makes you think she's retarded? [drink]

  4. Idaho-Bob   2 months ago

    Colorado may regard its policy as essential to public health and safety. Certainly, censorious governments throughout history have believed the same

    This statement needs to be flung in the faces of every politician who says shit like "hate speech" and "mis/disinformation".

  5. Fu Manchu   2 months ago

    This was an open and shut 1A case. Nice to see SCOTUS had some sense on it.

    1. TrickyVic (old school)   2 months ago

      Except for one.

    2. Davedave   2 months ago

      Yes, it doesn't need to be regulated as speech when it's already a criminal offence. Prosecutions for fraud, simple remedy that already exists.

  6. mad.casual   2 months ago

    the decision was 8–1

    Today's drinking game: Before reading the details of the case; have people try to guess who the lone dissenting judge is without sounding racist.

    1. BYODB   2 months ago

      Jackson isn't the only black person on the Supreme Court, so it's hard to label someone a racist just because they think Jackson is a damn fool.

      If you can find someone that hates both Thomas and Jackson, maybe, but I suspect finding such a person would be difficult.

      1. mad.casual   2 months ago

        Jackson isn't the only black person on the Supreme Court

        You say that like Clarence Thomas is black the same way KBJ is black. Are you here to tell us black people are wrong to think otherwise?

        [leans in, shields mouth with hand, whispers...] You understand the point of a drinking game, right?

        1. Zeb   2 months ago

          Thomas is about as authentically black and underprivileged in origin (in the American sense) as you can get. Born in a dirt floor shack speaking Gullah, FFS.

          1. rswallen   2 months ago

            But is he Black?

          2. mad.casual   2 months ago

            Underprivileged, living on a dirt floor, not speaking English is how you define 'authentically Black'? Huh.[drink]

    2. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 months ago

      Kbj, because she is a window licking retard.

      1. Zeb   2 months ago

        Nah, she's worse than that. Retards aren't dangerous or persuasive. She's just smart enough to make her bullshit sound OK to a certain segment of the population who want to believe it.

        1. Bill McNeal   2 months ago

          "Nah, she's worse than that. Retards aren't dangerous or persuasive. She's just smart enough to make her bullshit sound OK to a certain segment of the population who want to believe it."

          If you couch your bullshit in an empathetic-sounding voice and use words like, "underprivileged", "undiagnosed", or my favorite, "would you rather have a live son or a dead daughter?", then anything is fair game.

          She's a dangerous ideologue that managed to get confirmed while claiming under oath that she had no idea what a woman is because she's not a biologist.

  7. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

    This entire article reads like Damon is writing a freshman high school paper. People know what strict scrutiny is even if you found it shocking Damon. The tenor of this article is wild.

    Explains most of your prediction articles.

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      The tenor of this article is wild.

      It's clearly written to a dying, idiotic culture and not a/the dying, idiotic libertarian culture. Like a disco apologist explaining flagging album sales in the 90s. The genre is still popular, but here's why Dick Clark doesn't play as many of your favorite songs and sometimes people laugh at you when you do The Hustle in public.

    2. Mickey Rat   2 months ago

      There is no real editorial criticism of the Colorado government or the Democrat Party in suppressing medical speech or health care choice for parents and families. Particularly, the allegedly "libertarian leaning" Governor Jared Polis's part in making that ban law.

  8. MollyGodiva   2 months ago

    It was an 8-1 ruling because the lawyers were idiots. They should have very heavily pushed the (correct) argument that conversion therapy is child abuse. That would have introduced a very strong compelling government interest.

    1. TrickyVic (old school)   2 months ago

      I doubt you believe in judicial deference much when it comes to things you don't like. I doubt Jackson believes in judicial deference to authority when it's something she doesn't like either.

      Conversion therapy is not as harmful as gender reassignment.
      Less harmful for our society than Marxism.

      1. MollyGodiva   2 months ago

        I do admit that I don't like child abuse.

        1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

          You defend pedophiles and trans surgeries. You applaud abuse.

