Title: Unit 7
1Unit 7
- Commercial Speech
- Regulation of Advertising
2Evolution of First Amendment Protection for
Commercial Speech
- Valentine v. Chrestensen (1942) U.S. Supreme
Court said advertising received no First
Amendment protection.
- N.Y. Times v. Sullivan (1964) The Court said a
paid political ad did receive protection under
the First Amendment.
- Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Pittsburgh Commission on
Human Relations, (1973). The Court suggested it
might give constitutional protection to an
ordinary commercial proposal.
3Evolution of First Amendment Protection for
Commercial Speech (continued)
- Bigelow v. Virginia, (1975). The Court said the
First Amendment protects an ad containing factual
material of clear public interest and promoting a
legal activity. - Virginia State Board of Pharmacy v. Virginia
Citizens Council, (1976). The Court explicitly
declared that purely commercial speech receives
First Amendment protection, but the government
may regulate ads that are false, misleading, or
deceptive or promote illegal products or
services.
4Evolution of First Amendment Protection for
Commercial Speech (continued)
- Central Hudson Gas Electric Co. v. Public
Service Commission of New York, (1980). The Court
articulated the Central Hudson test.
- Board of Trustees v. Fox, (1989). The Court
modified the fourth part of the Central Hudson
test.
5The Central Hudson Test (modified by Board of
Trustees, SUNY v. Fox, 1989)
- 1.) Is the expression eligible for protection
under the First Amendment? If the ad is false,
deceptive, misleading or promotes illegal
activities or products, the answer to this
question is no, and the case ends here. - However, if it is determined that an ad is
entitled to First Amendment protection, the next
step is to analyze the constitutionality of the
regulation.
6The Central Hudson Test, contd
- 2. Is the asserted government interest in
regulation (reason for regulating) substantial?
- 3. Does the regulation directly advance the
government interest? (Does the regulation do what
its designed to do?)
- 4. Is there a reasonable fit between the
government interest and the regulation? Is the
regulation narrowly tailored to achieve the
desired objective?
7Recent Commercial Speech Case 1
- U.S. v. Edge Broadcasting (1993) Edge owned a
radio station in N.C. whose major audience was in
Virginia. The Court upheld a federal law
prohibiting the broadcasting of lottery ads by a
station licensed to a state that prohibited
lotteries. - The regulation advanced the substantial
government interest of allowing N.C. to
discourage gambling among its residents.
8Recent Commercial Speech Case 2
- 44 Liquormart, Inc. v. Rhode Island (1996) The
Court struck down a Rhode Island law banning
retail liquor price advertising except at the
point of sale. - R.I. provided no evidence that the
price-advertising ban significantly promoted the
states interest in temperance.
- There were less extensive measures likely to meet
the states goal.
9Recent Commercial Speech Case 3
- Greater New Orleans Broadcasting Assn v. U.S.
(1999) The Court ruled that a federal law
prohibiting broadcast ads for private casino
gambling by stations located in a state in which
such gambling is legal violated the First
Amendment. - Federal law was riddled with exceptions.
- Government failed to connect casino advertising
with evil effects of gambling.
10Deceptive Advertising
- An ad is deceptive if it contains a
representation or omission of information that is
material and likely to mislead consumers acting
reasonably to their detriment. - The FTC now tends to focus its regulatory efforts
on deception that may cause consumers physical or
economic harm.
11FTC Tools to Combat Deceptive Advertising
- To prevent deception
- Advisory opinions
- Industry guides
- Policy statements
- Trade Regulation Rules
- Substantiation
12FTC Tools to Combat Deceptive Advertising
(continued)
- To halt and/or punish deception
- Consent decrees
- Cease and desist orders (Both consent decrees and
cease and desist orders can include corrective
ads or affirmative disclosures.)
- Injunctions (FTC must go to court and ask court
to issue an injunction.)
- Civil penalties
- Criminal penalties
13Right to refuse advertising
- The courts have recognized that media have the
right to refuse advertising as long as they are
not violating contracts, antitrust law or
anti-discrimination laws. - Broadcast media, however, do have some legal
obligations to provide advertising time to
candidates during election.
14Self-regulation
- NAD (National Advertising Division) Reviews
national advertising and investigates complaints
about ads
- NARB (National Advertising Review Board) Hears
appeals from NAD decisions
- CARU (Childrens Advertising Review Unit)
Monitors ads aimed at children under 12,
investigates complaints, reviews proposed ads