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First Amendment to the United States Constitution

The First Amendment (Amendment I) to the United States Constitution prevents the government from making laws that: regulate an establishment of religion; prohibit the free exercise of religion; abridge the freedom of speech, the freedom of the press, the freedom of assembly, or the right to petition the government for redress of grievances. It was adopted on December 15, 1791, as one of the ten amendments that constitute the Bill of Rights.

The Bill of Rights was proposed to assuage Anti-Federalist opposition to Constitutional ratification. Initially, the First Amendment applied only to laws enacted by the Congress, and many of its provisions were interpreted more narrowly than they are today. Beginning with Gitlow v. New York (1925), the Supreme Court applied the First Amendment to states—a process known as incorporation—through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.

In Everson v. Board of Education (1947), the Court drew on Thomas Jefferson's correspondence to call for "a wall of separation between church and State", though the precise boundary of this separation remains in dispute and the terms "church" and "State" do not appear in the Amendment. Speech rights were expanded significantly in a series of 20th and 21st century court decisions which protected various forms of political speech, anonymous speech, campaign finance, pornography, and school speech; these rulings also defined a series of exceptions to First Amendment protections. The Supreme Court overturned English common law precedent to increase the burden of proof for defamation and libel suits, most notably in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964). Commercial speech, however, is less protected by the First Amendment than political speech, and is therefore subject to greater regulation.

The Free Press Clause protects publication of information and opinions, and applies to a wide variety of media. In Near v. Minnesota (1931) and New York Times v. United States (1971), the Supreme Court ruled that the First Amendment protected against prior restraint—pre-publication censorship—in almost all cases. The Petition Clause protects the right to petition all branches and agencies of government for action. In addition to the right of assembly guaranteed by this clause, the Court has also ruled that the amendment implicitly protects freedom of association.

Although the First Amendment applies only to state actors,[a][1] there is a common misconception that it prohibits anyone from limiting free speech, including private, non-governmental entities.[2] Moreover, the Supreme Court has determined that protection of speech is not absolute.[3]

Text

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.[4]

 
The hand-written copy of the proposed articles of amendment passed by Congress in 1789, cropped to show just the text in the third article that would later be ratified as the First Amendment

Background

 
George Mason was the principal author of the Virginia Declaration of Rights, adopted by the Fifth Virginia Convention on June 12, 1776.
 
James Madison, drafter of the Bill of Rights

The right to petition for redress of grievances was a principle included in the 1215 Magna Carta, as well as the 1689 English Bill of Rights. In 1776, the second year of the American Revolutionary War, the Virginia colonial legislature passed a Declaration of Rights that included the sentence "The freedom of the press is one of the greatest bulwarks of liberty, and can never be restrained but by despotic Governments." Eight of the other twelve states made similar pledges. However, these declarations were generally considered "mere admonitions to state legislatures", rather than enforceable provisions.[5]

After several years of comparatively weak government under the Articles of Confederation, a Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia proposed a new constitution on September 17, 1787, featuring among other changes a stronger chief executive. George Mason, a Constitutional Convention delegate and the drafter of Virginia's Declaration of Rights, proposed that the Constitution include a bill of rights listing and guaranteeing civil liberties. Other delegates—including future Bill of Rights drafter James Madison—disagreed, arguing that existing state guarantees of civil liberties were sufficient and any attempt to enumerate individual rights risked the implication that other, unnamed rights were unprotected. After a brief debate, Mason's proposal was defeated by a unanimous vote of the state delegations.[6]

For the constitution to be ratified, however, nine of the thirteen states were required to approve it in state conventions. Opposition to ratification ("Anti-Federalism") was partly based on the Constitution's lack of adequate guarantees for civil liberties. Supporters of the Constitution in states where popular sentiment was against ratification (including Virginia, Massachusetts, and New York) successfully proposed that their state conventions both ratify the Constitution and call for the addition of a bill of rights. The U.S. Constitution was eventually ratified by all thirteen states. In the 1st United States Congress, following the state legislatures' request, James Madison proposed twenty constitutional amendments, and his proposed draft of the First Amendment read as follows:

The civil rights of none shall be abridged on account of religious belief or worship, nor shall any national religion be established, nor shall the full and equal rights of conscience be in any manner, or on any pretext, infringed. The people shall not be deprived or abridged of their right to speak, to write, or to publish their sentiments; and the freedom of the press, as one of the great bulwarks of liberty, shall be inviolable. The people shall not be restrained from peaceably assembling and consulting for their common good; nor from applying to the Legislature by petitions, or remonstrances, for redress of their grievances.[7]

This language was greatly condensed by Congress, and passed the House and Senate with almost no recorded debate, complicating future discussion of the Amendment's intent.[8][9] Congress approved and submitted to the states for their ratification twelve articles of amendment on September 25, 1789. The revised text of the third article became the First Amendment, because the last ten articles of the submitted 12 articles were ratified by the requisite number of states on December 15, 1791, and are now known collectively as the Bill of Rights.[10][11]

Freedom of religion

 
The Maryland Toleration Act secured religious liberty in the English colony of Maryland. Similar laws were passed in the Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, Connecticut and Pennsylvania. These laws stood in direct contrast with the Puritan theocratic rule in the Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay colonies.[12]

Religious liberty, also known as freedom of religion, is "the right of all persons to believe, speak, and act – individually and in community with others, in private and in public – in accord with their understanding of ultimate truth."[13] The acknowledgement of religious freedom as the first right protected in the Bill of Rights points toward the American founders' understanding of the importance of religion to human, social, and political flourishing.[13] Freedom of religion[13] is protected by the First Amendment through its Establishment Clause and Free Exercise Clause, which together form the religious liberty clauses of the First Amendment.[14] The first clause prohibits any governmental "establishment of religion" and the second prohibits any governmental interference with "the free exercise thereof."[15] These clauses of the First Amendment encompass "the two big arenas of religion in constitutional law. Establishment cases deal with the Constitution's ban on Congress endorsing, promoting or becoming too involved with religion. Free exercise cases deal with Americans' rights to practice their faith."[16] Both clauses sometimes compete with each other. The Supreme Court in McCreary County v. American Civil Liberties Union (2005) clarified this by the following example: When the government spends money on the clergy, then it looks like establishing religion, but if the government cannot pay for military chaplains, then many soldiers and sailors would be kept from the opportunity to exercise their chosen religions.[15] In Murdock v. Pennsylvania (1943) the Supreme Court stated that "Freedom of press, freedom of speech, freedom of religion are in a preferred position".[17] The Court added:

Plainly, a community may not suppress, or the state tax, the dissemination of views because they are unpopular, annoying or distasteful. If that device were ever sanctioned, there would have been forged a ready instrument for the suppression of the faith which any minority cherishes but which does not happen to be in favor. That would be a complete repudiation of the philosophy of the Bill of Rights.[17]

In his dissenting opinion in McGowan v. Maryland (1961), Justice William O. Douglas illustrated the broad protections offered by the First Amendment's religious liberty clauses:

The First Amendment commands government to have no interest in theology or ritual; it admonishes government to be interested in allowing religious freedom to flourish—whether the result is to produce Catholics, Jews, or Protestants, or to turn the people toward the path of Buddha, or to end in a predominantly Moslem nation, or to produce in the long run atheists or agnostics. On matters of this kind, government must be neutral. This freedom plainly includes freedom from religion, with the right to believe, speak, write, publish and advocate anti-religious programs. Board of Education v. Barnette, supra, 319 U. S. 641. Certainly the "free exercise" clause does not require that everyone embrace the theology of some church or of some faith, or observe the religious practices of any majority or minority sect. The First Amendment, by its "establishment" clause, prevents, of course, the selection by government of an "official" church. Yet the ban plainly extends farther than that. We said in Everson v. Board of Education, 330 U. S. 1, 330 U. S. 16, that it would be an "establishment" of a religion if the Government financed one church or several churches. For what better way to "establish" an institution than to find the fund that will support it? The "establishment" clause protects citizens also against any law which selects any religious custom, practice, or ritual, puts the force of government behind it, and fines, imprisons, or otherwise penalizes a person for not observing it. The Government plainly could not join forces with one religious group and decree a universal and symbolic circumcision. Nor could it require all children to be baptized or give tax exemptions only to those whose children were baptized.[18]

Those who would renegotiate the boundaries between church and state must therefore answer a difficult question: Why would we trade a system that has served us so well for one that has served others so poorly?

--Justice Sandra Day O'Connor in her concurring opinion in McCreary County v. American Civil Liberties Union (2005).[19]

The First Amendment tolerates neither governmentally established religion nor governmental interference with religion.[20] One of the central purposes of the First Amendment, the Supreme Court wrote in Gillette v. United States (1970), consists "of ensuring governmental neutrality in matters of religion."[21] The history of the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause and the Supreme Court's own constitutional jurisprudence with respect to these clauses was explained in the 1985 case Wallace v. Jaffree.[22] The Supreme Court noted at the outset that the First Amendment limits equally the power of Congress and of the states to abridge the individual freedoms it protects. The First Amendment was adopted to curtail the power of Congress to interfere with the individual's freedom to believe, to worship, and to express himself in accordance with the dictates of his own conscience. The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment imposes on the states the same limitations the First Amendment had always imposed on the Congress.[23] This "elementary proposition of law" was confirmed and endorsed time and time again in cases like Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U. S. 296, 303 (1940)[b] and Wooley v. Maynard (1977).[c][26] The central liberty that unifies the various clauses in the First Amendment is the individual's freedom of conscience:[27]

Just as the right to speak and the right to refrain from speaking are complementary components of a broader concept of individual freedom of mind, so also the individual's freedom to choose his own creed is the counterpart of his right to refrain from accepting the creed established by the majority. At one time, it was thought that this right merely proscribed the preference of one Christian sect over another, but would not require equal respect for the conscience of the infidel, the atheist, or the adherent of a non-Christian faith such as Islam or Judaism. But when the underlying principle has been examined in the crucible of litigation, the Court has unambiguously concluded that the individual freedom of conscience protected by the First Amendment embraces the right to select any religious faith or none at all. This conclusion derives support not only from the interest in respecting the individual's freedom of conscience, but also from the conviction that religious beliefs worthy of respect are the product of free and voluntary choice by the faithful, and from recognition of the fact that the political interest in forestalling intolerance extends beyond intolerance among Christian sects – or even intolerance among "religions" – to encompass intolerance of the disbeliever and the uncertain.[28]

Establishment of religion

 
Thomas Jefferson's tombstone. The inscription, as he stipulated, reads "Here was buried Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of American Independence, of the Statute of Virginia for Religious Freedom, and father of the University of Virginia."

The precise meaning of the Establishment Clause can be traced back to the beginning of the 19th century. Thomas Jefferson wrote about the First Amendment and its restriction on Congress in an 1802 reply to the Danbury Baptists,[29] a religious minority that was concerned about the dominant position of the Congregational church in Connecticut, who had written to the newly elected president about their concerns. Jefferson wrote back:

Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between Man & his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should "make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof", thus building a wall of separation between Church & State. Adhering to this expression of the supreme will of the nation in behalf of the rights of conscience, I shall see with sincere satisfaction the progress of those sentiments which tend to restore to man all his natural rights, convinced he has no natural right in opposition to his social duties.[30]

In Reynolds v. United States (1878) the Supreme Court used these words to declare that "it may be accepted almost as an authoritative declaration of the scope and effect of the amendment thus secured. Congress was deprived of all legislative power over mere [religious] opinion, but was left free to reach [only those religious] actions which were in violation of social duties or subversive of good order." Quoting from Jefferson's Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom the court stated further in Reynolds:

In the preamble of this act ... religious freedom is defined; and after a recital 'that to suffer the civil magistrate to intrude his powers into the field of opinion, and to restrain the profession or propagation of principles on supposition of their ill tendency, is a dangerous fallacy which at once destroys all religious liberty,' it is declared 'that it is time enough for the rightful purposes of civil government for its officers to interfere [only] when [religious] principles break out into overt acts against peace and good order.' In these two sentences is found the true distinction between what properly belongs to the church and what to the State.

