The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Legislator ordered to stop blocking posts

Ga. House member can’t drop opposing views, judge rules.

- By Bill Rankin bill.rankin@ajc.com

A federal judge has ordered state Rep. Ginny Ehrhart to stop blocking and deleting comments from those with opposing views on her official Facebook page.

U.S. District Judge J.P. Boulee found that the Powder Springs Republican’s blocks and deletions infringed upon the First Amendment rights of retired communicat­ions software executive Thomas Biedermann.

Biedermann filed suit in March 2020 after Ehrhart deleted his disapprovi­ng comments to her post about her legislatio­n to criminaliz­e transgende­r surgeries performed on children. Biedermann, who used the pseudonym Tom Alfred, was then blocked from her legislativ­e Facebook page.

Boulee’s ruling noted that Ehrhart has blocked more than 60 people from the Facebook page and that they have joined together on social media calling themselves

#blockedbyg­inny.

In granting Biedermann a preliminar­y injunction, Boulee noted that Ehrhart has both a personal and a legislativ­e Facebook page. The official page “was used in furtheranc­e of (Ehrhart’s) work as a government official,” he wrote. “Further, the official Facebook page was open to the public and, at the very least, the interactiv­e component of the official Facebook page invited a public exchange of views.”

In court filings, Ehrhart conceded that she periodical­ly removed from the official

page objectiona­ble content that did not align with the image or message she wished to convey to the public, Boulee said.

He also found there is a substantia­l likelihood that Biedermann will establish that Ehrhart’s blocks and deletions constitute “viewpoint discrimina­tion in a public forum in violation of (Biedermann’s) First Amendment right to freedom of speech and expression.”

Ehrhart had argued that an injunction would be damaging to her because her official Facebook page could be flooded with posts, thwarting her ability to communicat­e with her constituen­ts and the public in the way she deems best.

But Boulee wrote that “an ongoing infringeme­nt of (Biedermann’s) constituti­onal right to freedom of speech and expression outweighs (Ehrhart’s) desire to exclude opposing public viewpoints from the official Facebook page.” This is particular­ly true considerin­g Ehrhart “has alternativ­e options to communicat­e her message within constituti­onal boundaries, such as disabling public comments or responses on her posts altogether,” the judge said.

“Public officials who silence their constituen­ts on social media demonstrat­e their desire to hear only from their choir,” Biedermann’s lawyer, Gerry Weber, said. “This ruling is great for free speech and also for democracy.”

Ehrhart’s lawyers declined to comment, and Ehrhart did not respond when asked for comment.

Boulee also ordered both sides to try to resolve the rest of the case through mediation, using either a private mediator or a U.S. magistrate to do so.

 ?? DREAMSTIME/TNS ?? A federal judge ruled that Rep. Ginny Ehrhart, R-powder Springs, infringed on the First Amendment rights of a critic when she blocked his comments.
DREAMSTIME/TNS A federal judge ruled that Rep. Ginny Ehrhart, R-powder Springs, infringed on the First Amendment rights of a critic when she blocked his comments.
 ?? ?? State Rep. Ginny Ehrhart
State Rep. Ginny Ehrhart

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