In a decision that could shift the legal footing of workplace discrimination law, the U.S. Supreme Court has unanimously revived a lawsuit brought by an Ohio state employee alleging discrimination based on her sexual orientation.
Marlean Ames, a heterosexual woman employed by the Ohio Department of Youth Services since 2004, claims she was passed over for promotion and later demoted under a new supervisor — a lesbian woman — who allegedly favored another LGBTQ+ colleague. Ames argues that her treatment was a direct result of her heterosexuality and that diversity-focused management practices unfairly penalized her.
The Court’s ruling in Ames v. Ohio Department of Youth Services dismantles a precedent long applied by lower courts, which had required plaintiffs from majority groups to show special evidence of discrimination when alleging bias.
Writing for the Court, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson clarified that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act does not impose “a heightened standard” for majority-group plaintiffs. In other words, heterosexual employees alleging discrimination deserve the same legal footing as anyone else.

However, as Fox News notes, Thursday’s order does not fully resolve the case in Ames’ favor. The justices acknowledged that Ohio has “alternative arguments” to justify its decision to promote a lesbian woman over Ames and to subsequently demote her with a pay cut — after which her former position was filled by a gay man.
The Court did not weigh the merits of those arguments, including claims that Ames was a difficult employee. Instead, it struck down the 6th Circuit’s “background circumstances” rule, which had required plaintiffs from majority groups to meet a higher burden of proof when alleging discrimination:
“We granted review to consider the validity of the “background circumstances” rule, and we reject that rule for the reasons set forth above. We leave it to the courts below to address any of Ohio’s remaining arguments on remand,” Jackson wrote.
Ames’ case was supported by the Justice Department, the American First Legal Foundation and the libertarian Pacific Legal Foundation. The NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund was among the major groups backing Ohio in the case.
The state maintains Ames was demoted as part of a structural reorganization aimed at addressing sexual abuse in juvenile facilities. Officials involved in the personnel decision, the agency points out, were also straight. Still, Ames contends her demotion was motivated less by performance and more by an office culture increasingly driven by identity politics.
Previously, both a federal district court and the Cincinnati-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals sided with the state. Those courts concluded Ames had not convincingly shown her sexual orientation was a factor in the agency’s decision-making.
But the Supreme Court disagreed, effectively resetting the standard. The justices’ decision not only sends Ames’ case back to the lower courts — it also signals a broader opening for claims of so-called reverse discrimination to be treated on equal legal ground.
Ames’ case may now serve as a litmus test for how far courts are willing to apply anti-discrimination laws in workplaces where diversity policies and identity-based initiatives continue to influence employment decisions — even in the Trump era.
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