 
An April 22, 1885, cartoon from the Puck magazine depicting an army of clergymen assaulting a fortress defended by newspaper editors including from Puck, while atop a hill in the background a statue labeled "Constitution" that states "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion" can be seen

Reynolds was the first Supreme Court decision to use the metaphor "a wall of separation between Church and State." American historian George Bancroft was consulted by Chief Justice Morrison Waite in Reynolds regarding the views on establishment by the Founding Fathers. Bancroft advised Waite to consult Jefferson and Waite then discovered the above quoted letter in a library after skimming through the index to Jefferson's collected works according to historian Don Drakeman.[31]

The Establishment Clause[32] forbids federal, state, and local laws which purpose is "an establishment of religion." The term "establishment" denoted in general direct aid to the church by the government.[33] In Larkin v. Grendel's Den, Inc. (1982) the Supreme Court stated that "the core rationale underlying the Establishment Clause is preventing "a fusion of governmental and religious functions," Abington School District v. Schempp, 374 U. S. 203, 374 U. S. 222 (1963)."[34] The Establishment Clause acts as a double security, for its aim is as well the prevention of religious control over government as the prevention of political control over religion.[14] The First Amendment's framers knew that intertwining government with religion could lead to bloodshed or oppression, because this happened too often historically. To prevent this dangerous development they set up the Establishment Clause as a line of demarcation between the functions and operations of the institutions of religion and government in society.[35] The Federal government of the United States as well as the state governments are prohibited from establishing or sponsoring religion,[14] because, as observed by the Supreme Court in Walz v. Tax Commission of the City of New York (1970), the 'establishment' of a religion historically implied sponsorship, financial support, and active involvement of the sovereign in religious activity.[36] The Establishment Clause thus serves to ensure laws, as said by Supreme Court in Gillette v. United States (1970), which are "secular in purpose, evenhanded in operation, and neutral in primary impact".[21]

The First Amendment's prohibition on an establishment of religion includes many things from prayer in widely varying government settings over financial aid for religious individuals and institutions to comment on religious questions.[15] The Supreme Court stated in this context: "In these varied settings, issues of about interpreting inexact Establishment Clause language, like difficult interpretative issues generally, arise from the tension of competing values, each constitutionally respectable, but none open to realization to the logical limit."[15] The National Constitution Center observes that, absent some common interpretations by jurists, the precise meaning of the Establishment Clause is unclear and that decisions by the United Supreme Court relating to the Establishment Clause often are by 5–4 votes.[37] The Establishment Clause, however, reflects a widely held consensus that there should be no nationally established church after the American Revolutionary War.[37] Against this background the National Constitution Center states:

Virtually all jurists agree that it would violate the Establishment Clause for the government to compel attendance or financial support of a religious institution as such, for the government to interfere with a religious organization's selection of clergy or religious doctrine; for religious organizations or figures acting in a religious capacity to exercise governmental power; or for the government to extend benefits to some religious entities and not others without adequate secular justification.[37]

Originally, the First Amendment applied only to the federal government, and some states continued official state religions after ratification. Massachusetts, for example, was officially Congregational until the 1830s.[38] In Everson v. Board of Education (1947), the Supreme Court incorporated the Establishment Clause (i.e., made it apply against the states):

The 'establishment of religion' clause of the First Amendment means at least this: Neither a state nor the Federal Government can set up a church. Neither can pass laws which aid one religion, aid all religions, or prefer one religion to another ... in the words of Jefferson, the [First Amendment] clause against establishment of religion by law was intended to erect 'a wall of separation between church and State'. ... That wall must be kept high and impregnable. We could not approve the slightest breach.[39]

 
The Founding of Maryland (1634) depicts Father Andrew White, a Jesuit missionary in the left and colonists meeting the people of the Yaocomico branch of the Piscatawy Indian Nation in St. Mary's City, Maryland, the site of Maryland's first colonial settlement.[40]

Citing Justice Hugo Black in Torcaso v. Watkins (1961) the Supreme Court repeated its statement from Everson v. Board of Education (1947) in Abington School District v. Schempp (1963):

We repeat and again reaffirm that neither a State nor the Federal Government can constitutionally force a person 'to profess a belief or disbelief in any religion.' Neither can it constitutionally pass laws or impose requirements which aid all religions as against non-believers, and neither can it aid those religions based on a belief in the existence of God as against those religions founded on different beliefs.[41]

At the core of the Establishment Clause lays the core principle of denominational neutrality.[42] In Epperson v. Arkansas (1968) the Supreme Court outlined the broad principle of denominational neutrality mandated by the First Amendment: "Government in our democracy, state and national, must be neutral in matters of religious theory, doctrine, and practice. It may not be hostile to any religion or to the advocacy of no-religion, and it may not aid, foster, or promote one religion or religious theory against another or even against the militant opposite. The First Amendment mandates governmental neutrality between religion and religion, and between religion and nonreligion."[43] The clearest command of the Establishment Clause is, according to the Supreme Court in Larson v. Valente, 456 U.S. 228 (1982), that one religious denomination cannot be officially preferred over another.[44] In Zorach v. Clauson (1952) the Supreme Court further observed: "Government may not finance religious groups nor undertake religious instruction nor blend secular and sectarian education nor use secular institutions to force one or some religion on any person. But we find no constitutional requirement which makes it necessary for government to be hostile to religion and to throw its weight against efforts to widen the effective scope of religious influence. The government must be neutral when it comes to competition between sects. It may not thrust any sect on any person. It may not make a religious observance compulsory. It may not coerce anyone to attend church, to observe a religious holiday, or to take religious instruction. But it can close its doors or suspend its operations as to those who want to repair to their religious sanctuary for worship or instruction."[45] In McCreary County v. American Civil Liberties Union (2005) the Court explained that when the government acts with the ostensible and predominant purpose of advancing religion, then it violates that central Establishment Clause value of official religious neutrality, because there being no neutrality when the government's ostensible object is to take sides.[46]

In Torcaso v. Watkins (1961), the Supreme Court ruled that the Constitution prohibits states and the federal government from requiring any kind of religious test for public office. The Supreme Court in the same case made it also clear that state governments and the federal government are prohibited from passing laws or imposing requirements which aid all religions as against non-believers, as well as aiding those religions based on a belief in the existence of God as against those religions founded on different beliefs. In Board of Education of Kiryas Joel Village School District v. Grumet (1994),[47] the Court concluded that "government should not prefer one religion to another, or religion to irreligion."[48] In a series of cases in the first decade of the 2000s—Van Orden v. Perry (2005),[49] McCreary County v. ACLU (2005),[50] and Salazar v. Buono (2010)[51]—the Court considered the issue of religious monuments on federal lands without reaching a majority reasoning on the subject.

Separationists

 
President Thomas Jefferson wrote in 1802 of "a wall of separation".[52]

Everson used the metaphor of a wall of separation between church and state, derived from the correspondence of President Thomas Jefferson. It had been long established in the decisions of the Supreme Court, beginning with Reynolds v. United States (1878), when the Court reviewed the history of the early Republic in deciding the extent of the liberties of Mormons. Chief Justice Morrison Waite, who consulted the historian George Bancroft, also discussed at some length the Memorial and Remonstrance against Religious Assessments by James Madison,[53] who drafted the First Amendment; Madison used the metaphor of a "great barrier".[54]

In Everson, the Court adopted Jefferson's words.[52] The Court has affirmed it often, with majority, but not unanimous, support. Warren Nord, in Does God Make a Difference?, characterized the general tendency of the dissents as a weaker reading of the First Amendment; the dissents tend to be "less concerned about the dangers of establishment and less concerned to protect free exercise rights, particularly of religious minorities".[55]

Beginning with Everson, which permitted New Jersey school boards to pay for transportation to parochial schools, the Court has used various tests to determine when the wall of separation has been breached. Everson laid down the test that establishment existed when aid was given to religion, but that the transportation was justifiable because the benefit to the children was more important.

Felix Frankfurter called in his concurrence opinion in McCollum v. Board of Education (1948) for a strict separation between state and church: "Separation means separation, not something less. Jefferson's metaphor in describing the relation between Church and State speaks of a 'wall of separation', not of a fine line easily overstepped. ... 'The great American principle of eternal separation'—Elihu Root's phrase bears repetition—is one of the vital reliances of our Constitutional system for assuring unities among our people stronger than our diversities. It is the Court's duty to enforce this principle in its full integrity."[56]

In the school prayer cases of the early 1960s Engel v. Vitale and Abington School District v. Schempp, aid seemed irrelevant. The Court ruled on the basis that a legitimate action both served a secular purpose and did not primarily assist religion.

In Walz v. Tax Commission of the City of New York (1970), the Court ruled that a legitimate action could not entangle government with religion. In Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971), these points were combined into the Lemon test, declaring that an action was an establishment if:[57]

  1. the statute (or practice) lacked a secular purpose;
  2. its principal or primary effect advanced or inhibited religion; or
  3. it fostered an excessive government entanglement with religion.

The Lemon test has been criticized by justices and legal scholars, but it has remained the predominant means by which the Court enforced the Establishment Clause.[58] In Agostini v. Felton (1997), the entanglement prong of the Lemon test was converted to simply being a factor in determining the effect of the challenged statute or practice.[35] In Zelman v. Simmons-Harris (2002), the opinion of the Court considered secular purpose and the absence of primary effect; a concurring opinion saw both cases as having treated entanglement as part of the primary purpose test.[58] Further tests, such as the endorsement test and coercion test, have been developed to determine whether a government action violated the Establishment Clause.[59][60]

In Lemon, the Court stated that the separation of church and state could never be absolute: "Our prior holdings do not call for total separation between church and state; total separation is not possible in an absolute sense. Some relationship between government and religious organizations is inevitable", the court wrote. "Judicial caveats against entanglement must recognize that the line of separation, far from being a 'wall', is a blurred, indistinct, and variable barrier depending on all the circumstances of a particular relationship."[61]

After the Supreme Court ruling in the coach praying case of Kennedy v. Bremerton School District (2022), the Lemon Test may have been replaced or complemented with a reference to historical practices and understandings.[62][63][64]

Accommodationists

Accommodationists,[65] in contrast, argue along with Justice William O. Douglas that "[w]e are a religious people whose institutions presuppose a Supreme Being."[66][d] Furthermore, as observed by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger in Walz v. Tax Commission of the City of New York (1970) with respect to the separation of church and state: "No perfect or absolute separation is really possible; the very existence of the Religion Clauses is an involvement of sorts—one that seeks to mark boundaries to avoid excessive entanglement."[36] He also coined the term "benevolent neutrality" as a combination of neutrality and accommodationism in Walz to characterize a way to ensure that there is no conflict between the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause.[67][e] Burger's successor, William Rehnquist, called for the abandonment of the "wall of separation between church and State" metaphor in Wallace v. Jaffree (1985), because he believed this metaphor was based on bad history and proved itself useless as a guide to judging.[69]

David Shultz has said that accommodationists claim the Lemon test should be applied selectively.[66] As such, for many conservatives, the Establishment Clause solely prevents the establishment of a state church, not public acknowledgements of God nor 'developing policies that encourage general religious beliefs that do not favor a particular sect and are consistent with the secular government's goals'.[70][71] In Lynch v. Donnelly (1984), the Supreme Court observed that the "concept of a "wall" of separation between church and state is a useful metaphor, but is not an accurate description of the practical aspects of the relationship that in fact exists. The Constitution does not require complete separation of church and state; it affirmatively mandates accommodation, not merely tolerance, of all religions, and forbids hostility toward any."[72]

Free exercise of religion

 
The First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston, Massachusetts

The acknowledgement of religious freedom as the first right protected in the Bill of Rights points toward the American founders' understanding of the importance of religion to human, social, and political flourishing. The First Amendment makes clear that it sought to protect "the free exercise" of religion, or what might be called "free exercise equality."[13] Free exercise is the liberty of persons to reach, hold, practice and change beliefs freely according to the dictates of conscience. The Free Exercise Clause prohibits governmental interference with religious belief and, within limits, religious practice.[14] "Freedom of religion means freedom to hold an opinion or belief, but not to take action in violation of social duties or subversive to good order."[73] The clause withdraws from legislative power, state and federal, the exertion of any restraint on the free exercise of religion. Its purpose is to secure religious liberty in the individual by prohibiting any invasions thereof by civil authority.[74] "The door of the Free Exercise Clause stands tightly closed against any governmental regulation of religious beliefs as such, Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U. S. 296, 310 U. S. 303. Government may neither compel affirmation of a repugnant belief, Torcaso v. Watkins, 367 U. S. 488; nor penalize or discriminate against individuals or groups because they hold religious views abhorrent to the authorities, Fowler v. Rhode Island, 345 U. S. 67; nor employ the taxing power to inhibit the dissemination of particular religious views, Murdock v. Pennsylvania, 319 U. S. 105; Follett v. McCormick, 321 U. S. 573; cf. Grosjean v. American Press Co., 297 U. S. 233."[75]

The Free Exercise Clause offers a double protection, for it is a shield not only against outright prohibitions with respect to the free exercise of religion, but also against penalties on the free exercise of religion and against indirect governmental coercion.[76] Relying on Employment Division v. Smith (1990)[77] and quoting from Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. Hialeah (1993)[78] the Supreme Court stated in Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia, Inc. v. Comer (2017) that religious observers are protected against unequal treatment by virtue of the Free Exercise Clause and laws which target the religious for "special disabilities" based on their "religious status" must be covered by the application of strict scrutiny.[79]

In Reynolds v. United States (1878), the Supreme Court found that while laws cannot interfere with religious belief and opinions, laws can regulate religious practices like human sacrifice or the obsolete Hindu practice of suttee. The Court stated that to rule otherwise, "would be to make the professed doctrines of religious belief superior to the law of the land, and in effect permit every citizen to become a law unto himself. Government would exist only in name under such circumstances."[80] If the purpose or effect of a law is to impede the observance of one or all religions, or is to discriminate invidiously between religions, that law is constitutionally invalid even though the burden may be characterized as being only indirect. But if the State regulates conduct by enacting a general law within its power, the purpose and effect of which is to advance the State's secular goals, the statute is valid despite its indirect burden on religious observance unless the State may accomplish its purpose by means which do not impose such a burden.[81]

 
Bear Butte, in South Dakota, is a sacred site for over 30 Plains tribes.

