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Yes, you have a First Amendment right to ādemeanā government officials
Bay City native Madonna ā ā probably wouldnāt be thrilled with her Michigan hometownās violation of its citizensā First Amendment rights. The city code people speaking during the public comment period of city commission meetings from ādemeaning city officials, officers, or employees,ā ā[d]erogatory comments directed at another person,ā or āusing vulgarities.ā Thatās bad news for Bay City residents who want to take the Queen of Popās advice to ā.ā&²Ō²ś²õ±č;
In a letter sent last week, FIREcalled on Bay Cityās government to eliminate these unconstitutional restrictions on its constituentsā right to speak freely about matters involving the city and its leaders.
The prohibitions on ādemeaningā and āderogatoryā comments violate the First Amendment by selectively targeting speech based on viewpoint. The Supreme Court has made clear that even a speech restriction that āevenhandedly prohibits disparagement of all groupsā is viewpoint discriminatory because determining whether speech is disparaging requires the government to consider the viewpoint expressed. And basic First Amendment law dictates that speech does not lose protection because others subjectively find it offensive or otherwise objectionable.
It is all too easy to envision the Commission enforcing the rules to suppress criticism of commissioners and other city officials while giving the public free rein to praise the city and its leaders.
Bay City cannot justify a flat ban on āvulgarities,ā either. Just ask Paul Robert Cohen. In 1968, Cohen walked into a Los Angeles courthouse wearing a shirt that read, āFuck the Draft.ā He was convicted of disturbing the peace, but the Supreme Court reversed his conviction on appeal, stating that āso long as the means are peaceful, the communication need not meet standards of acceptability.ā The Court added that if governments were allowed to āforbid particular words,ā they āmight soon seize upon the censorship of particular words as a convenient guise for banning the expression of unpopular views.ā
A āvulgarityā may well be relevant to a Bay City residentās public comment. FIREhas seen local governments use similar bans on āobsceneā speech to suppress public comments on relevant issues, such as a school board that cited a parent for saying the word āpenisā to describe and complain about a case of indecent exposure on school grounds.
The problems with the commissionās rules run even deeper; theyāre also unconstitutionally vague. As we said in our letter:
When does a comment directed at a government official cross the line from merely critical to ādemeaningā or āderogatoryā? Making this determination is an unavoidably subjective exercise. There is no clear answer. Yet, laws and regulations āmust provide explicit standards for those who apply themā to prevent āarbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.ā
Bay City is far from the only example of a city or other government entity adopting a vague and overbroad ādecorumā policy to control constituentsā speech. Some viewpoint-neutral, objective, prepublished limits on public comment may be constitutional, such as limiting the amount of time reserved for each comment. But as FIREexplained in a recently filed amicus curiae brief, governments frequently use so-called decorum policies to shut down criticism of government officials.
FIRE sues Michigan mayor who abused power, shouted down constituents at city council meeting
Press Release
FIREfiled a lawsuit against the mayor of Eastpointe, Michigan, for censoring residents during public comment in city council meetings.
You need only drive two hours south from Bay City to find a stark example of a government official suppressing criticism in the name of decorum. FIRErecently sued the mayor of Eastpointe, Michigan, who shouted down and interrupted constituents at city council meetings when they tried to comment on her dispute with another council member. The mayor cited a policy forbidding commenters from directing speech at a council member, but she conveniently wasnāt a stickler for that rule when supporters called her ābeautifulā and āwonderful.ā
FIRE is concerned that Bay City commissioners may apply the cityās decorum rules in the same way. As we told the city, āIt is all too easy to envision the Commission enforcing the rules to suppress criticism of commissioners and other city officials while giving the public free rein to praise the city and its leaders.ā Such a double standard would violate the First Amendment and betray what the Supreme Court described as our countryās āprofound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open.ā&²Ō²ś²õ±č;
FIRE calls on Bay Cityās government to get and remember that citizens expressing themselves is in by abolishing its unconstitutional decorum rules.
We look forward to the cityās response to our letter.
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