The ruling could either reaffirm state authority to curb practices deemed harmful to minors or undermine similar laws in more than 20 states by expanding First Amendment protections for counselors.
Supreme Court Could Redefine the Limits of State Power
As the Supreme Court considers Chiles v. Salazar, a case examining Colorado’s 2019 ban on gay conversion therapy for minors, the justices face a dispute that could reshape how states regulate licensed mental health professionals.
The case turns on a single constitutional question: whether Colorado’s restriction on “any practice or treatment … that attempts or purports to change an individual’s sexual orientation or gender identity” is a permissible regulation of professional conduct or an unconstitutional limit on speech.
Newsweek sought views from religious, legal and medical experts as the Supreme Court prepares to issue its ruling in the coming weeks.
Why It Matters
As the Supreme Court weighs Chiles v. Salazar, the outcome stands to reshape far more than Colorado’s 2019 ban on conversion therapy for minors.
The case asks whether states may regulate a licensed therapist’s treatment when that treatment is delivered through speech—an issue that could affect health care oversight nationwide.
Supporters of the ban cite extensive evidence that conversion therapy endangers minors, while the petitioner argues the law unlawfully censors viewpoint-based counseling.
Legal scholars warn that a ruling for Chiles could threaten similar bans in more than 20 states and weaken professional standards across medical and mental health fields, while a ruling for Colorado would reaffirm broad state authority to restrict harmful practices involving children.
What To Know
So-called ‘gay conversion therapy’ is a discredited practice—usually involving talk-based counseling, behavioral techniques, or religious interventions—aimed at trying to change a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity, something every major medical and mental health organization has stated is ineffective, harmful, and unsupported by evidence.
Colorado’s conversion therapy ban is a 2019 state law that prohibits licensed
mental health providers from attempting to change a minor’s sexual orientation or gender identity through any treatment or practice, including talk-based counseling.
The petitioner, Colorado therapist Kaley Chiles, argues that the state has unlawfully restricted her interactions with clients.
Chiles wants the Supreme Court to let her talk with her young clients about sexuality and gender in the way she believes is right—even if the state considers those conversations harmful—and to stop Colorado from telling her certain topics or viewpoints are off-limits in her counseling sessions.