In Cantwell v. Connecticut (1940), the Court held that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment applied the Free Exercise Clause to the states. While the right to have religious beliefs is absolute, the freedom to act on such beliefs is not absolute.[82] Religious freedom is a universal right of all human beings and all religions, providing for the free exercise of religion or free exercise equality. Due to its nature as fundamental to the American founding and to the ordering of human society, it is rightly seen as a capricious right, i.e. universal, broad, and deep—though not absolute.[13] Justice Field put it clearly in Davis v. Beason (1890): "However free the exercise of religion may be, it must be subordinate to the criminal laws of the country, passed with reference to actions regarded by general consent as properly the subjects of punitive legislation."[83] Furthermore, the Supreme Court in Employment Division v. Smith made clear that "the right of free exercise does not relieve an individual of the obligation to comply with a "valid and neutral law of general applicability on the ground that the law proscribes (or prescribes) conduct that his religion prescribes (or proscribes)." United States v. Lee, 455 U. S. 252, 455 U. S. 263, n. 3 (1982) (STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment); see Minersville School Dist. Bd. of Educ. v. Gobitis, supra, 310 U.S. at 310 U. S. 595 (collecting cases)."[f][85][16] Smith also set the precedent[86] "that laws affecting certain religious practices do not violate the right to free exercise of religion as long as the laws are neutral, generally applicable, and not motivated by animus to religion."[87]

To accept any creed or the practice of any form of worship cannot be compelled by laws, because, as stated by the Supreme Court in Braunfeld v. Brown (1961), the freedom to hold religious beliefs and opinions is absolute.[88] Federal or state legislation cannot therefore make it a crime to hold any religious belief or opinion due to the Free Exercise Clause.[88] Legislation by the United States or any constituent state of the United States which forces anyone to embrace any religious belief or to say or believe anything in conflict with his religious tenets is also barred by the Free Exercise Clause.[88] Against this background, the Supreme Court stated that Free Exercise Clause broadly protects religious beliefs and opinions:

The free exercise of religion means, first and foremost, the right to believe and profess whatever religious doctrine one desires. Thus, the First Amendment obviously excludes all "governmental regulation of religious beliefs as such." Sherbert v. Verner supra, 374 U.S. at 374 U. S. 402. The government may not compel affirmation of religious belief, see Torcaso v. Watkins, 367 U. S. 488 (1961), punish the expression of religious doctrines it believes to be false, United States v. Ballard, 322 U. S. 78, 322 U. S. 86–88 (1944), impose special disabilities on the basis of religious views or religious status, see McDaniel v. Paty, 435 U. S. 618 (1978); Fowler v. Rhode Island, 345 U. S. 67, 345 U. S. 69 (1953); cf. Larson v. Valente, 456 U. S. 228, 456 U. S. 245 (1982), or lend its power to one or the other side in controversies over religious authority or dogma, see Presbyterian Church v. Hull Church, 393 U. S. 440, 393 U. S. 445–452 (1969); Kedroff v. St. Nicholas Cathedral, 344 U. S. 94, 344 U. S. 95–119 (1952); Serbian Eastern Orthodox Diocese v. Milivojevich, 426 U. S. 696, 426 U. S. 708–725 (1976). But the "exercise of religion" often involves not only belief and profession but the performance of (or abstention from) physical acts: assembling with others for a worship service, participating in sacramental use of bread and wine, proselytizing, abstaining from certain foods or certain modes of transportation. It would be true, we think (though no case of ours has involved the point), that a state would be "prohibiting the free exercise [of religion]" if it sought to ban such acts or abstentions only when they are engaged in for religious reasons, or only because of the religious belief that they display. It would doubtless be unconstitutional, for example, to ban the casting of "statues that are to be used for worship purposes," or to prohibit bowing down before a golden calf."[89]

In Sherbert v. Verner (1963),[90] the Supreme Court required states to meet the "strict scrutiny" standard when refusing to accommodate religiously motivated conduct. This meant the government needed to have a "compelling interest" regarding such a refusal. The case involved Adele Sherbert, who was denied unemployment benefits by South Carolina because she refused to work on Saturdays, something forbidden by her Seventh-day Adventist faith.[91] In Wisconsin v. Yoder (1972), the Court ruled that a law which "unduly burdens the practice of religion" without a compelling interest, even though it might be "neutral on its face", would be unconstitutional.[92][93]

 
Washington National Cathedral, the Episcopal cathedral in Washington, D.C.

The need for a compelling governmental interest was narrowed in Employment Division v. Smith (1990),[94] which held no such interest was required under the Free Exercise Clause regarding a neutral law of general applicability that happens to affect a religious practice, as opposed to a law that targets a particular religious practice (which does require a compelling governmental interest).[95] In Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye v. City of Hialeah (1993),[96] in which the meaning of "neutral law of general applicability" was elaborated by the court,[97] the Supreme Court ruled Hialeah had passed an ordinance banning ritual slaughter, a practice central to the Santería religion, while providing exceptions for some practices such as the kosher slaughter. Since the ordinance was not "generally applicable", the Court ruled that it needed to have a compelling interest, which it failed to have, and so was declared unconstitutional.[98] In this case the Supreme Court also stated that inquiries whether laws discriminate based on religion does not end with the text of the laws at issue. Facial neutrality of laws (i.e. laws which are apparently neutral in their language but in reality discriminate against a particular group) is not determinative in these inquiries, because both the Free Exercise Clause and the Establishment Clause extends beyond facial discrimination.[99] The Supreme Court explained that "[o]fficial action that targets religious conduct for distinctive treatment cannot be shielded by mere compliance with the requirement of facial neutrality" and "[t]he Free Exercise Clause protects against governmental hostility which is masked as well as overt."[99] The neutrality of a law is also suspect if First Amendment freedoms are curtailed to prevent isolated collateral harms not themselves prohibited by direct regulation.[100] The Court also observed: "The Free Exercise Clause "protect[s] religious observers against unequal treatment," Hobbie v. Unemployment Appeals Comm'n of Fla., 480 U. S. 136, 148 (1987) (STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment), and inequality results when a legislature decides that the governmental interests it seeks to advance are worthy of being pursued only against conduct with a religious motivation. The principle that government, in pursuit of legitimate interests, cannot in a selective manner impose burdens only on conduct motivated by religious belief is essential to the protection of the rights guaranteed by the Free Exercise Clause."[101]

 
The U.S. guarantees freedom of religion, and some churches in the U.S. take strong stances on political subjects.

In 1993, the Congress passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), seeking to restore the compelling interest requirement applied in Sherbert and Yoder. In City of Boerne v. Flores (1997),[102] the Court struck down the provisions of RFRA that forced state and local governments to provide protections exceeding those required by the First Amendment, on the grounds that while the Congress could enforce the Supreme Court's interpretation of a constitutional right, the Congress could not impose its own interpretation on states and localities.[103] Congress can enact legislation to expand First Amendment free exercise rights through its enforcement powers in Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, but to do so "there must be a congruence and proportionality between the injury to be prevented or remedied and the means adopted to that end."[104] The decision in City of Boerne struck down the Religious Freedom Restoration Act RFRA in so far as it applied to states and other local municipalities within them.,[104] so that partly in response to it 21 states enacted State Religious Freedom Restoration Acts since 1993.[105] According to the court's ruling in Gonzales v. UDV (2006),[106] RFRA remains applicable to federal laws and so those laws must still have a "compelling interest."[107]

RFRA secures Congress’ view of the right to free exercise under the First Amendment, and it provides a remedy to redress violations of that right.[108] The Supreme Court decided in light of this in Tanzin v. Tanvir (2020) that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act's express remedies provision permits litigants, when appropriate, to obtain money damages against federal officials in their individual capacities.[109] This decision is significant "not only for the plaintiffs but also for cases involving violations of religious rights more broadly."[110] In the 1982 U.S. Supreme Court case United States v. Lee (1982) (1982) the Court declared: "Congress and the courts have been sensitive to the needs flowing from the Free Exercise Clause, but every person cannot be shielded from all the burdens incident to exercising every aspect of the right to practice religious beliefs. When followers of a particular sect enter into commercial activity as a matter of choice, the limits they accept on their own conduct as a matter of conscience and faith are not to be superimposed on the statutory schemes which are binding on others in that activity."[111][112] The Supreme Court in Estate of Thornton v. Caldor, Inc. (1985) echoed this statement by quoting Judge Learned Hand from his 1953 case Otten v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., 205 F.2d 58, 61 (CA2 1953): "The First Amendment ... gives no one the right to insist that, in pursuit of their own interests others must conform their conduct to his own religious necessities."[113] In Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. (2014) the Supreme Court had to decide, with a view to the First Amendment's Free Exercise Clause and the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act, "the profound cultural question of whether a private, profit-making business organized as a corporation can "exercise" religion and, if it can, how far that is protected from government interference."[114] The Court decided that closely held, for-profit corporations have free exercise rights under the RFRA,[115] but its decision was not based on the constitutional protections of the First Amendment.[116]

In Locke v. Davey (2004), the Court stated, "[g]iven the historic and substantial state interest at issue, it cannot be concluded that the denial of funding for vocational religious instruction alone is inherently constitutionally suspect",[117] explaining that denying funding a scholarship when it was going to be used for education in theology and when that state's constitution forbids state aid to religious institutions "was not presumptively unconstitutional, because the state was neither criminalizing nor penalizing the study of theology."[118] The Court ruled therefore that a state has a "substantial state interest" in denying funding a scholarship when it was going to be used for education in theology and when that state's constitution forbids state aid to religious institutions.[118] In Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia, Inc. v. Comer (2017),[119] the Court ruled that denying a generally available public benefit on account of the religious nature of an institution violates the Free Exercise Clause.[120] In Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue (2020),[121] the Court ruled that the Free Exercise Clause forbad a state from denying a tax credit on the basis of a Blaine Amendment in that state's constitution, which the Court said is subject to the "strictest scrutiny" and can only survive if it is "narrowly tailored" to promote "interests of the highest order".[122] Citing Lyng v. Northwest Indian Cemetery Protective Association (1988) the Supreme Court decided in the Espinoza follow-up case Carson v. Makin (2022) that the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment protects against “indirect coercion or penalties on the free exercise of religion, not just outright prohibitions.”[123]

Freedom of speech and of the press

 
Inscription of the First Amendment (December 15, 1791) in front of Independence Hall in Philadelphia

The First Amendment broadly protects the rights of free speech and free press.[124] Free speech means the free and public expression of opinions without censorship, interference, or restraint by the government.[125][126][127][128] The term "freedom of speech" embedded in the First Amendment encompasses the decision what to say as well as what not to say.[129] The speech covered by the First Amendment covers many ways of expression and therefore protects what people say as well as how they express themselves.[130] Free press means the right of individuals to express themselves through publication and dissemination of information, ideas, and opinions without interference, constraint, or prosecution by the government.[131][132] In Murdock v. Pennsylvania (1943), the Supreme Court stated that "Freedom of press, freedom of speech, freedom of religion are in a preferred position.".[133] The Court added that a community may not suppress, or the state tax, the dissemination of views because they are unpopular, annoying, or distasteful. That would be a complete repudiation of the philosophy of the Bill of Rights, according to the Court.[134] In Stanley v. Georgia (1969), the Supreme Court stated that the First Amendment protects the right to receive information and ideas, regardless of their social worth, and to be generally free from governmental intrusions into one's privacy and control of one's own thoughts.[135]

