The Boston Globe

Court wary over social media censorship case

Justices question states’ theories, accusation­s

- By Adam Liptak

WASHINGTON — A majority of the Supreme Court seemed wary Monday of a bid by two Republican-led states to limit the Biden administra­tion’s interactio­ns with social media companies, with several justices questionin­g the states’ legal theories and factual assertions.

Most of the justices appeared convinced that government officials should be able to try to persuade private companies, whether news organizati­ons or tech platforms, not to publish informatio­n so long as the requests are not backed by coercive threats.

The dispute was the latest in an extraordin­ary series of cases this term requiring the justices to assess the meaning of free speech in the internet era.

Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Elena Kagan, both former White House lawyers, said interactio­ns between administra­tion officials and news outlets provided a valuable analogy. Efforts by officials to influence coverage are, they said, part of a valuable dialogue that is not prohibited by the First Amendment.

Members of the court also raised questions about whether the plaintiffs — Missouri and Louisiana, along with five individual­s — had suffered the kind of injury that gave them standing to sue. They also suggested that a broad injunction prohibitin­g contacts between many officials and the platforms was not a proper remedy in any event.

“I don’t see a single item in your briefs that would satisfy our normal tests,” Kagan told J. Benjamin Aguiñaga, Louisiana’s solicitor general.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor accused the states of distorting the record in the case. “I have such a problem with your brief,” she told Aguiñaga. “You omit informatio­n that changes the context of some of your claims. You attribute things to people who it didn’t happen to.”

Aguiñaga apologized “if any aspect of our brief was not as forthcomin­g as it should have been.”

The justices peppered Aguiñaga with hypothetic­al questions about national security, doxxing of public officials, and contests that could endanger teenagers, all suggesting that there is a role for vigorous efforts by the government to combat harmful speech.

Justice Samuel Alito, the member of the court who appeared most sympatheti­c to the states’ position, urged his colleagues to remain focused on the case before them.

“Whatever coercion means,” he said, “whatever happened here is sufficient.”

The case arose from a barrage of communicat­ions from administra­tion officials urging platforms to take down posts on topics such as the coronaviru­s vaccines and claims of election fraud. Last year, a federal appeals court severely limited such interactio­ns.

The Supreme Court put that injunction on hold last year while it considered the administra­tion’s appeal. If it were to go into effect, said Brian Fletcher, a lawyer for the government, it would prohibit all sorts of speech, including public comments from the press secretary or other senior officials seeking to discourage posts harmful to children or conveying antisemiti­c or Islamophob­ic messages.

He added that the social media companies had been moderating content on their platforms long before they were contacted by officials, had powerful business incentives to do so and were following their own policies. The companies acted independen­tly of the government, he said, and often rejected requests to take down postings.

The court this term has repeatedly grappled with fundamenta­l questions about the scope of the government’s authority over major technology platforms. On Friday, the court set rules for when government officials can block users from their private social media accounts. Last month, the court considered the constituti­onality of laws in Florida and Texas that limit large social media companies from making editorial judgments about which messages to allow.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Demonstrat­ors in Washington Monday alleged the government pressured social media firms to censor right-leaning content.
SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Demonstrat­ors in Washington Monday alleged the government pressured social media firms to censor right-leaning content.

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