      2. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

        "Gender reassignment" IS conversion therapy.

    2. Chuck P. (Now with less Sarc more snark)   2 months ago

      Lol! Never stop being you, dude. This gem is worth every bit of that $0.50.

      (plays "shave and a haircut")

    3. Mickey Rat   2 months ago

      There is growing evidence that transing kids is child abuse that does not work on the psychological aspects and is physically harmful, but the "conversion therapy" ban seems to mandate that course of treatment once a diagnosis of gender dysphoria is made for a minor.

      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 months ago

        Study just this week that reaffirms transing through surgery and drugs increases mental health problems and suicidal ideation.

        1. mad.casual   2 months ago

          Akin to and almost lock-step with "The Cinderella Effect" circa the gay marriage movement; "trans identification" was largely understood to be a flight of fancy prior to the trans rights movement. It wasn't until adult male autogynephilia and was lumped together with teen female body dysmorphia and further with pre-adolescent speculative or wistful ideation... without any science undergirding any of it at any step and mountains of science opposing it at every step... that transitioning minors became "necessary".

          I pointed out that it's similar to both tossing virgins into volcanoes and ice pick lobotomies early on and certain professionals now frame it as the latter, but it's more like the former. Ice pick lobotomies, morality aside, definitively alter behavior and thinking. We didn't have drugs at the time to "fix" people the way we do today. The trans movement had all of that behind them historically and was either unaware like some tribe of cargo cult natives or, like true believers, actively rejected science and insisted on tossing virgins into volcanoes.

          1. rswallen   2 months ago

            tossing virgins into volcanoes.

            Dunno about volcanoes, but they do seem to want to toss them into operating theatres asap.

            1. mad.casual   2 months ago

              Cut their genitals off with ceremonial obsidian daggers... whatever.

              Point is, ice pick lobotomies no shit alter brain function and the connections between mind and body via scientifically-established mechanisms.

              Gender reassignment surgery, from before the time "gender identity" was coined and circulated, was about appeasing some gender God or re-uniting their gendered-but-mis-bodied Thetans with their extra-corporeal genitals.

    4. JFree   2 months ago

      It was an 8-1 case because CO has a small group of politically-driven gay billionaires who deliberately go overboard with any law on those issues in order to force legal lines to be drawn. They started about 25 or so years ago when the theocrats in Colorado Springs got some law/referendum passed that was almost Old Testament in its anti-gayness. So this group formed - and declared war - and has been very successful at taking over commissions/etc, forcing theocrats out of office, etc. And like everything - power corrupts and corrupt people gravitate to power.

    5. Zeb   2 months ago

      Perhaps some such therapy is abusive (as can be the case with any kind of therapy), but to call it that in general is idiotic. Convincing children that they are what they actually are is not abuse. And is a far better goal than telling them they can be something they are not and never will be.

    6. rswallen   2 months ago

      I would actually love to see a lawyer argue that. Not because I think it would be effective, just to see them embarrass themself.

    7. Clipton   2 months ago

      Conversion therapy is child abuse but performing life altering experimental surgeries on minors isn't. Got it.

  9. Ken Arromdee   2 months ago

    This is not what happened. What actually happened is that liberal justices had to sign onto the anti-ban side because the same reasoning has been used for laws that restrict doctors' speech related to abortions.

    It has nothing to do with how difficult the legal question is.

  10. Agammamon   2 months ago

    Root leaves out the previous rulings in transing children - if conversion therapy can be made illegal so can 'trans health care'.

    1. Rick James   2 months ago

      I admit I'm still struggling with this, although I admit that I'm no lawyer (or Doctor, or a Reason Approved(tm) District Court Judge).

      By the system's own definition, you start out (or are 'assigned') one thing, and then you are converted into something else.

      You're neither born into homosexuality nor heterosexuality as there's no genetic or biological basis for it. It is a preference. However, your "sex", sometimes referred to as "gender" is in fact something you're born into. So to turn you into the opposite sex in the binary calculation, you must be converted.