The Supreme Court of the United States characterized the rights of free speech and free press as fundamental personal rights and liberties and noted that the exercise of these rights lies at the foundation of free government by free men.[136][137] The Supreme Court stated in Thornhill v. Alabama (1940) that the freedom of speech and of the press guaranteed by the United States Constitution embraces at the least the liberty to discuss publicly and truthfully all matters of public concern, without previous restraint or fear of subsequent punishment.[138] In Bond v. Floyd (1966), a case involving the Constitutional shield around the speech of elected officials, the Supreme Court declared that the First Amendment central commitment is that, in the words of New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964), "debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open."[139] The Court further explained that just as erroneous statements must be protected to give freedom of expression the breathing space it needs to survive, so statements criticizing public policy and the implementation of it must be similarly protected.[139] The Supreme Court in Chicago Police Dept. v. Mosley (1972) said:

"But, above all else, the First Amendment means that government has no power to restrict expression because of its message, its ideas, its subject matter, or its content. ... To permit the continued building of our politics and culture, and to assure self-fulfillment for each individual, our people are guaranteed the right to express any thought, free from government censorship. The essence of this forbidden censorship is content control. Any restriction on expressive activity because of its content would completely undercut the "profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open.""[124]

The level of protections with respect to free speech and free press given by the First Amendment is not limitless. As stated in his concurrence in Chicago Police Dept. v. Mosley (1972), Chief Justice Warren E. Burger said:

"Numerous holdings of this Court attest to the fact that the First Amendment does not literally mean that we "are guaranteed the right to express any thought, free from government censorship." This statement is subject to some qualifications, as for example those of Roth v. United States, 354 U. S. 476 (1957); Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, 315 U. S. 568 (1942). See also New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U. S. 254 (1964)."[140]

Attached to the core rights of free speech and free press are several peripheral rights that make these core rights more secure. The peripheral rights encompass not only freedom of association, including privacy in one's associations, but also, in the words of Griswold v. Connecticut (1965), "the freedom of the entire university community", i.e., the right to distribute, the right to receive, and the right to read, as well as freedom of inquiry, freedom of thought, and freedom to teach.[141] The United States Constitution protects, according to the Supreme Court in Stanley v. Georgia (1969), the right to receive information and ideas, regardless of their social worth, and to be generally free from governmental intrusions into one's privacy and control of one's thoughts.[142] As stated by the Court in Stanley: "If the First Amendment means anything, it means that a State has no business telling a man, sitting alone in his own house, what books he may read or what films he may watch. Our whole constitutional heritage rebels at the thought of giving government the power to control men's minds."[143]

Wording of the clause

The First Amendment bars Congress from "abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press". U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens commented about this phraseology in a 1993 journal article: "I emphasize the word 'the' in the term 'the freedom of speech' because the definite article suggests that the draftsmen intended to immunize a previously identified category or subset of speech." Stevens said that, otherwise, the clause might absurdly immunize things like false testimony under oath.[144] Like Stevens, journalist Anthony Lewis wrote: "The word 'the' can be read to mean what was understood at the time to be included in the concept of free speech."[145] But what was understood at the time is not 100% clear.[146] In the late 1790s, the lead author of the speech and press clauses, James Madison, argued against narrowing this freedom to what had existed under English common law:

The practice in America must be entitled to much more respect. In every state, probably, in the Union, the press has exerted a freedom in canvassing the merits and measures of public men, of every description, which has not been confined to the strict limits of the common law.[147]

Madison wrote this in 1799, when he was in a dispute about the constitutionality of the Alien and Sedition Laws, which was legislation enacted in 1798 by President John Adams' Federalist Party to ban seditious libel. Madison believed that legislation to be unconstitutional, and his adversaries in that dispute, such as John Marshall, advocated the narrow freedom of speech that had existed in the English common law.[147]

Speech critical of the government

The Supreme Court declined to rule on the constitutionality of any federal law regarding the Free Speech Clause until the 20th century. For example, the Supreme Court never ruled on the Alien and Sedition Acts; three Supreme Court justices riding circuit presided over sedition trials without indicating any reservations.[148] The leading critics of the law, Vice President Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, argued for the Acts' unconstitutionality based on the First Amendment and other Constitutional provisions.[149] Jefferson succeeded Adams as president, in part due to the unpopularity of the latter's sedition prosecutions; he and his party quickly overturned the Acts and pardoned those imprisoned by them.[150] In the majority opinion in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964),[151] the Court noted the importance of this public debate as a precedent in First Amendment law and ruled that the Acts had been unconstitutional: "Although the Sedition Act was never tested in this Court, the attack upon its validity has carried the day in the court of history."[152][153]

World War I

 
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes formulated the clear and present danger test for free speech cases.

During the patriotic fervor of World War I and the First Red Scare, the Espionage Act of 1917 imposed a maximum sentence of twenty years for anyone who caused or attempted to cause "insubordination, disloyalty, mutiny, or refusal of duty in the military or naval forces of the United States". Specifically, the Espionage Act of 1917 states that if anyone allows any enemies to enter or fly over the United States and obtain information from a place connected with the national defense, they will be punished.[154] Hundreds of prosecutions followed.[155] In 1919, the Supreme Court heard four appeals resulting from these cases: Schenck v. United States, Debs v. United States, Frohwerk v. United States, and Abrams v. United States.[156]

In the first of these cases, Socialist Party of America official Charles Schenck had been convicted under the Espionage Act for publishing leaflets urging resistance to the draft.[157] Schenck appealed, arguing that the Espionage Act violated the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment. In Schenck v. United States, the Supreme Court unanimously rejected Schenck's appeal and affirmed his conviction.[158] Debate continued over whether Schenck went against the right to freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., writing for the Court, explained that "the question in every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent."[159] One week later, in Frohwerk v. United States, the court again upheld an Espionage Act conviction, this time that of a journalist who had criticized U.S. involvement in foreign wars.[160][161]

In Debs v. United States, the Court elaborated on the "clear and present danger" test established in Schenck.[162] On June 16, 1918, Eugene V. Debs, a political activist, delivered a speech in Canton, Ohio, in which he spoke of "most loyal comrades were paying the penalty to the working class—these being Wagenknecht, Baker and Ruthenberg, who had been convicted of aiding and abetting another in failing to register for the draft."[163] Following his speech, Debs was charged and convicted under the Espionage Act. In upholding his conviction, the Court reasoned that although he had not spoken any words that posed a "clear and present danger", taken in context, the speech had a "natural tendency and a probable effect to obstruct the recruiting services".[164][165] In Abrams v. United States, four Russian refugees appealed their conviction for throwing leaflets from a building in New York; the leaflets argued against President Woodrow Wilson's intervention in Russia against the October Revolution. The majority upheld their conviction, but Holmes and Justice Louis Brandeis dissented, holding that the government had demonstrated no "clear and present danger" in the four's political advocacy.[160]

Extending protections

 
Justice Louis Brandeis wrote several dissents in the 1920s upholding free speech claims.

The Supreme Court denied a number of Free Speech Clause claims throughout the 1920s, including the appeal of a labor organizer, Benjamin Gitlow, who had been convicted after distributing a manifesto calling for a "revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat".[166] In Gitlow v. New York (1925), the Court upheld the conviction, but a majority also found that the First Amendment applied to state laws as well as federal laws, via the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.[167][168] Holmes and Brandeis dissented in several more cases in this decade, however, advancing the argument that the Free Speech Clause protected a far greater range of political speech than the Court had previously acknowledged. In Whitney v. California (1927),[169] in which Communist Party USA organizer Charlotte Anita Whitney had been arrested for "criminal syndicalism", Brandeis wrote a dissent in which he argued for broader protections for political speech:

Those who won our independence ... believed that freedom to think as you will and to speak as you think are means indispensable to the discovery and spread of political truth; that without free speech and assembly discussion would be futile; that with them, discussion affords ordinarily adequate protection against the dissemination of noxious doctrine; that the greatest menace to freedom is an inert people; that public discussion is a political duty; and that this should be a fundamental principle of the American government.[170]

In Herndon v. Lowry (1937), the Court heard the case of African American Communist Party organizer Angelo Herndon, who had been convicted under the Slave Insurrection Statute for advocating black rule in the southern United States. The Court reversed Herndon's conviction, holding that Georgia had failed to demonstrate any "clear and present danger" in Herndon's political advocacy.[171] The clear and present danger test was again invoked by the majority in the 1940 Thornhill v. Alabama decision in which a state antipicketing law was invalidated.[172][173][174] The importance of freedom of speech in the context of "clear and present danger" was emphasized in Terminiello v. City of Chicago (1949)[175] where the Supreme Court noted that the vitality of civil and political institutions in society depends on free discussion.[176] Democracy requires free speech because it is only through free debate and free exchange of ideas that government remains responsive to the will of the people and peaceful change is effected.[176] Restrictions on free speech are only permissible when the speech at issue is likely to produce a clear and present danger of a serious substantive evil that rises far above public inconvenience, annoyance, or unrest.[176] Justice William O. Douglas wrote for the Court that "a function of free speech under our system is to invite dispute. It may indeed best serve its high purpose when it induces a condition of unrest, creates dissatisfaction with conditions as they are, or even stirs people to anger."[176]

Although the Court referred to the clear and present danger test in a few decisions following Thornhill,[177] the bad tendency test was not explicitly overruled,[172] and the clear and present danger test was not applied in several subsequent free speech cases involving incitement to violence.[178] In 1940, Congress enacted the Smith Act, making it illegal to advocate "the propriety of overthrowing or destroying any government in the United States by force and violence".[179] The statute provided law enforcement a tool to combat Communist leaders. Eugene Dennis was convicted in the Foley Square trial for attempting to organize a Communist Party.[180] In Dennis v. United States (1951),[181] the Court upheld the Smith Act.[g][182] Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson relied on Holmes' "clear and present danger" test as adapted by Learned Hand: "In each case [courts] must ask whether the gravity of the 'evil', discounted by its improbability, justifies such invasion of free speech as necessary to avoid the danger."[183] Clearly, Vinson suggested, clear and present danger did not intimate "that before the Government may act, it must wait until the putsch is about to be executed, the plans have been laid and the signal is awaited."[184] In a concurring opinion, Justice Felix Frankfurter proposed a "balancing test", which soon supplanted the "clear and present danger" test:

The demands of free speech in a democratic society as well as the interest in national security are better served by candid and informed weighing of the competing interests, within the confines of the judicial process.[182]

In Yates v. United States (1957), the Supreme Court limited the Smith Act prosecutions to "advocacy of action" rather than "advocacy in the realm of ideas". Advocacy of abstract doctrine remained protected while speech explicitly inciting the forcible overthrow of the government was punishable under the Smith Act.[185][186]

During the Vietnam War, the Court's position on public criticism of the government changed drastically. Though the Court upheld a law prohibiting the forgery, mutilation, or destruction of draft cards in United States v. O'Brien (1968),[187] fearing that burning draft cards would interfere with the "smooth and efficient functioning" of the draft system,[188][189] the next year, the court handed down its decision in Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969),[190] expressly overruling Whitney v. California.[191] Brandenburg discarded the "clear and present danger" test introduced in Schenck and further eroded Dennis.[192][193] Now the Supreme Court referred to the right to speak openly of violent action and revolution in broad terms:

[Our] decisions have fashioned the principle that the constitutional guarantees of free speech and free press do not allow a State to forbid or proscribe advocacy of the use of force or law violation except where such advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or cause such action.[194]

In Cohen v. California (1971),[195] the Court voted reversed the conviction of a man wearing a jacket reading "Fuck the Draft" in the corridors of a Los Angeles County courthouse. Justice John Marshall Harlan II wrote in the majority opinion that Cohen's jacket fell in the category of protected political speech despite the use of an expletive: "One man's vulgarity is another man's lyric."[196]

