In Kentucky town, gay-marriage opponent Davis still divides
MOREHEAD, Ky. (AP) The last place Lincoln Caudill expected to see his eastern Kentucky hometown was on a television in a Philadelphia restaurant, yet there it was in the summer of 2015, flickering back at him from a newscast about a defiant county clerk refusing to issue marriage licenses to gay couples.
The U.S. Supreme Court had just declared same-sex marriage legal. But Kim Davis, the local clerk, denied some gay couples licenses because she said it violated her religious beliefs to have her name on them. For the next few months, satellite trucks, Bibles and bullhorns would dominate Morehead, Kentucky, as it became the focus of fierce national debate.
Two years later, Caudill is back in Morehead, campaigning for the county's top elected office and trying to talk to as many people as he can. But like many people in town, he doesn't want to talk about Davis.
"I know she's created a controversy in the county, and the farthest I can stay from giving an opinion on it, that's what I plan to do," he said.
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