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A new cultural and constitutional paradigm: The unending First Amendment battles in Trumpland ā First Amendment News 389
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Donald Trumpās impact on the First Amendment
In so many different respects, it is hard to think of any other single person whose actions have had such a significant effect on the public and courts' view of the First Amendment than Donald Trump. On the one hand, it has been argued that Trumpās many defamation actions against others are prime examples of the need for First Amendment protection. On the other hand, some now maintain that recent criminal and civil actions against Trump exemplify the need for First Amendment protection. Either or both ways, Trump is continuing to have a major impact on the law and culture of free speech in America. So much so that an entire book ā and a big one at that! ā could be written about the unending First Amendment battles connected in one way or another to our former president.
Wait a minute! Now that I think of it, such a book has already been written ā in 2018 by professor , titled, ā.ā That book cataloged and analyzed the various First Amendment conflicts that occurred during Trumpās presidency. (See ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ās āSo to Speakā podcast interview with Zick).
![The First Amendment in the Trump Era by Timothy Zick](/sites/default/files/styles/417xy/public/2023/08/The%20First%20Amendment%20in%20the%20Trump%20Era%20by%20Timothy%20Zick.jpeg.webp?itok=1aqSZVXM)
Related
- Richard Hasen, āā (2022)
- Catherine Ross, ā,ā (2021)
For all its merit, however, Zickās book was published five years ago ā which in Trump time is a long while. Hell, since then, Robert Corn-Revere published āThe Retaliator in Chief: The Case Against Donald J. Trump,ā in FAN 202.2 on March 4, 2019, and was litigated in the and the .
There has been so much more First Amendment cannon fodder since then that professor Zick would do well to consider a sequel ā albeit with the understanding that it too would likely become dated in just a few years. But the good professor is still in the Trump/free speech game, as evidenced by his recent comments in : āConflating protected political advocacy with conspiring to commit federal crimes might work to some extent in the court of public opinion, but wonāt be much of a defense in an actual court.ā
Trumpās lawyers continue to fly a different conceptual flag. For example, consider their First Amendment challenges to the Justice Departmentās request for a protective non-disclosure order in the 2020 election case. In the for , the defense argued āInstead of hewing to this narrow framework, the government requests the Court restrict all documents produced by the government, regardless of sensitivity, contrary to established law and President Trumpās First Amendment rights.ā
Opposing views on Trump and free speech: Abridgment or abuse?
Various parties have weighed in on either side of the issue:
āIn 2018, before the 2020 election and before Trumpās multifront challenge to the results, there was a striking level of bipartisan support for free speech ā including tolerance for lies. But that bipartisan support changed by 2023.ā ā Thomas B. Edsall, (Aug. 2)
āIn a trial about First Amendment rights, the government seeks to restrict First Amendment rights,ā Trumpās lawyers write in the filing. āWorse, it does so against its administrationās primary political opponent, during an election season in which the administration, prominent party members, and media allies have campaigned on the indictment and proliferated its false allegations.ā ā Brittany Bernstein, (Aug. 2)
āEven assuming that Smith can prove Trump lied, there would still be constitutional barriers to criminalizing his false statements.ā ā Jonathan Turley, (Aug. 5)
Compare those sentiments to these:
āOur Constitution is designed to stop people from trying to overthrow elections and trying to overthrow the government,ā Raskin, a former constitutional law professor, told NBCās āMeet the Press.ā āBut in any event, there's a whole apparatus of criminal law which is in place to enforce this constitutional principle. That's what Donald Trump is charged with violating.ā ā Rep. Jamie Raskin via Ken Tran, (Aug. 6)
āTrump did not just state the false claims; he allegedly used the false claims to engage in a conspiracy to steal the election. There is no First Amendment right to use speech to subvert an election, any more than there is a First Amendment right to use speech to bribe, threaten, or intimidate.ā ā Richard Hasen, (Aug. 1)
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And this:
āStarting roughly in the 1980s, the political valence of free speech arguments has changed, fueled in part by the feminist anti-pornography movement, in part by the movement of the Republican Party in a more libertarian and therefore anti-regulatory direction, in part by concerns about racist and other forms of hate and in part by the growth of what is now labeled political correctness.ā ā Frederick Schauer, (Aug. 2)
Next, consider the swirl of First Amendment fights that have made recent news in Trumpland. Only a few days ago, a federal district court Trumpās counterclaim in a defamation lawsuit against E. Jean Carroll. (Recall that last year a court $5 million to Ms. Carroll in her sex abuse and defamation case against Trump, and his bid for a retrial was .) And late this past July another federal judge Trumpās $475 million defamation suit against CNN. Then last July the Trump Media and Technology Group The Washington Post for defamation to the tune of $3.78 million in compensatory and punitive damages.
Furthermore, Steve Brill, the man who brought us Court TV, is that the Trump election indictment case be televised: āFederal court rules do not allow cameras in any criminal trials. However, no matter which side of this Donald Trump case you may be rooting for, you should want those rules to be suspended so that this trial can be televised live.ā
On related fronts: John Eastman is busy raising First Amendment defenses in his California Bar discipline case (see FAN issues 385 and 385.1 by Stephen Rohde), though his attorneys are asking that the proceeding be , arguing that their client is concerned that he may be criminally charged by special counsel Jack Smith.
Let us not overlook the former mayor of New York: āIn his to a lawsuit filed by two Georgia election workers who said Rudy Giuliani harmed them by falsely alleging they mishandled ballots in the 2020 presidential election, Giuliani has admitted lying. But he says the women suffered no harm ā and claims that his lies are protected by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.ā Mr. Giuliani has also been exercising his free speech rights full throttle in his of special prosecutor Jack Smith for alleged abridgments of Trumpās First Amendment rights.