Political speech

The ability to publicly criticize even the most prominent politicians and leaders without fear of retaliation is part of the First Amendment, because political speech is core First Amendment speech. As the Supreme Court stated with respect to the judicial branch of the government exemplarily that the First Amendment prohibits "any law abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press ... It must be taken as a command of the broadest scope that explicit language, read in the context of a liberty-loving society, will allow. [...] The assumption that respect for the judiciary can be won by shielding judges from published criticism wrongly appraises the character of American public opinion. For it is a prized American privilege to speak one's mind, although not always with perfect good taste, on all public institutions. And an enforced silence, however limited, solely in the name of preserving the dignity of the bench would probably engender resentment, suspicion, and contempt much more than it would enhance respect."[197]

Anonymous speech

In Talley v. California (1960),[198] the Court struck down a Los Angeles city ordinance that made it a crime to distribute anonymous pamphlets. Justice Hugo Black wrote in the majority opinion: "There can be no doubt that such an identification requirement would tend to restrict freedom to distribute information and thereby freedom of expression. ... Anonymous pamphlets, leaflets, brochures and even books have played an important role in the progress of mankind."[199] In McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Commission (1995),[200] the Court struck down an Ohio statute that made it a crime to distribute anonymous campaign literature.[201] However, in Meese v. Keene (1987),[202] the Court upheld the Foreign Agents Registration Act of 1938, under which several Canadian films were defined as "political propaganda", requiring their sponsors to be identified.[203]

Campaign finance

 
U.S. Senator Mitch McConnell, plaintiff in McConnell v. Federal Election Commission

In Buckley v. Valeo (1976),[204] the Supreme Court reviewed the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 and related laws, which restricted the monetary contributions that may be made to political campaigns and expenditure by candidates. The Court affirmed the constitutionality of limits on campaign contributions, saying they "serve[d] the basic governmental interest in safeguarding the integrity of the electoral process without directly impinging upon the rights of individual citizens and candidates to engage in political debate and discussion."[205] However, the Court overturned the spending limits, which it found imposed "substantial restraints on the quantity of political speech".[206][207]

The court again scrutinized campaign finance regulation in McConnell v. Federal Election Commission (2003).[208] The case centered on the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (BCRA), a federal law that imposed new restrictions on campaign financing. The Supreme Court upheld provisions which barred the raising of soft money by national parties and the use of soft money by private organizations to fund certain advertisements related to elections. However, the Court struck down the "choice of expenditure" rule, which required that parties could either make coordinated expenditures for all its candidates, or permit candidates to spend independently, but not both, which the Court agreed "placed an unconstitutional burden on the parties' right to make unlimited independent expenditures".[209] The Court also ruled that the provision preventing minors from making political contributions was unconstitutional, relying on Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District.

In Federal Election Commission v. Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. (2007),[210] the Court sustained an "as applied" challenge to BCRA, holding that issue ads may not be banned from the months preceding a primary or general election. In Davis v. Federal Election Commission (2008),[211] the Supreme Court declared the "Millionaire's Amendment" provisions of the BCRA to be unconstitutional. The Court held that easing BCRA restrictions for an opponent of a self-financing candidate spending at least $350,000 of his or her own money violated the freedom of speech of the self-financing candidate.[212]

In Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010),[213] the Court ruled that the BCRA's federal restrictions on electoral advocacy by corporations or unions were unconstitutional for violating the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment. The Court overruled Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce (1990),[214] which had upheld a state law that prohibited corporations from using treasury funds to support or oppose candidates in elections did not violate the First or Fourteenth Amendments. The Court also overruled the portion of McConnell that upheld such restrictions under the BCRA.[215] In other words, the ruling was considered to hold that "political spending is a form of protected speech under the First Amendment".[216]

In McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission (2014),[217] the Court ruled that federal aggregate limits on how much a person can donate to candidates, political parties, and political action committees, combined respectively in a two-year period known as an "election cycle", violated the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment.[218]

Flag desecration

The divisive issue of flag desecration as a form of protest first came before the Supreme Court in Street v. New York (1969).[219] In response to hearing an erroneous report of the murder of civil rights activist James Meredith, Sidney Street burned a 48-star U.S. flag. Street was arrested and charged with a New York state law making it a crime "publicly [to] mutilate, deface, defile, or defy, trample upon, or cast contempt upon either by words or act [any flag of the United States]".[220] The Court, relying on Stromberg v. California (1931),[221] found that because the provision of the New York law criminalizing "words" against the flag was unconstitutional, and the trial did not sufficiently demonstrate he had been convicted solely under the provisions not yet deemed unconstitutional, the conviction was unconstitutional. The Court, however, "resist[ed] the pulls to decide the constitutional issues involved in this case on a broader basis" and left the constitutionality of flag-burning unaddressed.[222][223]

The ambiguity with regard to flag-burning statutes was eliminated in Texas v. Johnson (1989).[224] In that case, Gregory Lee Johnson burned an American flag at a demonstration during the 1984 Republican National Convention in Dallas, Texas. Charged with violating a Texas law prohibiting the vandalizing of venerated objects, Johnson was convicted, sentenced to one year in prison, and fined $2,000. The Supreme Court reversed his conviction. Justice William J. Brennan Jr. wrote in the decision that "if there is a bedrock principle underlying the First Amendment, it is that government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because society finds the idea offensive or disagreeable."[225] Congress then passed a federal law barring flag burning, but the Supreme Court struck it down as well in United States v. Eichman (1990).[226][227] A Flag Desecration Amendment to the U.S. Constitution has been proposed repeatedly in Congress since 1989, and in 2006 failed to pass the Senate by a single vote.[228]

Falsifying military awards

While the unauthorized wear or sale of the Medal of Honor has been a punishable offense under federal law since the early twentieth century,[229][230] the Stolen Valor Act criminalized the act of not only wearing, but also verbally claiming entitlement to military awards a person did not in fact earn.[231] In United States v. Alvarez (2012), the Supreme Court struck down the Act, ruling that the First Amendment bars the government from punishing people for making false claims regarding military service or honors where the false claim was not "made to effect a fraud or secure moneys or other valuable considerations". The Supreme Court could not agree on a single rationale for its decision.[232]

Compelled speech

The Supreme Court has determined that the First Amendment also protects citizens from being compelled by the government to say or to pay for certain speech.

In West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette (1943), the Court ruled that school children could not be punished for refusing either to say the pledge of allegiance or salute the American flag. The Court also overruled Minersville School District v. Gobitis (1940), which had upheld such punishments of school children.[233]

In National Institute of Family and Life Advocates v. Becerra (2018), the Court ruled that a California law requiring crisis pregnancy centers to post notices informing patients they can obtain free or low-cost abortions and include the number of the state agency that can connect the women with abortion providers violated those centers' right to free speech.[234]

In Janus v. AFSCME (2018), the Court ruled that requiring a public sector employee to pay dues to a union of which he is not a member violated the First Amendment. According to the Court, "the First Amendment does not permit the government to compel a person to pay for another party's speech just because the government thinks that the speech furthers the interests of the person who does not want to pay." The Court also overruled Abood v. Detroit Board of Education (1977), which had upheld legally obligating public sector employees to pay such dues.[235]

Commercial speech

Commercial speech is speech done on behalf of a company or individual for the purpose of making a profit. Unlike political speech, the Supreme Court does not afford commercial speech full protection under the First Amendment. To effectively distinguish commercial speech from other types of speech for purposes of litigation, the Court uses a list of four indicia:[236]

  1. The contents do "no more than propose a commercial transaction".
  2. The contents may be characterized as advertisements.
  3. The contents reference a specific product.
  4. The disseminator is economically motivated to distribute the speech.

Alone, each indicium does not compel the conclusion that an instance of speech is commercial; however, "[t]he combination of all these characteristics ... provides strong support for ... the conclusion that the [speech is] properly characterized as commercial speech."[237]

In Valentine v. Chrestensen (1942),[238] the Court upheld a New York City ordinance forbidding the "distribution in the streets of commercial and business advertising matter", ruling the First Amendment protection of free speech did not include commercial speech.[239]

In Virginia State Pharmacy Board v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council (1976),[240] the Court overturned Valentine and ruled that commercial speech was entitled to First Amendment protection:

What is at issue is whether a State may completely suppress the dissemination of concededly truthful information about entirely lawful activity, fearful of that information's effect upon its disseminators and its recipients. ... [W]e conclude that the answer to this one is in the negative.[241]

In Ohralik v. Ohio State Bar Association (1978),[242] the Court ruled that commercial speech was not protected by the First Amendment as much as other types of speech:

We have not discarded the 'common-sense' distinction between speech proposing a commercial transaction, which occurs in an area traditionally subject to government regulation, and other varieties of speech. To require a parity of constitutional protection for commercial and noncommercial speech alike could invite a dilution, simply by a leveling process, of the force of the [First] Amendment's guarantee with respect to the latter kind of speech.[243]

In Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp. v. Public Service Commission (1980),[244] the Court clarified what analysis was required before the government could justify regulating commercial speech:

  1. Is the expression protected by the First Amendment? Lawful? Misleading? Fraud?
  2. Is the asserted government interest substantial?
  3. Does the regulation directly advance the governmental interest asserted?
  4. Is the regulation more extensive than is necessary to serve that interest?

Six years later, the U.S. Supreme Court, applying the Central Hudson standards in Posadas de Puerto Rico Associates v. Tourism Company of Puerto Rico (1986),[245] affirmed the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico's conclusion that Puerto Rico's Games of Chance Act of 1948, including the regulations thereunder, was not facially unconstitutional. The lax interpretation of Central Hudson adopted by Posadas was soon restricted under 44 Liquormart, Inc. v. Rhode Island (1996),[246] when the Court invalidated a Rhode Island law prohibiting the publication of liquor prices.

School speech

In Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (1969),[247] the Supreme Court extended free speech rights to students in school. The case involved several students who were punished for wearing black armbands to protest the Vietnam War. The Court ruled that the school could not restrict symbolic speech that did not "materially and substantially" interrupt school activities.[248] Justice Abe Fortas wrote:

First Amendment rights, applied in light of the special characteristics of the school environment, are available to teachers and students. It can hardly be argued that either students or teachers shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate. ... [S]chools may not be enclaves of totalitarianism. School officials do not possess absolute authority over their students. Students ... are possessed of fundamental rights which the State must respect, just as they themselves must respect their obligations to the State.[249]

In Healy v. James (1972), the Court ruled that Central Connecticut State College's refusal to recognize a campus chapter of Students for a Democratic Society was unconstitutional, reaffirming Tinker.[250]

However, since 1969 the Court has also placed several limitations on Tinker. In Bethel School District v. Fraser (1986),[251] the Court ruled that a student could be punished for his sexual-innuendo-laced speech before a school assembly and, in Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier (1988),[252] the Court found that schools need not tolerate student speech that is inconsistent with their basic educational mission.[253] In Morse v. Frederick (2007),[254] the Court ruled that schools could restrict student speech at school-sponsored events, even events away from school grounds, if students promote "illegal drug use".[255]

In 2014, the University of Chicago released the "Chicago Statement", a free speech policy statement designed to combat censorship on campus. This statement was later adopted by a number of top-ranked universities including Princeton University, Washington University in St. Louis, Johns Hopkins University, and Columbia University.[256][257]

Internet access

In Packingham v. North Carolina (2017), the Supreme Court held that a North Carolina law prohibiting registered sex offenders from accessing various websites impermissibly restricted lawful speech in violation of the First Amendment.[258] The Court held that "a fundamental principle of the First Amendment is that all persons have access to places where they can speak and listen, and then, after reflection, speak and listen once more."[259][260]

Obscenity

 
Justice Potter Stewart wrote that while he could not precisely define pornography, he "[knew] it when [he saw] it".

