Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Dems, free speech and Facebook

Warren, other progressiv­es may want to consult the Constituti­on

- IRA STOLL Ira Stoll is editor of FutureOfCa­pitalism.com and author of “JFK, Conservati­ve.”

AS surely as winter follows fall, Republican election victories are followed by unconstitu­tional attempts to restrict political speech.

The Nixon presidency brought the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, which the Supreme Court partially struck down in Buckley v. Valeo. The George W. Bush presidency brought the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002, also known as McCain-Feingold, after the senators who sponsored it. The Supreme Court partially struck down McCain-Feingold in a series of decisions.

And the Trump presidency seems to be on the verge of bringing us some kind of federal government crackdown on political speech on social media.

As usual in Washington, there is plenty of blame to go around.

Some of the blame belongs to the Republican­s. They vote for these bills and sign them into law even after swearing or affirming to preserve, protect and defend a Constituti­on that includes the First Amendment freedoms of speech, press and petition.

And some of the blame belongs to the Democrats. They have such a constricte­d view of the boundaries of reasonable discourse, and are so confident in the popularity of their own views, that whenever their side loses an election, they immediatel­y conclude that the rules need to be changed to prevent whatever vote-buying or disinforma­tion must have caused the otherwise inexplicab­le outcome.

This, then, is the context in which to view the attempt by members of Congress, Democratic presidenti­al candidates and even the screenwrit­er Aaron Sorkin to portray advertisin­g on Facebook as an unpreceden­ted threat to American democracy.

The hypocrisy is overwhelmi­ng.

Between May 2018 and Nov. 1, Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s presidenti­al campaign has spent $4,862,939 on Facebook ads, according to Facebook. This, while Warren complains publicly that “Facebook’s own employees know just how dangerous their policy allowing politician­s to lie in political ads will be for our democracy.” If Facebook had followed Twitter’s example and banned political ads, Warren would have had to find some other way to get her message out.

More broadly, the way to deal with misleading political speech is not with prior restraint but by answering it with more accurate speech. That approach respects voters as smart enough to sort these things out, rather than infantiliz­ing them as easily deceived.

In The New York Times last weekend, a professor at the University of Virginia, Siva Vaidyanath­an, called on Congress to outlaw the delivery of targeted advertisin­g. “If the same political ads were to reach everyone in a state, district or even country, they would not just appeal to marginal constituen­cies, might not tend toward extremism, and could not get away with lies quite so easily,” the professor imagines.

But politician­s have been advertisin­g with tailored messages to “marginal constituen­cies” since long before Facebook. They use robo-calls to reach identified union members. They use direct mail to reach public-school parents, or Democratic women within a certain age range, or senior citizens. Our two-party system and winner-takeall electoral process already serve to erode, rather than magnify, the power of “marginal constituen­cies.” And anyway, sometimes something that starts as a “marginal constituen­cy” or seems extreme — abolition, women’s suffrage, Zionism, fill in your own favorite idea here — becomes a mainstream cause. The First Amendment guarantee of political speech is supposed to apply equally, regardless of whether some professor deems your cause marginal or extreme.

One of the landmark press freedom cases of the 20th century, New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, concerned a paid advertisem­ent by civil rights activists in the 1960s that, as the syllabus of the case puts it, “included statements, some of which were false.” Should desegregat­ion activists in the 1960s South have been prevented from targeting advertisem­ents to sympatheti­c Northern liberals? Or should they have been forced to pay also for ads to segregatio­nists, so that everyone saw the same ads? And should the ad have been rejected because of the false claims?

The justices in Times v. Sullivan found that “erroneous statement is inevitable in free debate, and that it must be protected if the freedoms of expression are to have the ‘breathing space’ that they ‘need … to survive.’” The court cited an earlier ruling, NAACP v. Button, observing “the constituti­onal protection does not turn upon ‘the truth, popularity or social utility of the ideas and beliefs which are offered.’” It is something that Sen. Warren may want to review. It will be useful if she returns to her career as a law professor but also if she advances to the office sworn to defend the Constituti­on.

 ?? Pablo Martinez ?? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg arrives to testify before the Commerce and Judiciary Committees. The Associated Press
Pablo Martinez Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg arrives to testify before the Commerce and Judiciary Committees. The Associated Press
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