      Telling children they were born in the wrong body and then lying to them that sterilization is reversible is the worst form of conversion therapy and should not only be banned, but its practitioners should be hanged by the neck with piano wires.

      I can't help but think that at some point, someone will notice this fact and within a few years down the road, they'll continue transing kids on the pretext that conversion therapy is the Section 230 of Psychology.

      1. Zeb   2 months ago

        It's so incoherent. If gender is a social construct, then construct these kids into something that can have a reasonably normal and functional life. If adults want to be freaky weirdos, I don't give a shit (if they leave everyone else out of it). Leave the kids alone. THat is just sick and they really are destroying people's lives.

        1. Square = Circle   2 months ago

          It's so incoherent.

          Indeed. If gender is a social construct, there is no reason for surgeries and cross-sex hormones.

        2. mad.casual   2 months ago

          If adults want to be freaky weirdos, I don't give a shit (if they leave everyone else out of it).

          Once again, this all started, not because some tranny went around to all the public restrooms in their city and there were guards loitering around them, waiting to force them to use the "Tranny only" drinking fountains. It started because, for over 100 yrs. women in the workplace (and elsewhere) enjoyed separate bathrooms and employers provided them, and government officials couldn't simply abide private entities doing as they pleased like that.

          The issue was always about bludgeoning the opposition and forcing others to bend the knee. See the turnabout with Bryon Noem.

          1. Social Justice is neither   2 months ago

            Wait, you think the trans bathroom things were the start and not a reaction to ladydick out in women's spaces? Nobody much cared when everyone kept to themselves there but once you're in people's face about it and demanding more you're over the line.

  11. MWAocdoc   2 months ago

    Furthermore, if the state tries to regulate what I say to my patients, it is not regulating my medical practice but censorship of my speech. I may be wrong, but I cannot practice medicine while constantly looking over my shoulder to see if my thoughts are acceptable to the Medical Board. If I make a medical practice mistake, my patients can sue me for medical malpractice. If I make too many medical mistakes the Board may look into suspending my license to practice, although why doctors have to have permission from the state to practice medicine in the first place is a significant question.

  12. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

    I dont agree with this ruling because the law should be able to do the opposite: put tranny groomers in prison.

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      I disagree with the premise of locking people in cages as remediation for them rather than prevention for society. If people reform themselves while locked in a cage, great, but it's not the state's job.

  13. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>Why SCOTUS Ruled 8–1 Against Colorado's 'Conversion Therapy' Ban

    because one justice is 100% retarded

  14. Sequel   2 months ago

    Justice Jackson clearly and explicitly began her term by lecturing the USA that the Constitution "required" racial discrimination. I don't think that true liberals have any doubts about 70's civil rights exuberance distilled into 21st century Woke.

    On the other hand, Kagan and Sotomayor have never been quite the career liberals that the news media touts them to be and are more correctly cast as "progressives".

    As for the conservatives, the US is still adapting to life in a new era in which discrimination is plainly not divisible into Good and Evil forms, and blatant denial of a fundamental freedoms from the Bill of Rights are no longer arguably exempted from strict scrutiny.

    1. mad.casual   2 months ago

      On the other hand, Kagan and Sotomayor have never been quite the career liberals that the news media touts them to be and are more correctly cast as "progressives".

      Maybe generational semantic drift, but I would say this is backwards. They're traditional, career, bleeding-heart liberals. Minorities, including women, are oppressed and it's at least partially the government's job to make sure evil racists care for their brothers and sisters equally. They're just not progressive to the point that such care undoes all social and intellectual understanding of biology and science for the last 10,000 yrs.

  15. Davedave   2 months ago

    It's pretty clear that 'conversion therapy' can't be banned as a matter of free speech without running into difficulties, but is already the criminal offence of fraud.

    1. Brett Bellmore   2 months ago

      Having to avoid the necessity of proving it fraud is exactly what they want to avoid, because they might not be able to.

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