According to the U.S. Supreme Court, the First Amendment's protection of free speech does not apply to obscene speech. Therefore, both the federal government and the states have tried to prohibit or otherwise restrict obscene speech, in particular the form that is now called pornography. As of 2019, pornography, except for child pornography, is in practice free of governmental restrictions in the United States, though pornography about "extreme" sexual practices is occasionally prosecuted. The change in the twentieth century, from total prohibition in 1900 to near-total tolerance in 2000, reflects a series of court cases involving the definition of obscenity. The U.S. Supreme Court has found that most pornography is not obscene, a result of changing definitions of both obscenity and pornography.[38] The legal tolerance also reflects changed social attitudes: one reason there are so few prosecutions for pornography is that juries will not convict.[261]

In Rosen v. United States (1896), the Supreme Court adopted the same obscenity standard as had been articulated in a famous British case, Regina v. Hicklin (1868).[262] The Hicklin test defined material as obscene if it tended "to deprave or corrupt those whose minds are open to such immoral influences, and into whose hands a publication of this sort may fall".[263] In the early twentieth century, literary works including An American Tragedy (Theodore Dreiser, 1925) and Lady Chatterley's Lover (D.H. Lawrence, 1928) were banned for obscenity. In the federal district court case United States v. One Book Called Ulysses (1933), Judge John M. Woolsey established a new standard to evaluate James Joyce's novel Ulysses (1922), stating that works must be considered in their entirety, rather than declared obscene on the basis of an individual part of the work.[264]

The Supreme Court ruled in Roth v. United States (1957)[265] that the First Amendment did not protect obscenity.[264] It also ruled that the Hicklin test was inappropriate; instead, the Roth test for obscenity was "whether to the average person, applying contemporary community standards, the dominant theme of the material, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest".[266] This definition proved hard to apply, however, and in the following decade, members of the Court often reviewed films individually in a court building screening room to determine if they should be considered obscene.[267] Justice Potter Stewart, in Jacobellis v. Ohio (1964),[268] famously said that, although he could not precisely define pornography, "I know it when I see it".[269][270]

The Roth test was expanded when the Court decided Miller v. California (1973).[271] Under the Miller test, a work is obscene if:

(a)  'the average person, applying contemporary community standards' would find the work, as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest ... (b) ... the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law, and (c) ... the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.[272]

"Community" standards—not national standards—are applied to determine whether allegedly obscene material appeals to the prurient interest and is patently offensive.[264] By contrast, the question whether a work lacks serious value depends upon "whether a reasonable person would find such value in the material, taken as a whole."[273]

Child pornography is not subject to the Miller test, as the Supreme Court decided in New York v. Ferber (1982) and Osborne v. Ohio (1990),[274][275] ruling that the government's interest in protecting children from abuse was paramount.[276][277]

Personal possession of obscene material in the home may not be prohibited by law. In Stanley v. Georgia (1969),[278] the Court ruled that "[i]f the First Amendment means anything, it means that a State has no business telling a man, sitting in his own house, what books he may read or what films he may watch."[143] However, it is constitutionally permissible for the government to prevent the mailing or sale of obscene items, though they may be viewed only in private. Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition (2002)[279] further upheld these rights by invalidating the Child Pornography Prevention Act of 1996, holding that, because the act "[p]rohibit[ed] child pornography that does not depict an actual child" (simulated child pornography) it was overly broad and unconstitutional under the First Amendment[280] and:

First Amendment freedoms are most in danger when the government seeks to control thought or to justify its laws for that impermissible end. The right to think is the beginning of freedom, and speech must be protected from the government because speech is the beginning of thought.[281]

In United States v. Williams (2008),[282] the Court upheld the PROTECT Act of 2003, ruling that prohibiting offers to provide and requests to obtain child pornography did not violate the First Amendment, even if a person charged under the Act did not possess child pornography.[283][284]

Memoirs of convicted criminals

In some states, there are Son of Sam laws prohibiting convicted criminals from publishing memoirs for profit.[285] These laws were a response to offers to David Berkowitz to write memoirs about the murders he committed. The Supreme Court struck down a law of this type in New York as a violation of the First Amendment in the case Simon & Schuster v. Crime Victims Board (1991).[286] That statute did not prohibit publication of a memoir by a convicted criminal. Instead, it provided that all profits from the book were to be put in escrow for a time. The interest from the escrow account was used to fund the New York State Crime Victims Board—an organization that pays the medical and related bills of victims of crime. Similar laws in other states remain unchallenged.[287]

Defamation

 
Justice William J. Brennan Jr. wrote the landmark decision New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, requiring the demonstration of "actual malice" in libel suits against public figures.

American tort liability for defamatory speech or publications traces its origins to English common law. For the first two hundred years of American jurisprudence, the basic substance of defamation law continued to resemble that existing in England at the time of the Revolution. An 1898 American legal textbook on defamation provides definitions of libel and slander nearly identical to those given by William Blackstone and Edward Coke. An action of slander required the following:[288]

  1. Actionable words, such as those imputing the injured party: is guilty of some offense, suffers from a contagious disease or psychological disorder, is unfit for public office because of moral failings or an inability to discharge his or her duties, or lacks integrity in profession, trade or business;
  2. That the charge must be false;
  3. That the charge must be articulated to a third person, verbally or in writing;
  4. That the words are not subject to legal protection, such as those uttered in Congress; and
  5. That the charge must be motivated by malice.

An action of libel required the same five general points as slander, except that it specifically involved the publication of defamatory statements.[289] For certain criminal charges of libel, such as seditious libel, the truth or falsity of the statements was immaterial, as such laws were intended to maintain public support of the government and true statements could damage this support even more than false ones.[290] Instead, libel placed specific emphasis on the result of the publication. Libelous publications tended to "degrade and injure another person" or "bring him into contempt, hatred or ridicule".[289]

Concerns that defamation under common law might be incompatible with the new republican form of government caused early American courts to struggle between William Blackstone's argument that the punishment of "dangerous or offensive writings ... [was] necessary for the preservation of peace and good order, of government and religion, the only solid foundations of civil liberty" and the argument that the need for a free press guaranteed by the Constitution outweighed the fear of what might be written.[290] Consequently, very few changes were made in the first two centuries after the ratification of the First Amendment.

The Supreme Court's ruling in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964)[151] fundamentally changed American defamation law. The case redefined the type of "malice" needed to sustain a libel case. Common law malice consisted of "ill-will" or "wickedness". Now, a public officials seeking to sustain a civil action against a tortfeasor needed to prove by "clear and convincing evidence" that there was actual malice. The case involved an advertisement published in The New York Times indicating that officials in Montgomery, Alabama had acted violently in suppressing the protests of African-Americans during the civil rights movement. The Montgomery Police Commissioner, L. B. Sullivan, sued the Times for libel, saying the advertisement damaged his reputation. The Supreme Court unanimously reversed the $500,000 judgment against the Times. Justice Brennan suggested that public officials may sue for libel only if the statements in question were published with "actual malice"—"knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not".[291][292] In sum, the court held that "the First Amendment protects the publication of all statements, even false ones, about the conduct of public officials except when statements are made with actual malice (with knowledge that they are false or in reckless disregard of their truth or falsity)."[293]

While actual malice standard applies to public officials and public figures,[294] in Philadelphia Newspapers v. Hepps (1988),[295] the Court found that, with regard to private individuals, the First Amendment does "not necessarily force any change in at least some features of the common-law landscape".[296] In Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. v. Greenmoss Builders, Inc. (1985)[297] the Court ruled that "actual malice" need not be shown in cases involving private individuals, holding that "[i]n light of the reduced constitutional value of speech involving no matters of public concern ... the state interest adequately supports awards of presumed and punitive damages—even absent a showing of 'actual malice'."[298][299] In Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc. (1974), the Court ruled that a private individual had to prove malice only to be awarded punitive damages, not actual damages.[300][301] In Hustler Magazine v. Falwell (1988),[302] the Court extended the "actual malice" standard to intentional infliction of emotional distress in a ruling which protected parody, in this case a fake advertisement in Hustler suggesting that evangelist Jerry Falwell's first sexual experience had been with his mother in an outhouse. Since Falwell was a public figure, the Court ruled that "importance of the free flow of ideas and opinions on matters of public interest and concern" was the paramount concern, and reversed the judgement Falwell had won against Hustler for emotional distress.[303]

In Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Co. (1990),[304] the Court ruled that the First Amendment offers no wholesale exception to defamation law for statements labeled "opinion", but instead that a statement must be provably false (falsifiable) before it can be the subject of a libel suit.[305] Nonetheless, it has been argued that Milkovich and other cases effectively provide for an opinion privilege.[306]

Private action

Despite the common misconception that the First Amendment prohibits anyone from limiting free speech,[2] the text of the amendment prohibits only the federal government, the states and local governments from doing so.[307]

State constitutions provide free speech protections similar to those of the U.S. Constitution. In a few states, such as California, a state constitution has been interpreted as providing more comprehensive protections than the First Amendment. The Supreme Court has permitted states to extend such enhanced protections, most notably in Pruneyard Shopping Center v. Robins.[308] In that case, the Court unanimously ruled that while the First Amendment may allow private property owners to prohibit trespass by political speakers and petition-gatherers, California was permitted to restrict property owners whose property is equivalent to a traditional public forum (often shopping malls and grocery stores) from enforcing their private property rights to exclude such individuals.[309] However, the Court did maintain that shopping centers could impose "reasonable restrictions on expressive activity".[310] Subsequently, New Jersey, Colorado, Massachusetts and Puerto Rico courts have adopted the doctrine;[311][312] California's courts have repeatedly reaffirmed it.[313]

Freedom of the press

The free speech and free press clauses have been interpreted as providing the same protection to speakers as to writers, except for radio and television wireless broadcasting which have, for historical reasons, been given less constitutional protections.[314] The Free Press Clause protects the right of individuals to express themselves through publication and dissemination of information, ideas and opinions without interference, constraint or prosecution by the government.[131][132] This right was described in Branzburg v. Hayes as "a fundamental personal right" that is not confined to newspapers and periodicals, but also embraces pamphlets and leaflets.[315] In Lovell v. City of Griffin (1938),[316] Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes defined "press" as "every sort of publication which affords a vehicle of information and opinion".[317] This right has been extended to media including newspapers, books, plays, movies, and video games.[318] While it is an open question whether people who blog or use social media are journalists entitled to protection by media shield laws,[319] they are protected equally by the Free Speech Clause and the Free Press Clause, because both clauses do not distinguish between media businesses and nonprofessional speakers.[131][132][320][321] This is further shown by the Supreme Court consistently refusing to recognize the First Amendment as providing greater protection to the institutional media than to other speakers.[322][323][324] For example, in a case involving campaign finance laws the Court rejected the "suggestion that communication by corporate members of the institutional press is entitled to greater constitutional protection than the same communication by" non-institutional-press businesses.[325] Justice Felix Frankfurter stated in a concurring opinion in another case succinctly: "[T]he purpose of the Constitution was not to erect the press into a privileged institution but to protect all persons in their right to print what they will as well as to utter it."[326] In Mills v. Alabama (1943) the Supreme Court laid out the purpose of the free press clause:

 
The Newseum's depiction of the five freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment to the US Constitution in Washington, D.C.

Whatever differences may exist about interpretations of the First Amendment, there is practically universal agreement that a major purpose of that Amendment was to protect the free discussion of governmental affairs. This, of course, includes discussions of candidates, structures and forms of government, the manner in which government is operated or should be operated, and all such matters relating to political processes. The Constitution specifically selected the press, which includes not only newspapers, books, and magazines, but also humble leaflets and circulars, see Lovell v. Griffin, 303 U. S. 444, to play an important role in the discussion of public affairs. Thus, the press serves and was designed to serve as a powerful antidote to any abuses of power by governmental officials, and as a constitutionally chosen means for keeping officials elected by the people responsible to all the people whom they were selected to serve. Suppression of the right of the press to praise or criticize governmental agents and to clamor and contend for or against change, which is all that this editorial did, muzzles one of the very agencies the Framers of our Constitution thoughtfully and deliberately selected to improve our society and keep it free.[327]

A landmark decision for press freedom came in Near v. Minnesota (1931),[328] in which the Supreme Court rejected prior restraint (pre-publication censorship). In this case, the Minnesota legislature passed a statute allowing courts to shut down "malicious, scandalous and defamatory newspapers", allowing a defense of truth only in cases where the truth had been told "with good motives and for justifiable ends".[329] The Court applied the Free Press Clause to the states, rejecting the statute as unconstitutional. Hughes quoted Madison in the majority decision, writing, "The impairment of the fundamental security of life and property by criminal alliances and official neglect emphasizes the primary need of a vigilant and courageous press."[330]

 
The leak of the Pentagon Papers by Daniel Ellsberg (pictured here in 2018) led to New York Times Co. v. United States (1971), a landmark press freedom decision.

