The federalist

Free Speech Fight Goes On After SCOTUS’s Devastating Ruling

The recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling has intensified the debate around free speech, particularly ⁤regarding government involvement with Big ⁤Tech in content moderation. In a significant case, Murthy v. Missouri, the Supreme Court, with a 6-3 majority, overturned a lower court injunction that previously restrained the ⁤federal government from possible coercion with social⁤ media platforms to regulate content. This decision has raised concerns about undermining the First Amendment by potentially facilitating‍ government-induced censorship through private tech companies.

Jenin Younes, litigation counsel from the New Civil Liberties Alliance, expressed determination⁣ to continue the‌ legal fight. The case, pivoting on issues about standing and the capability‍ of plaintiffs to prove imminent personal harm caused by ​government ‌actions, is set to undergo further proceedings in lower courts. Critics argue that this ruling could chill​ free ⁢expression, especially voices critical of governmental policies, as evidenced in previous⁤ action against individuals like Martin Kulldorff and others who ⁣faced professional consequences for their dissenting views on COVID-19 policies.

Justice Samuel Alito,‍ in his dissent, ‌warned of the precedent ‍this ruling sets, suggesting that ⁤sophisticated government ⁣coercion ‌might evade judicial scrutiny. Advocates for free speech are thus gearing up for a potentially arduous legal battle to⁤ prove ​the direct⁣ censorial impacts of⁢ government-tech collaboration⁣ on specific‍ plaintiffs, striving⁢ to⁤ fortify the First Amendment against expansive governmental control​ over public‍ discourse.


Free speech may have taken a beating in the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling giving Big Government and Big Tech free rein over the First Amendment, but an attorney for the private plaintiffs in the case says the battle is far from over.

“We are not giving up. … We are pursuing it on the merits … in the district court, and we want to get more discovery,” Jenin Younes, litigation counsel for the New Civil Liberties Alliance tells me in the latest edition of “The Federalist Radio Hour” podcast.

NCLA represents the private plaintiffs in the ruling that saw a 6-3 majority in Murthy v. Missouri reverse a lower court’s injunction that blocked the federal government from partnering with social media giants to silence posts it doesn’t like. As my colleague Shawn Fleetwood wrote, the decision — based on an absurd standing argument — effectively frees the Biden administration to continue its censoring operations during the 2024 election.

“The Supreme Court majority has practically erased the First Amendment and permitted government to co-opt private entities, like social media platforms, to accomplish its censorship aims,” NCLA said in a press release following the ruling.

In the majority opinion, Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote that the plaintiffs failed to establish standing because they did not “demonstrate a substantial risk that, in the near future, they will suffer an injury that is traceable to a Government defendant and redressable by the injunction they seek.”

“Because no plaintiff has carried that burden, none has standing to seek a preliminary injunction,” the decision opines.

‘Truth Can Get You Fired’

But if the past is truly an indicator of the future, it’s difficult to reconcile the standing argument with the speech suppression that occurred, particularly against those who rightly questioned the government’s Covid policies and voiced legitimate concerns over Covid vaccines.

NCLA’s clients, Drs. Jayanta Bhattacharya, Martin Kulldorff, Aaron Kheriaty, and Jill Hines, were all censored for daring to challenge the government’s “disinformation” campaign on the pandemic. It cost Kulldorff his job as a respected professor at Harvard.

“I am no longer a professor of medicine at Harvard. The Harvard motto is Veritas, Latin for truth. But, as I discovered, truth can get you fired. This is my story — a story of a Harvard biostatistician and infectious-disease epidemiologist, clinging to the truth as the world lost its way during the Covid pandemic,” he wrote earlier this year in a column for City Journal. Kulldorff had questioned the lockdowns and vaccine mandates.

“Scientific institutions have enjoyed enormous prestige among the public. The COVID-19 pandemic, and the dreadful performance of the experts and institutions, ended this idyll. – @mgurri https://t.co/3KcnfTq0Gj

— Martin Kulldorff (@MartinKulldorff) June 25, 2024

‘Factual Errors’

No one was hurt by the government? The majority opinion asserts that while the Big Tech speech suppressors did have content moderation policies and may have been censoring users, the plaintiffs provided no documentation showing the government coerced the social media giants to do so.

As censor-in-chief Joe Biden would say, that’s malarkey.

Younes said the ruling is rooted in some “factual errors” by the majority. The Louisiana District Court Judge who on July 4, 2023, issued the injunction against the government said the executive branch “seems to have assumed a role similar to an Orwellian ‘Ministry of Truth.’” U.S. District Judge Terry Doughty conducted a thorough review of voluminous records showing dozens of agencies communicating with Big Tech companies, according to Younes.

“[There were] probably close to 100 federal officials that we know of who were colluding with, coercing, pressuring, influencing the companies to effectuate their censorship desires,” the attorney said, adding that the justices in the majority appear to have “read the government’s brief and just believed everything they said.”

In his dissent, Justice Samuel Alito warned that the government’s conduct was “blatantly unconstitutional, and the country may come to regret the Court’s failure to say so.”

“Officials who read today’s decision together with Vullo will get the message. If a coercive campaign is carried out with enough sophistication, it may get by. That is not a message this Court should send.”

Difficult but Not Impossible

While the high court remanded the case to the lower court “for further proceedings consistent with this opinion,” Younes said expanded discovery might just stop the overreaching government yet. NCLA plans to go after government and Big Tech communications involving its clients to show the direct harm caused, as demanded in the majority’s standing argument.

“The district court has shown that it believes in our case and … said this is arguably the most massive attack on free speech in the history of the United States, which I agree with,” Younes said. “The federal government was censoring entire narratives, entire lines of thought. If you questioned the efficacy of the vaccines in 2021, even if you were a vaccine expert like our client, Martin Kulldorff, you would be censored on social media, as he was.”

The case may also get an assist from a presidential candidate. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., now running as an independent, had sought to intervene in the Supreme Court case but was turned back by the majority. If anyone knows censorship, it’s RFK Jr., who was blocked from social media as part of what the government and corporate media have described as the “Disinformation Dozen” for challenging the government’s faulty narrative on Covid vaccines.

Kennedy has lots of emails showing the Biden administration trying to silence his speech.

As government water carrier USA Today reported, one email shows the Biden administration pouncing after Kennedy suggested baseball legend Hank Aaron’s death may have been caused by his Covid-19 vaccine.

“Wanted to flag the below tweet and am wondering if we can get moving on the process for having it removed ASAP,” the digital director for the White House’s Covid response team wrote in an email to an official at Twitter, the publication reported.

Alito also dissented in the court’s rejection of Kennedy’s motion to join the lawsuit, suggesting standing could be a problem and RFK Jr. could help take away that argument.

“[The Supreme Court is] making it very difficult to bring the case, but they’re not making it impossible,” Younes said.

If the Supreme Court won’t stand up to assaults on the First Amendment, Congress must, said plaintiff Jill Hines, NCLA client and co-director of Health Freedom Louisiana.

“After reviewing the shocking and incriminating evidence indicating a massive government censorship scheme, the Justices erroneously determined to allow the government access to social media companies for the purpose of undermining free speech,” she said in the press release. “Congress must act immediately to defund agencies and third parties actively involved in this broadly pervasive and unconstitutional censorship scheme.”


Matt Kittle is a senior elections correspondent for The Federalist. An award-winning investigative reporter and 30-year veteran of print, broadcast, and online journalism, Kittle previously served as the executive director of Empower Wisconsin.



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