Title: Controls on the Press in Colonial America
1Controls on the Press in Colonial America
Type of control
Source of control
- licensing
- seditious libel
- breach of privilege (contempt of assembly)
- royal governors
- courts
- colonial assemblies
2Licensing in the colonies
- 1st newspaper in the colonies, Publick
Occurrences, Both Foreign and Domestick, 1690,
Boston, shut down after one issue for publishing
without a license. - 2nd newspaper, also in Boston, 1704, licensed and
subsidized by colonial authorities.
- How and when ended?
- In the mid-1720s, largely due to efforts of
James Franklin, who refused to submit to
licensing, jailed twice. Public opposition.
Licensing just died out.
3Seditious libel in the colonies
- What was seditious libel?
- Any criticism of government. Anything causing
public to think ill of government. Truth is
irrelevant. In fact, the greater the truth, the
greater the libel. - How and when ended?
- 1735 seditious libel trial of John Peter Zenger
effectively ended prosecutions but did not change
the law of seditious libel. Change in the law
didnt come until the end of the 18th century.
4Breach of privilege (or contempt of the assembly)
in the colonies
- What was breach of privilege?
- Criticism of the colonial assemblies or their
members.
- How punished?
- Summarily by the assemblies. None of the
rights available to the accused that he would
have had in a regular court of law.
- How and when ended?
- Enforced until the Revolution.
5Blackstones definition of freedom of the press,
18th century
No prior restraints on publication but not
freedom from post-publication punishments for
criminal publications.
Was this what the framers of the First Amendment
meant when they protected freedom of the press in
the First Amendment?
6First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
Added to the Constitution Dec. 15, 1791.
7The Sedition Act of 1798
A crime to speak, write or publish any false,
scandalous and malicious statements about
Congress or the president. Law incorporated the t
wo protections Hamilton had argued for in the
Zenger trial 1. Truth was a defense. 2. The jur
y was responsible for determining whether the
words were criminal.
8The Sedition Act of 1798
- Led to the development of a new definition of
freedom of the press
- Freedom of the press consists of no prior
restraints and the freedom to criticize
government.
- Law expired in 1801. President Jefferson repaid
fines and pardoned those who had been convicted.
920th Century Sedition Cases
- Schenck v. United States, 1919 The clear and
present danger test is enunciated by Justice
Holmes.
- Abrams v. United States, 1919 Holmes dissents,
saying the majority is misconstruing the clear
and present danger test.
- Gitlow v. New York, 1925 For the first time the
U.S. Supreme Court applies the First Amendment to
the states via the Fourteenth Amendment the
Court incorporates the First Amendments free
speech provision into the Fourteenth Amendment by
declaring the word liberty included the liberty
of speech.
10Incorporation
- Until 1925, the Bills of Rights, including the
First Amendment, applied only to actions of the
federal government
- Gitlow v. New York, 1925, U.S. Supreme Court
applied the First Amendment to the states via the
Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment.
11Incorporation
- The process by which the U.S. Supreme Court has
applied portions of the Bill of Rights to the
state via the 14th Amendments due process clause.
12More sedition cases
- Dennis v. United States, 1951 It becomes obvious
that the justices do not agree on the meaning of
the clear and present danger test.
- Yates v. United States, 1957 The Court begins
developing a new test, drawing a distinction
between advocacy of abstract doctrine and
incitement to imminent illegal action. - Brandenburg v. Ohio, 1969 The Court announces
the new test -- Advocacy of abstract doctrine is
protected by the First Amendment incitement to
imminent lawless action is not.
13Functions of freedom of expression in a
democratic society
- for individual self-fulfillment
- for the advancement of knowledge and discovery of
truth (marketplace of ideas theory)
- to enable citizens to participate in social,
including political, decision-making
(self-government rationale)
- to maintain a balance between stability and
change in society (safety valve function)
- to serve as a check on government (watchdog
function)
14First Amendment tests
- Bad tendency test
- If expression had a tendency to cause harm, it
could be prevented and/or punished.
15First Amendment tests
- Clear and present danger test
- The First Amendment does not protect speech
that creates a clear and present danger of
bringing about substantive evils that Congress
has the power to prevent. First articulated in
Schenck v. U.S., 1919. -
16When can dangerous speech be prohibited?
- The clear and present danger test has been
modified (some say replaced). The current test
for determining when speech is so dangerous it is
unprotected by the First Amendment distinguishes
between incitement and advocacy. - Advocacy of abstract doctrine is protected by the
First Amendment.
- Incitement to imminent lawless action is not
protected.
- Based on Yates v. U.S., 1957, Brandenburg
v. Ohio, 1969
17First Amendment tests
- Balancing test
- The right to freedom of expression is balanced
or weighed against competing rights and
interests, for example, the right to reputation
or to a fair trial by an impartial jury. - Ad hoc Each case handled separately, no
standards or definitions.
- Definitional Specific, defined standards
applied. Preferred approach for consistency and
predictability.
18Levels of scrutiny
- Courts apply different level of scrutiny
(review) to regulations on expression depending
on a number of factors, e.g., whether the
regulation is content-based or content-neutral,
what type of expression is at issue, the goal of
the regulation.
19Strict scrutiny
- If a regulation is aimed at restricting
expression or is a content-based restriction
affecting fully protected expression (such as
political speech), courts apply strict scrutiny.
- The regulation will be held constitutional only
if
- There is a compelling governmental interest to
justify the regulation
- The regulations is narrowly tailored, the least
restrictive means available to achieve the goal.
20Intermediate scrutiny
- If the regulation is not aimed at expression,
is content-neutral or affects less protected
speech (such as commercial speech, courts apply
intermediate scrutiny.
21The OBrien(or intermediate scrutiny) test
- Is the regulation within the power of
government?
- Does the regulation further a substantial
government interest?
- Is the interest unrelated to the suppression of
expression?
- Is the restriction on free speech no greater than
necessary to achieve the government interest?
- (Well cover other types of intermediate scrutiny
later in the semester as well.)
22Fighting Words
- Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, 1945 Words which
by their very utterance inflict injury or tend to
incite an immediate breach of the peace. Must be
aimed directly at an individual. - R.A.V. v. St. Paul, 1993 Local ordinance
prohibited conduct for the purpose of arousing
anger, alarm or resentment on the basis of
color, creed, religion, or gender. U.S. Supreme
Court struck the law down as unconstitutional
since it amounted to viewpoint discrimination.