Attorney General Dustin McDaniel who recently announced his personal support for same-sex marriage rights but said he would defend the law filed paperwork yesterday to at least temporarily preserve the ban, which voters approved by a 3-to-1 margin.
In other states that have seen gay-marriage bans overturned, judges either issued stays with their orders or state lawyers sought them with some immediacy.
Seventy of the state's 75 clerks have not granted licenses. A handful of clerks, including one who granted licenses yesterday, filed a stay request saying the judge's decision didn't address a law that threatens clerks with fines for "wrongful issuance of a marriage license."
With the weddings Saturday and today, Arkansas became the 18th state to allow same-sex marriages, and the first among former states of the old Confederacy, which broke away from the US during its Civil War in the 1860s.
Democratic attorneys general in several states including Kentucky, Nevada, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Virginia have declined to defend same-sex marriage bans.
"On our licenses, it automatically prints 'Mr.' and I told the girls just to change that to 'Ms.'" said Becky Lewallen, the county clerk in Washington County, which is home to the University of Arkansas. She was among those who requested a stay.