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Let us also not forget the Dominion defamation line of cases. As Sam Levine recently in an article in The Guardian:
When Dominion settled its closely-watched $787.5m defamation lawsuit against Fox last month, its lawyers made it clear that the company would continue to pursue legal action against those who spread false claims about the company and the 2020 election. The company still has major defamation cases pending against , Sidney Powell, Patrick Byrne, and Mike Lindell ā all allies of Donald Trump who were some of the most prominent figures that spread election lies involving the voting machine company on television and elsewhere after the 2020 election.
And back in late December 2021, a federal judge the Proud Boysā First Amendment defenses in one of the Jan. 6 conspiracy cases.
Related:
- āā with Tom Clare and Dan Webb, First Amendment Salon (May 9)
- āIs the Big Lie Protected Speech?,ā Brennan Center for Justice (2022):
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How First Amendment auditors are changing policing, helped by YouTube
Robert Klemko, ā,ā The Washington Post (Aug. 7)
By the end of [one] night, [Christopher] Ruff had recorded a half-dozen interactions between police and civilians, some of which he . Later that night he encountered the same sergeant and unloaded a barrage of profane insults. It was a typical Friday for the 33-year-old, part of his personal crusade to stop what he sees as overstepping, oath-breaking law enforcement. His encounters with police have been viewed more than 65 million times.
With varying degrees of antagonism and legal expertise, the online movement known as cop-watching or First Amendment auditing has swelled in popularity in recent years, capturing the imaginations of millions of Americans who are examining their relationship with policing after George Floydās murder at the hands of police in Minneapolis in 2020.
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Free speech cases in the news
- ā,ā The Free Speech Center (Aug. 7)
- Brie Stimson, ā,ā Fox News (Aug. 5)
- Eugene Volokh, ā,ā The Volokh Conspiracy (Aug. 3)
- Susanna Granieri, ā,ā First Amendment Watch (Aug. 2)
- Susanna Granieri, ā,ā First Amendment Watch (July 27)
- Susanna Granieri, ā,ā First Amendment Watch (July 25)
2022-2023 SCOTUS term: Free expression and related cases
Cases decided
- (6-3 per Gorsuch for the majority and Sotomayor for the dissent: The First Amendment prohibits Colorado from forcing a website designer to create expressive designs speaking messages with which the designer disagrees.)
- (held: First Amendment violated ā 4 votes per Kagan with Sotomayor concurring in part joined by Gorsuch in part. Thomas filed a dissent and Barrett also filed a dissent, in which Thomas joined). (āIn this context, a recklessness standard ā i.e., a showing that a person āconsciously disregard[ed] a substantial [and unjustifiable] risk that [his] conduct will cause harm to anotherā . . . ā is the appropriate mens rea. Requiring purpose or knowledge would make it harder for States to counter true threats ā with diminished returns for protected expression. The State prosecuted Counterman in accordance with an objective standard and did not have to show any awareness on Countermanās part of his statementsā threatening character. That is a violation of the First Amendment.ā)
- (9-0: ā When a defendant in a trademark suit uses the mark as a designation of source for its own goods or services ā i.e., as a trademark ā the threshold Rogers test for trademark infringement claims challenging so-called expressive works, see Rogers v. Grimaldi, does not apply, and the Lanham Actās exclusion from liability for ā[a]ny non-commercial use of a markā does not shield parody, criticism, or commentary from a claim of trademark dilution.) (This is from footnote 1 of the majority opinion: āTo be clear, when we refer to āthe Rogers threshold test,ā we mean any threshold First Amendment filter.ā Justice Kagan wrote the majority. Justice Sotomayor filed a concurring opinion, in which Justice Alito joined. Justice Gorsuch filed a concurring opinion, in which Justices Thomas and Barrett joined.)
- (7-2: Title 8 U.S.C. Ā§ 1324(a)(1)(A)(iv) ā which criminalizes āencouraging or inducingā illegal immigration ā forbids only the purposeful solicitation and facilitation of specific acts known to violate federal law and is not unconstitutionally overbroad.)
Review granted
- (argued Dec. 5)
- (argued March 22)
- (argued, March 27) (Volokh commentary )
- (argued, April 19)
Cert. granted and case remanded
- (cert. granted, judgment vacated, and case remanded to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit for further consideration in light of United States v. Hansen).
- (cert. granted, judgment vacated, and case remanded to the Court of Appeals of Oregon for further consideration in light of 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis).
Pending petitions
State action
- (cert. granted)
- (cert. granted)
Qualified immunity
- (cert. denied)
Immunity under Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act
- (cert. denied)
Liability Anti-Terrorism Act
- (held, 9-0 per Thomas, J.: SCOTUS blog: āPlaintiffsā allegations that the social-media-company defendants aided and abetted ISIS in its terrorist attack on a nightclub in Istanbul, Turkey fail to state a claim under .ā)
Section 230 immunity
- (held, 9-0, per curiam, SCOTUSblog: āThe 9th Circuitās judgment ā which held that plaintiffsā complaint was barred by of the Communications Decency Act ā is vacated, and the case is remanded for reconsideration in light of the courtās decision in Twitter, Inc. v. Taamneh.ā)
Review denied
Previous FAN
FAN 388: ā42 women who argued First Amendment free expression cases before the Supreme Courtā
This article is part of First Amendment News, an editorially independent publication edited by Ronald K. L. Collins and hosted by FIREas part of our mission to educate the public about First Amendment issues. The opinions expressed are those of the articleās author(s) and may not reflect the opinions of FIREor of Mr. Collins.
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