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White House urges SCOTUS to invalidate Texas and Florida content moderation laws.

The U.S. Solicitor General Urges‍ Supreme Court to Review ‌Online Content⁤ Moderation Laws

The ⁢U.S. Solicitor General has asked ‍the Supreme Court to review online content moderation ⁣laws brought by‍ Florida‌ and Texas—encouraging SCOTUS to ‍strike down relevant ‍portions of these laws that would⁣ restrict moderation on social media platforms.

The two laws passed in Florida and​ Texas prohibit social media⁣ companies⁤ from banning users based on political viewpoints. As such,⁢ they restrict the ability⁢ of platforms like Facebook, X (formerly Twitter), and YouTube to moderate content even if such content violates the terms and conditions of ​the ‌website. ⁤Courts have been divided over the matter.

The 11th ‌Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta⁢ had blocked most of Florida’s law from coming into effect, arguing they violate the First Amendment.

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Meanwhile, the 5th Circuit from⁤ New Orleans⁤ upheld the Texas law⁤ but left it on hold to allow⁣ time for a Supreme Court appeal.

In January,​ the Supreme Court postponed a decision on whether it would hear the cases, asking the U.S. Solicitor General to weigh in on the ⁣issue.

In ⁣a brief (pdf) filed on Monday, Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar stated that conflicting decisions ⁢from circuit courts⁢ over the Texas and ⁣Florida laws warrant a⁤ review by the Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court⁤ “should affirm the Eleventh⁢ Circuit​ and reverse the Fifth Circuit,” Ms. ​Prelogar said.

“The two laws differ in ‌some‌ respects, ⁣but both restrict platforms’ ability to‌ engage in content moderation by removing, editing, or arranging user-generated content; require platforms to ⁤provide ​individualized explanations for certain forms of content moderation; and require general disclosures about platforms’ content moderation ‍practices,” the brief said.

“When a social-media platform selects, edits, and arranges third-party speech‍ for ‍presentation to the public, it engages​ in activity ​protected by the First Amendment.”

“The content-moderation and individualized-explanation​ requirements” set ‍forward​ by‌ the Texas and Florida laws “impermissibly burden those protected activities.”

Florida, Texas, and ​other trade⁢ groups involved in the lawsuits‍ had earlier asked⁣ the Supreme ⁢Court to intervene on at least some of the case issues.‍ The Supreme Court could decide ‍on whether it would hear the lawsuits as soon as next month.

Florida and ⁣Texas Laws

The laws central to the cases are Senate Bill ⁢(SB) 7072 signed into law in Florida in May⁤ 2021 ⁣and House Bill (HB) 20 signed into law in September 2021.

Florida’s SB​ 7072 “prohibits a social ⁣media platform from willfully deplatforming‍ a candidate for political office,” ⁢according to the bill ‍ summary.

Violating the ⁢rule would allow the Florida‍ Elections Commission “to fine a social media platform $250,000 per​ day for⁣ deplatforming⁤ a ⁣candidate for statewide office and $25,000 per day for⁤ deplatforming any other candidate.”

Meanwhile, Texas’ HB 20 makes ‌it unlawful for tech companies to remove or restrict content based on “the viewpoint of the user or another person” or “the viewpoint represented ​in ⁢the user’s expression.”

HB 20 applies to⁢ platforms that ‌have over ‍50 million active monthly users in the United States. ‌It also requires platforms​ to establish⁤ procedures that⁣ would allow users ⁢to appeal any content removal done by the network.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott⁢ speaks at a ⁢press conference in Houston, Texas, on Sept. 13, 2022. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

NetChoice, one of the parties to the cases against the Texas and Florida laws, welcomed Ms. Prelogar’s brief asking for Supreme Court involvement.

“The Solicitor ⁢General’s brief ​underscores that⁢ both Texas and Florida’s​ laws are unconstitutional and that the Court should ​review our cases,” Chris Marchese, NetChoice⁢ Director of Litigation, said in an Aug. 14 statement.

“We urge the Court to strike‍ down Texas and Florida’s laws and reaffirm that the Constitution prohibits⁤ the government from controlling online speech.”

The Governors of Florida and Texas had earlier ⁢supported the respective laws from their states, arguing that‍ such measures are necessary to ensure that conservative voices are not silenced.

“If Big ‍Tech⁤ censors enforce rules inconsistently, to discriminate in favor of the dominant‍ Silicon ⁢Valley⁤ ideology, they ‍will now ​be held accountable,” Florida’s Republican Governor Ron DeSantis said about Senate ​Bill 7072 while signing it into law back in May 2021.

When Texas’ Republican Governor‍ Greg Abbott signed⁤ HB 20 in September 2021, ⁣he pointed out that social media websites⁤ are ⁣“our modern-day‌ public square” where “information should be able to flow freely.”

Biden–Big Tech Censorship

Ms. Prelogar’s brief at ‍the Supreme⁤ Court comes amid reports of censorship collusion between the federal government and Big Tech.

In recent weeks, Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio)⁣ released⁣ documents showing that the Biden administration and ⁣Facebook worked together to censor content and users on its platform, dubbing it “The Facebook Files.”

The documents,​ obtained by the House Judiciary Committee, show that ⁣the collusion aimed at restricting the online reach of ⁣sites ⁣like the New York Post and also deplatforming users ‍whom the administration viewed as undesirable with regard to content about COVID-19.

Elon​ Musk’s photo ‌through a Twitter ‍logo on Oct. 28, 2022. (Dado​ Ruvic/Illustration/Reuters)

Back in December, billionaire Elon Musk and independent⁢ journalist Matt Taibbi revealed ⁣ that former ⁣execs at Twitter suppressed the New York Post’s Hunter Biden laptop⁤ story ‌in the weeks leading to the 2020 presidential​ election.

The platform also removed content related to the 2020 elections, mail-in voting issues, ⁢and the ‍COVID-19 pandemic.​ At the time,‌ the company was ⁣under government⁢ pressure to purge such content.

Mr. Musk acquired Twitter in October last year and has now rebranded‍ the platform as ⁤“X.” In a June 17 interview with podcast host Zuby, the billionaire pointed out that big platforms like Facebook, Google, and YouTube have “put their thumb on​ the scale of elections worldwide.”

“And they have ‌done for



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