Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump gag order raises free speech questions

- Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine. Follow him on X: @Jacobsullu­m.

“I’LL be the only politician in history” who “won’t be allowed to criticize people,” former President Donald Trump complained last month. He was referring to the gag order issued by the judge who is overseeing the federal case that charges him with conspiring to reverse the outcome of the 2020 presidenti­al election.

While Trump’s claim was characteri­stically hyperbolic, the order does raise constituti­onal questions. That much was clear last week, when the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit considered Trump’s First Amendment objections to the speech restrictio­ns that U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan imposed.

Trump’s lawyers argue that the order was not justified by a “clear and present danger,” while the government says the relevant question is whether the extrajudic­ial statements covered by the order would create “a substantia­l likelihood of material prejudice to the proceeding­s.” The government’s position “doesn’t seem to give much balance at all to the First Amendment’s vigorous protection of political speech,” D.C. Circuit Judge Patricia Millett remarked.

Chutkan’s order bars Trump from making “any public statements” that “target” special counsel Jack Smith, his staff, court personnel or “any reasonably foreseeabl­e witness or the substance of their testimony.” Although that language is ambiguous and potentiall­y far-reaching, Chutkan said it left Trump free to defend himself and criticize the prosecutio­n.

Trump portrays the prosecutio­n as a legally baseless and blatantly corrupt attempt to help President

Joe Biden by distractin­g and discrediti­ng his opponent. Chutkan said Trump could continue to make that argument, provided he did not “vilify and implicitly encourage violence against public servants who are simply doing their jobs.”

Under Chutkan’s order, Trump can describe the prosecutio­n as politicall­y motivated, but he cannot call Smith “deranged” or refer to his staff as “thugs” and “political sleazebags.”

That rationale, Trump’s lawyers argue, amounts to an unconstitu­tional “heckler’s veto.” As Millett noted, “inflammato­ry language” generally is protected by the First Amendment.

Millett mentioned a 1987 case in which a court rejected a gag order imposed on Rep. Harold E. Ford Sr., D-tenn., who argued that the Reagan administra­tion’s corruption case against him was politicall­y and racially motivated. “Calling someone racist is pretty inflammato­ry,” Millett noted.

Chutkan’s order neverthele­ss seems to cover some of the same territory.

As Trump’s lawyers note, potential witnesses include estranged allies such as former Vice President Mike Pence and former Attorney General Bill Barr. If Trump is not allowed to “target” them, does that mean he cannot respond to their criticism of him, which is obviously relevant to his qualificat­ions for office?

On Oct. 24, four days after Chutkan temporaril­y froze her gag order, Trump publicly wondered if Mark Meadows, his former chief of staff, would show himself to be a “coward” and “weakling” by agreeing to “lie” for the prosecutio­n in exchange for immunity. The question for the D.C. Circuit is whether Chutkan oversteppe­d in trying to stop Trump from making comments like that.

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