However, Near also noted an exception, allowing prior restraint in cases such as "publication of sailing dates of transports or the number or location of troops".[331] This exception was a key point in another landmark case four decades later: New York Times Co. v. United States (1971),[332] in which the administration of President Richard Nixon sought to ban the publication of the Pentagon Papers, classified government documents about the Vietnam War secretly copied by analyst Daniel Ellsberg. The Court found that the Nixon administration had not met the heavy burden of proof required for prior restraint. Justice Brennan, drawing on Near in a concurrent opinion, wrote that "only governmental allegation and proof that publication must inevitably, directly, and immediately cause the occurrence of an evil kindred to imperiling the safety of a transport already at sea can support even the issuance of an interim restraining order." Justices Black and Douglas went still further, writing that prior restraints were never justified.[333]

The courts have rarely treated content-based regulation of journalism with any sympathy. In Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo (1974),[334] the Court unanimously struck down a state law requiring newspapers criticizing political candidates to publish their responses. The state claimed the law had been passed to ensure journalistic responsibility. The Supreme Court found that freedom, but not responsibility, is mandated by the First Amendment and so it ruled that the government may not force newspapers to publish that which they do not desire to publish.[335]

Content-based regulation of television and radio, however, have been sustained by the Supreme Court in various cases. Since there is a limited number of frequencies for non-cable television and radio stations, the government licenses them to various companies. However, the Supreme Court has ruled that the problem of scarcity does not allow the raising of a First Amendment issue. The government may restrain broadcasters, but only on a content-neutral basis. In Federal Communications Commission v. Pacifica Foundation,[336] the Supreme Court upheld the Federal Communications Commission's authority to restrict the use of "indecent" material in broadcasting.

State governments retain the right to tax newspapers, just as they may tax other commercial products. Generally, however, taxes that focus exclusively on newspapers have been found unconstitutional. In Grosjean v. American Press Co. (1936),[337] the Court invalidated a state tax on newspaper advertising revenues, holding that the role of the press in creating "informed public opinion" was vital.[338] Similarly, some taxes that give preferential treatment to the press have been struck down. In Arkansas Writers' Project v. Ragland (1987),[339] for instance, the Court invalidated an Arkansas law exempting "religious, professional, trade and sports journals" from taxation since the law amounted to the regulation of newspaper content. In Leathers v. Medlock (1991),[340] the Supreme Court found that states may treat different types of the media differently, such as by taxing cable television, but not newspapers. The Court found that "differential taxation of speakers, even members of the press, does not implicate the First Amendment unless the tax is directed at, or presents the danger of suppressing, particular ideas."[341]

In Branzburg v. Hayes (1972),[342] the Court ruled that the First Amendment did not give a journalist the right to refuse a subpoena from a grand jury. The issue decided in the case was whether a journalist could refuse to "appear and testify before state and Federal grand juries" basing the refusal on the belief that such appearance and testimony "abridges the freedom of speech and press guaranteed by the First Amendment".[343] The decision was that such a protection was not provided by the First Amendment. However, a concurring opinion by Justice Lewis F. Powell, in which he said a claim for press privilege "should be judged on its facts by the striking of a proper balance between freedom of the press and the obligation of all citizens to give relevant testimony with respect to criminal conduct. The balance of these vital constitutional and societal interests on a case-by-case basis accords with the tried and traditional way of adjudicating such questions," has been frequently cited by lower courts since the decision.[344]

Petition and assembly

 
Chief Justice Morrison Waite ruled in United States v. Cruikshank (1875) that the right of assembly was a secondary right to the right to petition.

The Petition Clause protects the right "to petition the government for a redress of grievances".[131] The right expanded over the years: "It is no longer confined to demands for 'a redress of grievances', in any accurate meaning of these words, but comprehends demands for an exercise by the government of its powers in furtherance of the interest and prosperity of the petitioners and of their views on politically contentious matters."[345] The right to petition the government for a redress of grievances therefore includes the right to communicate with government officials, lobbying government officials and petitioning the courts by filing lawsuits with a legal basis.[321] The Petition Clause first came to prominence in the 1830s, when Congress established the gag rule barring anti-slavery petitions from being heard; the rule was overturned by Congress several years later. Petitions against the Espionage Act of 1917 resulted in imprisonments. The Supreme Court did not rule on either issue.[345]

In California Motor Transport Co. v. Trucking Unlimited (1972),[346] the Supreme Court said the right to petition encompasses "the approach of citizens or groups of them to administrative agencies (which are both creatures of the legislature, and arms of the executive) and to courts, the third branch of Government. Certainly the right to petition extends to all departments of the Government. The right of access to the courts is indeed but one aspect of the right of petition."[347] Today, thus, this right encompasses petitions to all three branches of the federal government—the Congress, the executive and the judiciary—and has been extended to the states through incorporation.[345][348] According to the Supreme Court, "redress of grievances" is to be construed broadly: it includes not solely appeals by the public to the government for the redressing of a grievance in the traditional sense, but also, petitions on behalf of private interests seeking personal gain.[349] The right protects not only demands for "a redress of grievances" but also demands for government action.[345][349] The petition clause includes according to the Supreme Court the opportunity to institute non-frivolous lawsuits and mobilize popular support to change existing laws in a peaceful manner.[348]

In Borough of Duryea v. Guarnieri (2011),[350] the Supreme Court stated regarding the Free Speech Clause and the Petition Clause:

It is not necessary to say that the two Clauses are identical in their mandate or their purpose and effect to acknowledge that the rights of speech and petition share substantial common ground ... Both speech and petition are integral to the democratic process, although not necessarily in the same way. The right to petition allows citizens to express their ideas, hopes, and concerns to their government and their elected representatives, whereas the right to speak fosters the public exchange of ideas that is integral to deliberative democracy as well as to the whole realm of ideas and human affairs. Beyond the political sphere, both speech and petition advance personal expression, although the right to petition is generally concerned with expression directed to the government seeking redress of a grievance.[350]

The right of assembly is the individual right of people to come together and collectively express, promote, pursue, and defend their collective or shared ideas.[351] This right is equally important as those of free speech and free press, because, as observed by the Supreme Court of the United States in De Jonge v. Oregon, 299 U.S. 353, 364, 365 (1937), the right of peaceable assembly is "cognate to those of free speech and free press and is equally fundamental ... [It] is one that cannot be denied without violating those fundamental principles of liberty and justice which lie at the base of all civil and political institutions—principles which the Fourteenth Amendment embodies in the general terms of its due process clause ... The holding of meetings for peaceable political action cannot be proscribed. Those who assist in the conduct of such meetings cannot be branded as criminals on that score. The question ... is not as to the auspices under which the meeting is held but as to its purpose; not as to the relations of the speakers, but whether their utterances transcend the bounds of the freedom of speech which the Constitution protects."[345] The right of peaceable assembly was originally distinguished from the right to petition.[345] In United States v. Cruikshank (1875),[352] the first case in which the right to assembly was before the Supreme Court,[345] the court broadly declared the outlines of the right of assembly and its connection to the right of petition:

The right of the people peaceably to assemble for the purpose of petitioning Congress for a redress of grievances, or for anything else connected with the powers or duties of the National Government, is an attribute of national citizenship, and, as such, under protection of, and guaranteed by, the United States. The very idea of a government, republican in form, implies a right on the part of its citizens to meet peaceably for consultation in respect to public affairs and to petition for a redress of grievances.[353]

Justice Morrison Waite's opinion for the Court carefully distinguished the right to peaceably assemble as a secondary right, while the right to petition was labeled to be a primary right. Later cases, however, paid less attention to these distinctions.[345] An example for this is Hague v. Committee for Industrial Organization (1939), where it was decided that the freedom of assembly covered by the First Amendment applies to public forums like streets and parks.[354][345] In Hague the right of assembly was given a broad meaning, because the right of assembly can be used "for communication of views on national questions"[355] as well as for "holding meetings and disseminating information whether for the organization of labor unions or for any other lawful purpose."[356] In two 1960s decisions collectively known as forming the Noerr-Pennington doctrine,[h] the Court established that the right to petition prohibited the application of antitrust law to statements made by private entities before public bodies: a monopolist may freely go before the city council and encourage the denial of its competitor's building permit without being subject to Sherman Act liability.[357]

Freedom of association

Although the First Amendment does not explicitly mention freedom of association, the Supreme Court ruled, in NAACP v. Alabama (1958),[358][359] that this freedom was protected by the amendment and that privacy of membership was an essential part of this freedom.[360] In Roberts v. United States Jaycees (1984), the Court stated that "implicit in the right to engage in activities protected by the First Amendment" is "a corresponding right to associate with others in pursuit of a wide variety of political, social, economic, educational, religious, and cultural ends".[361] In Roberts the Court held that associations may not exclude people for reasons unrelated to the group's expression, such as gender.[362]

However, in Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Group of Boston (1995),[363] the Court ruled that a group may exclude people from membership if their presence would affect the group's ability to advocate a particular point of view.[364] Likewise, in Boy Scouts of America v. Dale (2000),[365] the Court ruled that a New Jersey law, which forced the Boy Scouts of America to admit an openly gay member, to be an unconstitutional abridgment of the Boy Scouts' right to free association.[366]

In Americans for Prosperity Foundation v. Bonta (2021), the Court ruled that California's requiring disclosure of the identities of nonprofit companies' big-money donors did not serve a narrowly tailored government interest and, thus, violated those donors' First Amendment rights.[367]

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ See for the topic First Amendment and state actor exemplarily the 2019 United States Supreme Court case Manhattan Community Access Corp. v. Halleck, No. 17-1702, 587 U.S. ___ (2019).
  2. ^ Writing for a unanimous Court in Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U. S. 296, 303 (1940), Justice Roberts explained: "We hold that the statute, as construed and applied to the appellants, deprives them of their liberty without due process of law in contravention of the Fourteenth Amendment. The fundamental concept of liberty embodied in that Amendment embraces the liberties guaranteed by the First Amendment. The First Amendment declares that Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. The Fourteenth Amendment has rendered the legislatures of the states as incompetent as Congress to enact such laws. The constitutional inhibition of legislation on the subject of religion has a double aspect. On the one hand, it forestalls compulsion by law of the acceptance of any creed or the practice of any form of worship. Freedom of conscience and freedom to adhere to such religious organization or form of worship as the individual may choose cannot be restricted by law. On the other hand, it safeguards the free exercise of the chosen form of religion."[24]
  3. ^ "Enlarging on this theme, THE CHIEF JUSTICE recently wrote: "We begin with the proposition that the right of freedom of thought protected by the First Amendment against state action includes both the right to speak freely and the right to refrain from speaking at all. See West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U. S. 624, 319 U. S. 633–634 (1943); id. at 319 U. S. 645 (Murphy, J., concurring). A system which secures the right to proselytize religious, political, and ideological causes must also guarantee the concomitant right to decline to foster such concepts. The right to speak and the right to refrain from speaking are complementary components of the broader concept of 'individual freedom of mind.' Id. at 319 U. S. 637.""[25]
  4. ^ The quote from Justice William O. Douglas comes from his majority opinion in Zorach v. Clauson (1952). This case centered on a program by the state of New York which allowed children to leave school during school hours to receive religious instruction outside the school. In upholding the New York program Justice Douglas stated: "We are a religious people whose institutions presuppose a Supreme Being. We guarantee the freedom to worship as one chooses. We make room for as wide a variety of beliefs and creeds as the spiritual needs of man deem necessary. We sponsor an attitude on the part of government that shows no partiality to any one group and that lets each flourish according to the zeal of its adherents and the appeal of its dogma. When the state encourages religious instruction or cooperates with religious authorities by adjusting the schedule of public events to sectarian needs, it follows the best of our traditions. For it then respects the religious nature of our people and accommodates the public service to their spiritual needs. To hold that it may not would be to find in the Constitution a requirement that the government show a callous indifference to religious groups. That would be preferring those who believe in no religion over those who do believe. Government may not finance religious groups nor undertake religious instruction nor blend secular and sectarian education nor use secular institutions to force one or some religion on any person. But we find no constitutional requirement which makes it necessary for government to be hostile to religion and to throw its weight against efforts to widen the effective scope of religious influence. The government must be neutral when it comes to competition between sects. It may not thrust any sect on any person. It may not make a religious observance compulsory. It may not coerce anyone to attend church, to observe a religious holiday, or to take religious instruction. But it can close its doors or suspend its operations as to those who want to repair to their religious sanctuary for worship or instruction."[67][68]
  5. ^ Burger explained the term "benevolent neutrality" with respect to the interplay of the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause in this way in Walz: "The course of constitutionality neutrality in this area cannot be an absolutely straight line; rigidity could well defeat the basic purpose of these provisions, which is to insure that no religion be sponsored or favored, none commanded, and none inhibited. The general principle deducible from the First Amendment and all that has been said by the Court is this: that we will not tolerate either governmentally established religion or governmental interference with religion. Short of those expressly proscribed governmental acts there is room for play in the joints productive of a benevolent neutrality which will permit religious exercise to exist without sponsorship and without interference."[67]
  6. ^ The inofficial, non-binding Syllabus for Employment Division v. Smith states: "Although a State would be "prohibiting the free exercise [of religion]" in violation of the Clause if it sought to ban the performance of (or abstention from) physical acts solely because of their religious motivation, the Clause does not relieve an individual of the obligation to comply with a law that incidentally forbids (or requires) the performance of an act that his religious belief requires (or forbids) if the law is not specifically directed to religious practice and is otherwise constitutional as applied to those who engage in the specified act for nonreligious reasons. See, e.g., Reynolds v. United States, 98 U. S. 145, 98 U. S. 166–167. The only decisions in which this Court has held that the First Amendment bars application of a neutral, generally applicable law to religiously motivated action are distinguished on the ground that they involved not the Free Exercise Clause alone, but that Clause in conjunction with other constitutional protections. See, e.g., Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U. S. 296, 310 U. S. 304–307; Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U. S. 205. Pp. 494 U. S. 876–882."[84]
  7. ^ Justice Tom C. Clark did not participate because he had ordered the prosecutions when he was Attorney General.
  8. ^ Eastern Railroad presidents Conference v. Noerr Motor Freight, Inc (1961) and United Mine Workers v. Pennington (1965)

