SCOTUS: Private Firms Not Bound by First Amendment

A private corporation that runs a public "forum" is not bound by the First Amendment, the Supreme Court ruled Monday morning.

The case, which nominally concerns a public access channel in New York, has attracted attention as a potential vector for regulation of social media firms facing charges of viewpoint bias.

The basic details of Manhattan Community Access Corp. v. Halleck are mundane. New York City designated Manhattan Neighborhood Network (MNN), a private nonprofit corporation, operator of a public access channel. Respondents DeeDee Halleck and Jesus Papoleto Melendez produced a film critical of MNN, which MNN agreed to air. The corporation subsequently removed their film and suspended the pair, claiming that they had made threats against MNN employees. Halleck and Melendez sued, claiming that MNN had violated their free speech rights under the First Amendment.

The case made its way to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, which is where it got interesting. Normally, to assess a First Amendment claim, a court would first determine whether or not the alleged violator was a state actor. But in this case, taking its cues from an opinion of now-retired Justice Anthony Kennedy, the Second Circuit instead ruled that, while MNN was a private entity, its fulfillment of certain roles made it a "public forum," and therefore subject to the requirements of the First Amendment.

The question before the Supreme Court, then, was whether or not what the Second Circuit had done was legitimate. Or, as Halleck and Melendez put it in their initial filing, "whether the Second Circuit erred in rejecting this Court’s state actor tests and instead creating a per se rule that private operators of public access channels are state actors subject to constitutional liability."

"Under what circumstances," they ask, "can a private entity (here a private operator of a public access channel) be deemed a state actor, subject to claims under the First Amendment?"

This question concerns more than just the operator of a Manhattan public access channel. Many major social media sites—Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and so forth—operate as platforms for discussion, and thereby claim no legal responsibility for the content published on them. But if the First Amendment can be enforced against a private entity serving as a public forum, then these sites risk similar lawsuits.

This concern was enough to motivate amicus curiae briefs from both the Internet Association, a trade group representing a number of major tech firms, and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the preeminent digital rights advocacy organization. The latter argued stridently against the idea that the mere operation of a public forum could qualify an otherwise private firm a state actor subject to the First Amendment.

"Certainly, the mere fact that something is either labeled a ‘public forum’ or operated by a private entity as a space generally open for communication by others does not automatically transform that private entity into a state actor," the EFF’s brief reads in part. "Internet users’ rights are best served by preserving the constitutional status quo, whereby private parties who operate private speech platforms have a First Amendment right to edit and curate their sites, and thus exclude whatever other private speakers or speech they choose."

A majority of the Court appeared to agree. Writing for his conservative colleagues, Justice Brett Kavanaugh concluded that MNN was categorically acting as a private actor, not a state actor. Because MNN does not cross that threshold into state action, he argued, whether or not it fulfills a role as a public forum is irrelevant to whether it is bound by the strictures of the First Amendment.

"[M]erely hosting speech by others is not a traditional, exclusive public function," Kavanaugh wrote, "and does not alone transform private entities into state actors subject to First Amendment constraints."

The dissenting opinion authored by Justice Sonia Sotomayor, and joined by the court’s left, leaves more leeway for possible First Amendment obligations for public forums, insofar as they are acting on behalf of a government agency. Specifically, Sotomayor argued, "By accepting [an] agency relationship [with New York City], MNN stepped into the City’s shoes and thus qualifies as a state actor, subject to the First Amendment like any other."

This leaves unclear what, exactly, constitutes a public forum subject to the First Amendment. Sotomayor notes that "this Court has not defined precisely what kind of governmental property interest (if any) is necessary for a public forum to exist." Her dissent, and the majority ruling as well, is silent on the question of public fora that, while private firms, rely on a government-created resource, i.e. the internet, in their model.

Still, the majority’s ruling seems to preclude the application of the First Amendment to private actors like Twitter or Facebook. This is all the more significant because many prominent figures on the right—especially president Donald Trump—have invoked free speech norms to criticize perceived attacks by social media giants on conservatives. Today’s ruling means such an argument, at least in the courts, is unlikely to get very far.

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Teen Vogue Tells Teenagers That ‘Sex Work’ Is ‘Real Work’

Teen Vogue is a vile publication that no parent should be getting for their teens. Here’s an example, but far from the first one. Yes, sex work is real work! https://t.co/v9T3b7eBj6 — Teen Vogue (@TeenVogue) June 16, 2019 Meanwhile: Teen magazine graduating from anal sex promotion to straight up prostitution. https://t.co/rsK3m4RiiE — Amanda House (@AmandaLeeHouse) […]

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The First Black President: Twice as Many Voters Say TRUMP Better for Blacks Than Barack Obama

33% of likely voters say President Trump has made life better for African Americans.
When Obama left office in 2099 only 13% of likely voters said he made life batter for African Americans.

