News

Supreme Court reverses 5th Circuit, again. Questions of online free speech remain.

In a case with profound free speech concerns, six Supreme Court justices ruled Wednesday that plaintiffs could show no injury and therefore had no right to sue.

The case, which arose after the pandemic and 2020 presidential election erupted in mass conspiracy theories online, raised several thorny constitutional issues. How do you crack down on misinformation without curtailing free speech? If the government asks a company to do something, is that inherently coercive? Doesn’t the government have an interest in communicating with social media companies – private businesses that now manage some of the biggest public forums – during a national crisis?

Why We Wrote This

Can the federal government crack down on misinformation online without stomping on the First Amendment? That’s just one hard question that remains unresolved after Wednesday’s Supreme Court ruling.

In sending the case, Murthy v. Missouri, back to a federal appeals court, the justices have done little to help clarify those concerns ahead of a contentious election season.

“Based on the court’s account of the facts, it seems right that it reversed” the lower court, says Jennifer Jones, a staff attorney at the Knight First Amendment Institute.

But “it’s really crucial that the Supreme Court clarify what the line is between permissible attempts to persuade and impermissible attempts to coerce,” she adds. “It’s unfortunate that we didn’t get that out of this decision.”

Nearing what is likely to be an eventful end to its term, the U.S. Supreme Court rejected a claim that the federal government had coerced social media companies into suppressing posts from certain individuals related to public health and election issues.

The narrow, procedural ruling held that two states and five individual plaintiffs don’t have standing, or the right to sue. The plaintiffs had claimed the federal government pressured social media companies into censoring users who voiced criticisms of the 2020 presidential election and the government response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The 6-3 decision – which split the court’s conservative justices – came in a case with profound free speech concerns, striking at the country’s yearslong efforts to police misinformation online without trampling First Amendment rights. In sending the case back to a federal appeals court, the justices have done little to help clarify those concerns ahead of what is expected to be a contentious 2024 election season.

Why We Wrote This

Can the federal government crack down on misinformation online without stomping on the First Amendment? That’s just one hard question that remains unresolved after Wednesday’s Supreme Court ruling.

“Based on the court’s account of the facts, it seems right that it reversed” the lower court, says Jennifer Jones, a staff attorney at the Knight First Amendment Institute.

But “it’s really crucial that the Supreme Court clarify what the line is between permissible attempts to persuade and impermissible attempts to coerce,” she adds. “It’s unfortunate that we didn’t get that out of this decision.”

Is misinformation protected under the First Amendment?

In 2021, the federal government became concerned about the spread of misinformation on social media amid the pandemic and unsubstantiated claims that the 2020 presidential election had been stolen. Officials in several federal agencies talked with senior figures at Facebook and Twitter (now called X) about their content moderation processes generally, and specifically about posts from certain users.

Previous ArticleNext Article