Boston Herald

Left picks and chooses on free speech issues

- By LAURA HOLLIS Laura Hollis is a syndicated columnist.

The New York Times, borrowing Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan’s language from her dissent in the recent Janus v. AFSCME case, purported in a June 30 article to explain “how conservati­ves (have) weaponized the First Amendment.”

The plaintiff in Janus successful­ly argued that he should not be forced to pay public sector union dues that support political causes he opposes. And the Janus decision was released the day after National Institute of Family and Life Advocates v. Becerra. In Becerra, plaintiffs were prolife pregnancy centers opposing California’s Reproducti­ve FACT Act, a statute which forced them to promote and advertise for abortion services. Both plaintiffs won their cases on First Amendment free-speech grounds.

As Times author Adam Liptak notes, passionate defense of First Amendment rights was once de rigueur for self-proclaimed leftists. But now that it’s conservati­ves who are asserting their rights to free speech, the left is sounding the alarm.

Liptak writes, “(L)iberals, who once championed expansive First Amendment rights are now uneasy about them.” Immediatel­y thereafter, he quotes renowned First Amendment litigator Floyd Abrams, who says, “Now, the progressiv­e community is at least skeptical and sometimes distraught at the level of First Amendment protection which is being afforded in cases brought by litigants on the right.”

This brief passage obscures an important distinctio­n between traditiona­l liberalism and its more contempora­ry cousin, progressiv­ism. Historical­ly, liberalism has defended principles, and — subject to very limited exceptions — the universal applicatio­n of them. Progressiv­ism, by contrast, exalts not universal principles, but specific outcomes (which fluctuate wildly and change when the wind blows). In the progressiv­e worldview, principles are malleable, and useful only to the extent that they achieve whatever the outcome du jour happens to be.

The United States Constituti­on — and the principles enshrined therein — is no exception.

Here’s a poorly kept secret that the recent Supreme Court cases reveal about progressiv­e objectives: They rarely win in a free and flourishin­g marketplac­e of ideas. As a result, progressiv­e ideologues have resorted to legislatio­n and lawsuits intended to stifle speech they don’t like and compel that which they do.

Alas, the left is waking up to the reality that all Americans have free-speech rights — not just Vietnam protesters, flag burners and abortion rights activists. Surprise! The constituti­onal protection that is sauce for the progressiv­e goose is also sauce for the conservati­ve gander.

For all their posturing about the fear of fascism under the Trump administra­tion, it is the so-called progressiv­e left that makes known its loathing for the constituti­onal protection­s that get in the way of whatever utopic vision they’re fever-dreaming about today. And it is they, not the Christian right, who have the zeal of the converted on their quest to perfect America by dismantlin­g the constituti­onal protection­s for anyone who gets in their way.

In the progressiv­e worldview, principles are malleable, and useful only to the extent that they achieve whatever the outcome du jour happens to be.

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