This is not the first time Trump has seen his numbers climb among African Americans.
A VoterLabs poll in May found that 29% of female African Americans approve of President’s Trump.

Rasmussen reported:

With unemployment for black Americans at an historic low, voters continue to believe President Trump has been better for young blacks than President Obama. But voters also still feel the government could do more and don’t think Trump’s rotten relationship with black members of Congress helps.

A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey finds that 33% of Likely U.S. Voters think life for young black Americans has gotten better since Trump’s election. Slightly more (36%) say life is worse for young blacks now, while 22% rate it as about the same. These findings have changed very little from a year ago. (To see survey question wording, click here.)

By comparison, in July 2016, Obama’s final year in office, just 13% said life for young black Americans had gotten better since the election of the nation’s first black president.

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O’Rourke Asked Three Times Whether Crossing Border Should Be a Crime

It took CNN host Jake Tapper three attempts to get a straight answer from Robert "Beto" O’Rourke on whether it should be a crime to illegally cross the United States border with Mexico.

The line of questioning from Tapper was based on a few months old policy proposal by Julian Castro, who wants to decriminalize unauthorized border crossings and begin treating them as civil offenses. O’Rourke was asked whether he agrees with Castro that laws making it a crime to cross the border should be repealed, but failed to come to a conclusion.

"I don’t know if it should be repealed but we should acknowledge that most of those arriving at the border now, especially from Central America, are at the most desperate and vulnerable moment and they pose no threat or harm to this country," O’Rourke began, before detailing one of his policies for how to deal with the border.

Tapper followed up in an attempt to "get a straight answer" on the question, but was again side-stepped by O’Rourke, who answered by saying he thinks drug smugglers and human traffickers need to be detained.

"I think what I’m saying is that in the vast majority of cases, there is no need to incarcerate or to detain migrant families and especially children," O’Rourke said. "But if somebody is attempting to smuggle human beings into the United States, if they are attempting to cross illegal drugs into this country, I want to make sure that we have the legal mechanism necessary to hold them accountable and to detain them to make sure they do not pose a threat to this country or to our communities."

Tapper followed up a third time with O’Rourke, who insisted he had already answered the question.

"Yeah, I’ve answered the question," O’Rourke said. "I do not think it should be repealed but I’m trying to get to the heart of the issue, which is to treat people humanly, and that we improve our security not through walls and through cages, but by making sure that those who are at the most vulnerable who are trying to follow our asylum laws are able to do that."

CNN credited O’Rourke for coming out against decriminalizing border crossings, without mentioning the effort Tapper exerted to get an answer from O’Rourke.

O’Rourke has advocated for removing existing wall on the border.

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Dictator in exile, Medici edition: Is Obama secretly meeting with Italy’s Renzi to get their stories straight?

Former President Obama’s weird careening around Europe is starting to have the look of a spygate rationale.

Following his earlier meetings, publicly known, with President Emmanuel Macron of France, and Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, he’s now meeting secretly with Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, in what might just be a bid for the two of them to get their stories straight. Italy, recall, is the nation that elected a Trump-like new government, following the deep state collaborations of the earlier government, and the new government has fired four Italian intelligence officials, apparently over a spygate bid to pin Russian collusion charges, falsely, on President Trump via planted emails, in a Machiavellian bid to get him thrown out of office.

That’s the suggestion from Joe Hoft over at GatewayPundit, which has a long and involved piece about the former president’s latest travels, citing quite a few open sources. He begins:

As reported on May 25th==>>

Earlier this month Italian Prime Minister Conte asked for the resignations of four top intelligence officials after his call with President Donald Trump.

 

And now another Internet Sleuth has uncovered some shocking news related to the recent removal of these top Italian intelligence ministers from their positions as top spies in the government.

Spygate figure George Papadopoulos, the low level Trump aide who was targeted in the Mueller dragnet as well as in FBI surveillance, seems to think this might be what’s going on. He tweeted:

 

 

The report is long and involved and well-supported with primary documents from a variety of sources. What it looks like here is Obama scrambling to get his story straight with the Italians one step ahead of the lawmen seeking to uncover the origins of the entire spygate fiasco. He’s met with Merkel. He’s met with Macron. He’s keeping close to the luxury palace pad in the south of France. And he’s sure as heck not saying anything, just secretly meeting with the spygate partners in Europe, looking less Louis XIV and more like a Medici prince.

