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Government speech

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thegovernment speech doctrine, in Americanconstitutional law, says that the government is not infringing the free speech rights of individual people when the government declines to useviewpoint neutrality in its own speech.[1] More generally, the degree to which governments have free speech rights remains unsettled, including the degree of free speech rights that states may have under theFirst Amendment versus federal speech restrictions.[2][3]

Individual free speech rights versus government speech

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The government speech doctrine establishes that the government may advance its speech without requiring viewpoint neutrality when the government itself is the speaker. Thus, when the state is the speaker, it may make content based choices. The simple principle has broad implications, and has led to contentious disputes within the Supreme Court.[1]

The doctrine was implied inWooley v. Maynard in 1977 when the Supreme Court acknowledged a legitimate government interest in communicating an official, ideologically partial message to the public. In the 1991 case ofRust v. Sullivan,[4] government-funded doctors in a government health program were not allowed to advise patients on obtaining abortions, and the doctors challenged this law on Free Speech grounds.[1] However, the Court held that because the program was government-funded, the doctors were, therefore, speaking on behalf of the government. Therefore, the government could say what it wishes, and “the Government has not discriminated based on viewpoint; it has merely chosen to fund one activity to the exclusion of the other."[5]

InLegal Services Corp. v. Velazquez, the Supreme Court held that, although providing government-funded legal services appeared similar to government-funded doctors, the speech of the lawyers was private speech because lawyers spoke on behalf of their clients. As a result, the government could not prevent these attorneys from filing constitutional suits against the government.[6]

Free speech rights of states versus federal speech restrictions

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When one sovereign tries to limit the speech of another sovereign, theFirst Amendment to the United States Constitution may protect the latter from the former.[2] David Fagundes has argued that government speech deserves constitutional protection only where the speech is intrinsic to a public function and furthers democratic self-government.[2]

References

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  1. ^abcHudson, David.The Rehnquist Court: Understanding Its Impact and Legacy, p. 91 (Greenwood Publishing 2007).
  2. ^abcFagundes, David (2006). "State Actors as First Amendment Speakers".Northwestern University Law Review.100 (4):1637–88.
  3. ^Volokh, Eugene."Do state and local governments have free speech rights?",Volokh Conspiracy (June 24, 2015).
  4. ^Rust v. Sullivan,500 U.S. 173 (1991). See alsoRosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia,515 U.S.819 (1995), as well asJohanns v. Livestock Marketing Association,544 U.S.550 (2005).
  5. ^Puiszis, Steven.Illinois Governmental Tort and Section 1983 Civil Rights Liability, p. 837 (Matthew Bender, Third Edition, 2012).
  6. ^Nowak, John and Rotunda, Ronald.Nowak and Rotunda's Principles of Constitutional Law, p. 919 (West Academic, 2010).

Further reading

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Unprotected speech
Clear and
present danger

andimminent
lawless action
Defamation and
false speech
Fighting words and
theheckler's veto
True threats
Obscenity
Speech integral
to criminal conduct
Strict scrutiny
Overbreadth and
Vagueness doctrines
Symbolic speech
versus conduct
Content-based
restrictions
Content-neutral
restrictions
In the
public forum
Designated
public forum
Nonpublic
forum
Compelled speech
Compelled subsidy
of others' speech
Government grants
and subsidies
Government speech
Loyalty oaths
School speech
Public employees
Hatch Act and
similar laws
Licensing and
restriction of speech
Commercial speech
Campaign finance
and political speech
Anonymous speech
State action
Official retaliation
Boycotts
Prisons
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