A lawsuit filed by attorneys general in Missouri and Louisiana alleged the federal government pressured social media companies to target conservative speech across a range of topics, from the efficacy of vaccines to the integrity of the 2020 presidential election. (Photo Illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
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The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday rejected arguments by Missouri and Louisiana that the federal government violated the First Amendment in its efforts to combat false, misleading, and dangerous information online.
In a 6-3 decision written by Justice Amy Coney Barrett, the court held that neither the states nor seven individuals who were co-plaintiffs in the case were able to demonstrate any harm or substantial risk that they will suffer an injury in the future.
U.S. Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett at hearings of the U.S. Committee on the Judiciary. Credit: Screenshot/Judiciary Committee website
Therefore, they lack legal standing to bring a case against the federal government.
The plaintiffs failed to prove that social media platforms acted due to government coercion, Barrett wrote, rather than their own judgment and policies. In fact, she wrote, social media platforms “began to suppress the plaintiffs’ COVID–19 content before the defendants’ challenged communications started.”
Plaintiffs cannot “manufacture standing,” Barrett wrote, “merely by inflicting harm on themselves based on their fears of hypothetical future harm that is not certainly impending.”
The ruling overturns a lower court decision that concluded officials under Presidents Joe Biden and Donald Trump unlawfully coerced social media companies to remove deceptive or inaccurate content out of fears it would fuel vaccine hesitancy or upend elections.
Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey speaks to The Federalist Society on the Missouri House of Representatives floor in April 2024. (Annelise Hanshaw/Missouri Independent)
Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey, who inherited the lawsuit from his predecessor, has called the federal government’s actions “the biggest violation of the First Amendment in our nation’s history.”
But those arguments were greeted with skepticism by the court in March, with justices from across the ideological spectrum punching holes in the lawsuit and raising concerns about the consequences for public safety and national security.
In his dissent, Justice Samuel Alito wrote that the government’s actions in this case were not ‘ham-handed censorship” that the court has routinely rejected, but that they were coercive and illegal all the same.
“It was blatantly unconstitutional,” he wrote, “and the country may come to regret the court’s failure to say so. … If a coercive campaign is carried out with enough sophistication, it may get by. That is not a message this court should send.”
Conspiracy spreaders
The states filed the lawsuit in 2022, along with seven people who either were banned from a platform or whose posts were not prominently featured on social media sites such as Facebook, YouTube, and X, then known as Twitter.
Among the co-plaintiffs is Jim Hoft, founder of the St. Louis-based right-wing conspiracy website Gateway Pundit. Hoft has built a career on promulgating false conspiracies on a wide range of topics, from the 2018 Parkland school shooting to former President Barack Obama’s birth certificate.
His company recently filed for bankruptcy as it faces defamation lawsuits in Missouri and Colorado filed by people who say they faced threats after being vilified by Gateway Pundit in false stories.
During appeals court arguments last year, the attorneys general specifically cited Hoft, claiming that he is “currently subjected to an ongoing campaign by federal officials to target the content on his website.”
Another named co-plaintiff in the case is Jill Hines. She is co-director of Health Freedom Louisiana, an anti-vaccine organization that, among other things, advances the theory soundly rejected by medical experts that vaccines are a cause of autism.
Benjamin Aguiñaga, solicitor general for Louisiana, argued before the court in March that the government has no authority to try to persuade social media platforms to violate Americans’ constitutional rights, “and pressuring platforms in back rooms shielded from public view is not using the bully pulpit at all. That is just being a bully.”
Emails obtained as part of the lawsuit, Aguiñaga argued, show the government badgered platforms behind closed doors, abused them with profanity, and “ominously says that the White House is considering its options … all to get the platforms to censor more speech.”
“Under this onslaught,” he said, “the platforms routinely cave.”
No coercion, government insists
The federal government, represented by Brian Fletcher, principal deputy solicitor general, argued Aguiñaga’s accusations simply don’t hold water.
There is no evidence that decisions by social media companies to remove or deprioritize content can be attributed to the government. Instead, Fletcher argued, the companies made their own decisions relying on their own content moderation policies.
There was no coercion or attempted intimidation, Fletcher said, and the best proof is that social media companies “routinely said ‘no’ to the government.”
This story first appeared in the Missouri Independent, a member with the Florida Phoenix in the nonprofit States Newsroom network. It will be updated.
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