The 2013 decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court settled some questions: Federal discrimination against same-sex marriages is now unconstitutional. California must now reopen marriage to same-sex couples. But the decisions have also raised broad new legal and political questions—not to mention literally thousands of technical questions about how to apply existing statutes and regulations to same-sex marriages. L.A. Times federal courts reporter Maura Dolan talks with UCLA Williams Institute research director M.V. Lee Badgett, San Francisco chief deputy city attorney Therese Stewart, and UCLA Williams Institute legal director David Codell about the future of marriage rights in America.