
Photographer Beats City Law that Forces the Promotion of Gay Pride Events
A Christian photographer’s seven-year legal battle against a Louisville DEI ordinance concludes with an $800,000 settlement, affirming that the government cannot compel artistic speech.
A seven-year legal fight for the right to say no to promoting LGBT Pride events has ended in an 800,000-dollar ruling in favour of free speech.
Faith, Photography, and a City Ordinance
The story began in 2019, when photographer Chelsey Nelson challenged the threat of a do-or-die “fairness” fiat from the City of Louisville, Kentucky, in the United States.
According to the city’s anti-discrimination law, Nelson was prohibited from advertising according to her Christian convictions about marriage.
Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) said at the time that the law “forced her to use her artistic talents to promote same-sex wedding ceremonies.”
Under the law, Nelson would not be allowed to conscientiously object and also keep her business photographing and blogging about weddings between one man and one woman.
She had to adopt and conform to the city’s diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) “fairness” regulations.
Responding, ADF filed a legal challenge on the Christian photographer’s behalf.
This was a strategic pre-emptive strike that took into account previous examples of lawfare being wielded by local authorities allied with those who identify as LGBTQ+.
From 2020 through 2024, Nelson’s case bounced from court to court until a ruling last year decided the outcome.
The first significant win was in 2022, when a federal district court issued a free speech injunction stopping the city from enforcing the law.
ADF explained that this allowed Nelson to “use her creative talents to speak messages that align with her religious beliefs about marriage.”
This meant that Nelson and her studio could now explain “reasons why she only celebrates wedding ceremonies between a man and a woman,” without fear of state retribution.
In 2025, a US District Court validated the photographer’s concerns and upheld the 2022 protection order. This stopped the city from using its DEI law to cancel Nelson’s livelihood.
“A God-Given, Constitutionally Guaranteed Right”
Commenting on the victory, ADF said,
“The court also ordered Louisville to pay Nelson nominal damages for restricting her speech.
These relate to compensation that “remedies past harm, prevents future misconduct, and vindicates constitutional freedoms.”
Although the city did not get a chance to enforce its anti-discrimination regulation, the pressure Nelson felt to self-censor was, in and of itself, ruled harmful.
Nelson has the constitutional right, ADF essentially argued, to responsibly run her business and life without fear of persecution.
ADF explained that “for over five years, Louisville officials said they could force Chelsey to promote views about marriage that violated her religious beliefs.
“But the First Amendment leaves decisions about what to say with the people, not the government.”
The court agreed.
Commenting on the 2025 outcome, Nelson strongly asserted,
“The government can’t force Americans to say things they don’t believe, and state officials have paid and will continue to pay a price when they violate this foundational freedom.”
“The freedom to speak without fear of censorship,” Nelson added, “is a God-given, constitutionally guaranteed right.”
“I’m grateful for my legal team at ADF that brought my case to victory not only for me, but for every other artist in Louisville.”
Last week, the lawsuit ended in a settlement.
The Democrat-run city agreed to pay $800,000 in attorneys’ fees for violating Nelson’s First Amendment rights.
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