This looks like one worth watching for it’s outcome. Read the whole thing here.

Image credit: Public domain image, via Wikipedia with satirical additions by Monica Showalter

Former President Obama’s weird careening around Europe is starting to have the look of a spygate rationale.

Following his earlier meetings, publicly known, with President Emmanuel Macron of France, and Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, he’s now meeting secretly with Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, in what might just be a bid for the two of them to get their stories straight. Italy, recall, is the nation that elected a Trump-like new government, following the deep state collaborations of the earlier government, and the new government has fired four Italian intelligence officials, apparently over a spygate bid to pin Russian collusion charges, falsely, on President Trump via planted emails, in a Machiavellian bid to get him thrown out of office.

That’s the suggestion from Joe Hoft over at GatewayPundit, which has a long and involved piece about the former president’s latest travels, citing quite a few open sources. He begins:

As reported on May 25th==>>

Earlier this month Italian Prime Minister Conte asked for the resignations of four top intelligence officials after his call with President Donald Trump.

 

And now another Internet Sleuth has uncovered some shocking news related to the recent removal of these top Italian intelligence ministers from their positions as top spies in the government.

Spygate figure George Papadopoulos, the low level Trump aide who was targeted in the Mueller dragnet as well as in FBI surveillance, seems to think this might be what’s going on. He tweeted:

 

 

The report is long and involved and well-supported with primary documents from a variety of sources. What it looks like here is Obama scrambling to get his story straight with the Italians one step ahead of the lawmen seeking to uncover the origins of the entire spygate fiasco. He’s met with Merkel. He’s met with Macron. He’s keeping close to the luxury palace pad in the south of France. And he’s sure as heck not saying anything, just secretly meeting with the spygate partners in Europe, looking less Louis XIV and more like a Medici prince.

This looks like one worth watching for it’s outcome. Read the whole thing here.

Image credit: Public domain image, via Wikipedia with satirical additions by Monica Showalter

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Supreme Court Tosses Ruling Against Christian Bakers Who Refused Cake For Gay Couple

The Supreme Court on Monday tossed out a lower court ruling against two Oregon bakers who had refused to make a wedding cake for a gay couple.

The case involved Melissa and Aaron Klein of Oregon, who shut down their small baker after a state agency fined them $135,000 for refusing to bake a wedding cake for two lesbians. The agency said the Kleins had violated the state’s public accommodation law.

The Kleins, though, cited their Christian beliefs as the reason they would not provide services for the gay couple. The case followed another from last year, in which Supreme Court justices ruled in favor of a Colorado baker.

The high court sent the Klein case back to a lower court “for further consideration in light of” their Colorado decision.

The Oregon case involved Rachel Bowman-Cryer, who went to the Sweet Cakes by Melissa in Gresham, Oregon, in January 2013 and inquired about a wedding cake. When Aaron Klein asked for the name of the groom, Bowman-Cryer said there wasn’t one. Klein told her the bakery does not bake cakes for gay weddings.

The Kleins were ordered to pay $135,000 to the couple for “discriminating against them in violation of a state public accommodations statute,” Fox News reported. The couple was forced to shut down their bakery.

After the Supreme Court’s decision not to take up the case, First Liberty, which represented the couple, lauded the decision.

“This is a victory for Aaron and Melissa Klein and for religious liberty for all Americans,” First Liberty president Kelly Shackelford said in a statement. “The Constitution protects speech, popular or not, from condemnation by the government. The message from the Court is clear, government hostility toward religious Americans will not be tolerated.”

Last June, the high court delivered a similar victory to Jack Phillips, the owner of Masterpiece Cake Shop in Colorado. The justices sent that case back to a lower court “after finding the Colorado Civil Rights Commission had acted with religious animus when investigating the baker’s actions,” the Washington Post reported.

Justice Anthony M. Kennedy said in the court’s majority opinion that there was improper religious bias by some Colorado officials against the baker. Future courts, he added, would need to address the rights of those with religious objections to same-sex marriage along with the rights of gay people, who “cannot be treated as social outcasts or as inferior in dignity and worth,” the Post wrote.

