According to KTVA, Assistant Attorney General Bill Milks argued, "Social policy should not be taken away from the democratic process," arguing the 1998 ban, which was approved by voters, should stand.

U.S. District Court Judge Timothy Burgess ruled otherwise, saying, "The core purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment is to protect an individual's freedom by ensuring that a constitutional right is not 'infringed simply because a majority of people choose that it be.'"

This ruling is a complete injunction of further enforcement of the law, meaning same-sex couples can start getting married immediately.

One of the attorneys for the plaintiffs told the Alaska Dispatch News: "We're completely overjoyed," adding "It's been a long time coming. It's justice and equality in Alaska."

Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to look at same-sex marriage cases from Utah, Virginia, Oklahoma, Wisconsin and Indiana which essentially allowed lower court rulings against bans on gay marriage to stand.

The Alaska ruling could still be appealed and sent to the same court that overturned the bans from the other five states.

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Orange Crush event organizer Steven Smalls looks out at Tybee Island's South Beach, site of the 2025 HBCU spring break festival scheduled for April 19 on Georgia's coast. (Justin Taylor/The Atlanta Journal Constitution)

Credit: Justin Taylor for The Atlanta Journal Constitution