Current:Home > MyAt the Supreme Court, 'First Amendment interests all over the place' -GrowthSphere Strategies
At the Supreme Court, 'First Amendment interests all over the place'
View
Date:2025-04-15 11:24:45
The usually quite certain justices of the U.S. Supreme Court seemed to be uncertainly groping their way on Tuesday, as they sought to craft a new rule for dealing with the social media age.
At issue were cases that test the ability of public officials to block critics from their "personal" social medial pages, a practice that Donald Trump often engaged in when he was president.
The first of Tuesday's cases dealt with two local school board members in Poway, Calif. They blocked two persistently critical parents from their social media pages, and the parents sued, contending the school officials had used their government authority to violate their First Amendment right of free speech.
Representing the school board members, lawyer Hashim Mooppan told the justices that the social media pages were extensions of the board members' campaign pages and thus were purely personal because the state had no control over them.
That prompted Justice Samuel Alito to ask, "What if you showed a Facebook page to a thousand people and 999 of them would think that this is an official page? Under your test, that wouldn't matter?"
"That shouldn't matter," Mooppan replied.
The example of former President Trump
"So that means President Trump's Twitter account was also personal?" Justice Elena Kagan interjected, raising the issue of then Trump's practice of blocking critics on his Twitter account.
"I think that was a harder question," Mooppan replied, noting that a government staffer facilitated Trump's page for him.
That didn't satisfy Justice Kagan. "I don't think a citizen would be able to really understand the Trump presidency, if you will, without any access to all the things that the president said on that account" she said. "It was an important part of how he wielded his authority. And to cut a citizen off from that is to cut a citizen off from part of the way that government works."
Who can be excluded?
Justice Sonia Sotomayor pressed lawyer Mooppan further, asking if a school board member's social media page is deemed to be personal, could he "exclude Muslims, Jews, whoever he wanted to exclude... because that's a social account?"
Mooppan replied that these were not government social media pages. They were campaign pages. "My clients were elected officials who have to run for re-election. So what they were doing is what incumbent officials all over the country do as a regular matter. They talk to their constituents to show what a good job they've been doing and why they should be re-elected." And they do that on their personal social media pages.
Several justices asked about school board members devoting their pages to school business. Why doesn't that transform their pages into a place where the public's business is being done? Mooppan replied that school business could just as well have been discussed in the board members' backyards, or for that matter, at a campaign event that is open only to fellow Republican or fellow Democratic party members.
Justice Amy Coney Barrett followed up, observing, "I think it's very difficult when you have an official who can in some sense define his own authority." After all, she noted, "My law clerk could just start posting things and say this is the official business of the Barrett chambers, right?"
Lawyer Mooppan replied, somewhat inscrutably, that "It becomes harder the higher up you go in the chain because it's harder to identify a superior who can tell you what to do."
What is state action?
Arguing the contrary position, on behalf of the blocked school board critics, lawyer Pamela Karlan contended that the parents were being denied access to important information about the public school system that is only available on the board members' personal pages.
Justice Alito asked how blocking a critic from a social media page is different from a public official at the grocery store deflecting a critic by telling her to call his office.
Karlan replied that when a public official is "clearly off duty, that is ... pushing the shopping cart down the aisle, arguably, they're not doing their job." But, she added, "If they say they're doing their job, then, yes, I would say the starting point is they're state actors," meaning they are exercising the authority of the state and their page is not purely personal.
Justice Brett Kavanaugh asked Karlan if her position would be the same if the White House press secretary were to invite a select group of reporters to her house for dinner, leaving out other members of the press. "Is that state action?" he asked.
Karlan replied that there would be "no meritorious constitutional claim" the uninvited reporters would "have a right to come to your dinner ... as opposed to you don't allow people to show up at press briefings altogether."
She contended that a public official, talking about public business, can't kick constituents off of his or her social media page without violating the constituents' first amendment rights.
"That's what makes this case so hard," opined Justices Kagan. "There are First Amendment interests all over the place."
veryGood! (96)
Related
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Mandalorian actress Gina Carano sues Disney over firing
- Vanderpump Rules' Raquel Leviss Makes Unexpected Runway Appearance During NYFW
- Alicia Keys and Swizz Beatz want you to see the 'Giants' of art in their collection
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- A 'Love Story' turned 'Red': Fireball releases lipstick inspired by Taylor Swift, Travis Kelce
- Leah Remini Reacts to New Beyoncé Wax Figure Comparisons
- Texas A&M to close Qatar campus as school’s board notes instability in Middle East as factor
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- The wife of a famed Tennessee sheriff died in a 1967 unsolved shooting. Agents just exhumed her body
Ranking
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Escaped North Carolina inmate recaptured after leaving work site, kidnapping woman: Police
- How murdered Hollywood therapist Amie Harwick testified at her alleged killer's trial
- 2 dead after small plane crashes into car, creating fiery explosion on Florida highway
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Alicia Silverstone Just Channeled Her Clueless Character With This Red-Hot Look
- Tommy Hilfiger takes over the Oyster Bar in Grand Central for a joyous New York-centric fashion show
- Colman Domingo talks 'Rustin' Oscar nod and being an awards style icon: 'Isn't it crazy?'
Recommendation
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Why Jesse Palmer Calls Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift’s Romance a Total Win
5 Marines killed in helicopter crash are identified: Every service family's worst fear
Sales of Tracy Chapman's Fast Car soar 38,400% after Grammys performance
Bodycam footage shows high
Is Caitlin Clark the best player ... ever? Five questions about Iowa's transcendent guard
Frustrated Taylor Swift fans battle ticket bots and Ticketmaster
Police say an Amazon driver shot a dog in self-defense. The dog’s family hired an attorney.