“The high court took the same tack last year in the florist’s case,” the Associated Press wrote. “Taking a second look at the case, the Washington Supreme Court concluded earlier in June that there was no animosity toward religion in court rulings that florist Barronelle Stutzman broke the state’s anti-discrimination laws by refusing on religious grounds to provide flowers for the wedding of a gay couple. Stutzman owns Arlene’s Flowers in Richland, Washington. The justices could consider Stutzman’s appeal in the fall.”

 

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McConnell teases Senate vote on emergency border funding while House conservatives keep pressure on Dems

As the crisis at the southern border drags on, congressional Republicans in both chambers are putting pressure on their Democratic colleagues to give President Trump the emergency funding he’s requested to deal with it.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell announced Monday morning on Fox News that he would bring up the administration’s $4.5 billion emergency border funding for a vote, putting Senate Democrats on record.

“I’m going to bring it up free-standing next week and see if they really aren’t interested in dealing with this mass of humanity that we have to take care of at the border,” McConnell said on Fox & Friends. “What’s the objection? This is not about the wall but about the humanitarian crisis.”

The emergency border funding request contains no money for the wall or for border security, but merely requests resources for overburdened federal immigration officials and departments to better deal with “the immediate humanitarian crisis,” as one administration official put it, precipitated by the surge of people claiming asylum at America’s southern border.

The measure includes $3.3 billion for humanitarian resources like diapers, clothing, food, and bed space for unaccompanied alien children (UACs), while $1.1 billion would go toward operations and support to address the crisis: detention beds, personnel costs, and human smuggling investigations. $178 million would go to things like technology upgrades.

However, that request went out weeks ago, and Congress hasn’t yet acted on it despite the fact that federal facilities are unquestionably overwhelmed, the executive branch says.

“It has been six weeks since the Administration requested emergency supplemental funding and Congress has yet to act. Since May 1, the day the Administration submitted this request, over 144,000 migrants have crossed our southern border illegally,” a statement from Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Kevin McAleenan last week says. “While the Department is doing everything we can to maximize our resources and personnel in a Department-wide emergency response, the surge of families and unaccompanied children migration has created an unsustainable strain on DHS personnel working to protect our borders.”

Meanwhile, conservative members of the House of Representatives have been working to put pressure on their Democratic colleagues to bring the supplemental request up for a House vote. Last week, a group of Republicans led by Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, used procedural tactics to substantially slow down the House’s work on an important spending bill.

This week, Roy and others have also scheduled a press conference at the Capitol Building on Tuesday calling on House leaders to allow a vote on the emergency package.

“Migrants and Americans are suffering while [the House] refuses to address the humanitarian crisis on our southern border,” Roy’s office says. “How can we look the American people in the eye and tell them that what we have done (nothing) is enough? We can’t.”



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SCOTUS throws out $135,000 fine against Christian bakers in gay wedding cake case, sends case back to Oregon

The Supreme Court refused to take up a high-profile religious liberty case involving a family of Christian bakers on Monday and instead sent it back to the lower courts for further consideration in light of the high court’s ruling in the Masterpiece Cakeshop case.

The case of Aaron and Melissa Klein, whose Oregon bakery became a major focal point of the national debate about religious liberty and the LGBT movement, has been remanded to the Oregon Court of Appeals. The Supreme Court also tossed out the Court of Appeals’ previous decision to uphold a $135,000 fine against the couple because of their refusal to participate in a same-sex wedding ceremony in 2013 by making a cake for it.

Those standing behind the Kleins are chalking up Monday’s Supreme Court order as a big win.

“This is a victory for Aaron and Melissa Klein and for religious liberty for all Americans,” said First Liberty president, CEO and chief counsel Kelly Shackelford, whose organization is representing the Kleins along with Boyden Gray & Associates, in an emailed statement. “The Constitution protects speech, popular or not, from condemnation by the government. The message from the Court is clear, government hostility toward religious Americans will not be tolerated.”

The case is to be re-evaluated in light of the Supreme Court’s June 2018 narrow decision in the case of Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, which reversed a decision by the Colorado Court of appeals in a similar religious liberty case.

However, since and despite the 2018 ruling, Masterpiece Cakeshop owner Jack Phillips has been sued multiple times for alleged discrimination. Earlier this year, the state of Colorado dropped a lawsuit it brought against Phillips for refusing to bake a cake for a gender transition just weeks after last year’s ruling. Last week, the same transgender individual behind the previous lawsuit sued Phillips for allegedly refusing to sell a birthday cake; an attorney representing Phillips dismissed the claim as “yet another desperate attempt to harass” the baker.



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