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Published byRodney West Modified over 9 years ago
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In re Tam on Appeal to Group 2 Seattle IP Inn of Court
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Congress shall make no law... abridging the freedom of speech... t abridging the freedom of speech abridging the freedom of speech he freedom of speech, or of the press... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press...
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What counts as “speech?” “Congress shall make no law... abridging the freedom of speech...” Any expressive communication – Written – Oral – Expressive conduct
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Can government “abridge” speech? “Congress shall make no law... abridging the freedom of speech...” BUT: Government can make some laws abridging some speech
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Historically permitted abridgments Fighting words (but not offensive words) Incitements to and threats of violence (if clear & present danger) Defamation (“actual malice” for public figures) Obscenity (Miller test)
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Other permitted abridgements When government speaks on its own behalf – Public monuments – Vanity license plates Time, place, and manner limitations
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Particularly disfavored abridgements Prior restraint Content regulation Viewpoint discrimination
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Content-based abridgements must pass “strict scrutiny” Government regulation must – Achieve compelling government interest – Be narrowly tailored to meet that interest Stringent standard, rarely satisfied Viewpoint discrimination not allowed “Commercial speech” subject to “intermediate scrutiny” See Central Hudson Gas & Electric
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What is “commercial speech?” Speech that “does no more than propose a commercial transaction” See Virginia Board of Pharmacy Not necessarily commercial speech if: – Advertisement – Refers to a product – Economic motive
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Commercial speech must pass “intermediate scrutiny” Government can prohibit commercial speech that: – Proposes an illegal transaction – Is false or misleading Government can regulate commercial speech if: – Substantial government interest – Regulation directly advances the interest – Regulation is narrowly tailored to serve the interest (reasonable fit between end and means)
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Unconstitutional conditions Government may not require surrender of constitutional right in exchange for a government benefit – Improper government coercion – Particularly applicable in free speech context
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Challenging the abridgement Facial challenge—law is unconstitutional, period (“strong medicine”) As applied challenge—law may be constitutional, but not in this case Challenge based on vagueness or overbreadth
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