References

Citations

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  173. ^ The Court adopted the imminent lawless action test in 1969's Brandenburg v. Ohio, 395 U.S. 444 (1969), which some commentators view as a modified version of the clear and present danger test.
  174. ^ Thornhill v. Alabama, 310 U.S. 88 (1940).
  175. ^ Terminiello v. City of Chicago 337 U.S. 1 (1949)
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    And Bridges v. California, 314 U.S. 252 (1941): "And, very recently [in Thornhill] we have also suggested that 'clear and present danger' is an appropriate guide in determining the constitutionality of restrictions upon expression ... What finally emerges from the 'clear and present danger' cases is a working principle that the substantive evil must be extremely serious, and the degree of imminence extremely high, before utterances can be punished."
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  188. ^ 50a U.S.C. § 462
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  323. ^ See Cohen v. Cowles Media Co., 501 U.S. 663 (1991) where the U.S. Supreme Court held that the press gets no special immunity from laws that apply to others, including those—such as copyright law—that target communication.
  324. ^ See also Henry v. Collins, 380 U.S. 356, 357 (1965) (per curiam) (applying Sullivan standard to a statement by an arrestee); Garrison v. Louisiana, 379 U.S. 64, 67–68 (1964) (applying Sullivan standard to statements by an elected district attorney); New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. at 286 (applying identical First Amendment protection to a newspaper defendant and individual defendants).
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General and cited references

Further reading

first, amendment, united, states, constitution, first, amendment, redirects, here, first, amendments, other, constitutions, first, amendment, disambiguation, first, amendment, amendment, united, states, constitution, prevents, government, from, making, laws, t. First Amendment redirects here For the first amendments to other constitutions see First Amendment disambiguation The First Amendment Amendment I to the United States Constitution prevents the government from making laws that regulate an establishment of religion prohibit the free exercise of religion abridge the freedom of speech the freedom of the press the freedom of assembly or the right to petition the government for redress of grievances It was adopted on December 15 1791 as one of the ten amendments that constitute the Bill of Rights The Bill of Rights was proposed to assuage Anti Federalist opposition to Constitutional ratification Initially the First Amendment applied only to laws enacted by the Congress and many of its provisions were interpreted more narrowly than they are today Beginning with Gitlow v New York 1925 the Supreme Court applied the First Amendment to states a process known as incorporation through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment In Everson v Board of Education 1947 the Court drew on Thomas Jefferson s correspondence to call for a wall of separation between church and State though the precise boundary of this separation remains in dispute and the terms church and State do not appear in the Amendment Speech rights were expanded significantly in a series of 20th and 21st century court decisions which protected various forms of political speech anonymous speech campaign finance pornography and school speech these rulings also defined a series of exceptions to First Amendment protections The Supreme Court overturned English common law precedent to increase the burden of proof for defamation and libel suits most notably in New York Times Co v Sullivan 1964 Commercial speech however is less protected by the First Amendment than political speech and is therefore subject to greater regulation The Free Press Clause protects publication of information and opinions and applies to a wide variety of media In Near v Minnesota 1931 and New York Times v United States 1971 the Supreme Court ruled that the First Amendment protected against prior restraint pre publication censorship in almost all cases The Petition Clause protects the right to petition all branches and agencies of government for action In addition to the right of assembly guaranteed by this clause the Court has also ruled that the amendment implicitly protects freedom of association Although the First Amendment applies only to state actors a 1 there is a common misconception that it prohibits anyone from limiting free speech including private non governmental entities 2 Moreover the Supreme Court has determined that protection of speech is not absolute 3 Contents 1 Text 2 Background 3 Freedom of religion 3 1 Establishment of religion 3 1 1 Separationists 3 1 2 Accommodationists 3 2 Free exercise of religion 4 Freedom of speech and of the press 4 1 Wording of the clause 4 2 Speech critical of the government 4 2 1 World War I 4 2 2 Extending protections 4 3 Political speech 4 3 1 Anonymous speech 4 3 2 Campaign finance 4 3 3 Flag desecration 4 3 4 Falsifying military awards 4 4 Compelled speech 4 5 Commercial speech 4 6 School speech 4 7 Internet access 4 8 Obscenity 4 9 Memoirs of convicted criminals 4 10 Defamation 4 11 Private action 4 12 Freedom of the press 5 Petition and assembly 6 Freedom of association 7 See also 8 Explanatory notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 General and cited references 10 Further reading 11 External linksTextCongress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof or abridging the freedom of speech or of the press or the right of the people peaceably to assemble and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances 4 nbsp The hand written copy of the proposed articles of amendment passed by Congress in 1789 cropped to show just the text in the third article that would later be ratified as the First AmendmentBackgroundFurther information Anti Federalism nbsp George Mason was the principal author of the Virginia Declaration of Rights adopted by the Fifth Virginia Convention on June 12 1776 nbsp James Madison drafter of the Bill of RightsThe right to petition for redress of grievances was a principle included in the 1215 Magna Carta as well as the 1689 English Bill of Rights In 1776 the second year of the American Revolutionary War the Virginia colonial legislature passed a Declaration of Rights that included the sentence The freedom of the press is one of the greatest bulwarks of liberty and can never be restrained but by despotic Governments Eight of the other twelve states made similar pledges However these declarations were generally considered mere admonitions to state legislatures rather than enforceable provisions 5 After several years of comparatively weak government under the Articles of Confederation a Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia proposed a new constitution on September 17 1787 featuring among other changes a stronger chief executive George Mason a Constitutional Convention delegate and the drafter of Virginia s Declaration of Rights proposed that the Constitution include a bill of rights listing and guaranteeing civil liberties Other delegates including future Bill of Rights drafter James Madison disagreed arguing that existing state guarantees of civil liberties were sufficient and any attempt to enumerate individual rights risked the implication that other unnamed rights were unprotected After a brief debate Mason s proposal was defeated by a unanimous vote of the state delegations 6 For the constitution to be ratified however nine of the thirteen states were required to approve it in state conventions Opposition to ratification Anti Federalism was partly based on the Constitution s lack of adequate guarantees for civil liberties Supporters of the Constitution in states where popular sentiment was against ratification including Virginia Massachusetts and New York successfully proposed that their state conventions both ratify the Constitution and call for the addition of a bill of rights The U S Constitution was eventually ratified by all thirteen states In the 1st United States Congress following the state legislatures request James Madison proposed twenty constitutional amendments and his proposed draft of the First Amendment read as follows The civil rights of none shall be abridged on account of religious belief or worship nor shall any national religion be established nor shall the full and equal rights of conscience be in any manner or on any pretext infringed The people shall not be deprived or abridged of their right to speak to write or to publish their sentiments and the freedom of the press as one of the great bulwarks of liberty shall be inviolable The people shall not be restrained from peaceably assembling and consulting for their common good nor from applying to the Legislature by petitions or remonstrances for redress of their grievances 7 This language was greatly condensed by Congress and passed the House and Senate with almost no recorded debate complicating future discussion of the Amendment s intent 8 9 Congress approved and submitted to the states for their ratification twelve articles of amendment on September 25 1789 The revised text of the third article became the First Amendment because the last ten articles of the submitted 12 articles were ratified by the requisite number of states on December 15 1791 and are now known collectively as the Bill of Rights 10 11 Freedom of religionMain articles Freedom of religion in the United States and Religion in the United States nbsp The Maryland Toleration Act secured religious liberty in the English colony of Maryland Similar laws were passed in the Rhode Island and Providence Plantations Connecticut and Pennsylvania These laws stood in direct contrast with the Puritan theocratic rule in the Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay colonies 12 Religious liberty also known as freedom of religion is the right of all persons to believe speak and act individually and in community with others in private and in public in accord with their understanding of ultimate truth 13 The acknowledgement of religious freedom as the first right protected in the Bill of Rights points toward the American founders understanding of the importance of religion to human social and political flourishing 13 Freedom of religion 13 is protected by the First Amendment through its Establishment Clause and Free Exercise Clause which together form the religious liberty clauses of the First Amendment 14 The first clause prohibits any governmental establishment of religion and the second prohibits any governmental interference with the free exercise thereof 15 These clauses of the First Amendment encompass the two big arenas of religion in constitutional law Establishment cases deal with the Constitution s ban on Congress endorsing promoting or becoming too involved with religion Free exercise cases deal with Americans rights to practice their faith 16 Both clauses sometimes compete with each other The Supreme Court in McCreary County v American Civil Liberties Union 2005 clarified this by the following example When the government spends money on the clergy then it looks like establishing religion but if the government cannot pay for military chaplains then many soldiers and sailors would be kept from the opportunity to exercise their chosen religions 15 In Murdock v Pennsylvania 1943 the Supreme Court stated that Freedom of press freedom of speech freedom of religion are in a preferred position 17 The Court added Plainly a community may not suppress or the state tax the dissemination of views because they are unpopular annoying or distasteful If that device were ever sanctioned there would have been forged a ready instrument for the suppression of the faith which any minority cherishes but which does not happen to be in favor That would be a complete repudiation of the philosophy of the Bill of Rights 17 In his dissenting opinion in McGowan v Maryland 1961 Justice William O Douglas illustrated the broad protections offered by the First Amendment s religious liberty clauses The First Amendment commands government to have no interest in theology or ritual it admonishes government to be interested in allowing religious freedom to flourish whether the result is to produce Catholics Jews or Protestants or to turn the people toward the path of Buddha or to end in a predominantly Moslem nation or to produce in the long run atheists or agnostics On matters of this kind government must be neutral This freedom plainly includes freedom from religion with the right to believe speak write publish and advocate anti religious programs Board of Education v Barnette supra 319 U S 641 Certainly the free exercise clause does not require that everyone embrace the theology of some church or of some faith or observe the religious practices of any majority or minority sect The First Amendment by its establishment clause prevents of course the selection by government of an official church Yet the ban plainly extends farther than that We said in Everson v Board of Education 330 U S 1 330 U S 16 that it would be an establishment of a religion if the Government financed one church or several churches For what better way to establish an institution than to find the fund that will support it The establishment clause protects citizens also against any law which selects any religious custom practice or ritual puts the force of government behind it and fines imprisons or otherwise penalizes a person for not observing it The Government plainly could not join forces with one religious group and decree a universal and symbolic circumcision Nor could it require all children to be baptized or give tax exemptions only to those whose children were baptized 18 Those who would renegotiate the boundaries between church and state must therefore answer a difficult question Why would we trade a system that has served us so well for one that has served others so poorly Justice Sandra Day O Connor in her concurring opinion in McCreary County v American Civil Liberties Union 2005 19 The First Amendment tolerates neither governmentally established religion nor governmental interference with religion 20 One of the central purposes of the First Amendment the Supreme Court wrote in Gillette v United States 1970 consists of ensuring governmental neutrality in matters of religion 21 The history of the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause and the Supreme Court s own constitutional jurisprudence with respect to these clauses was explained in the 1985 case Wallace v Jaffree 22 The Supreme Court noted at the outset that the First Amendment limits equally the power of Congress and of the states to abridge the individual freedoms it protects The First Amendment was adopted to curtail the power of Congress to interfere with the individual s freedom to believe to worship and to express himself in accordance with the dictates of his own conscience The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment imposes on the states the same limitations the First Amendment had always imposed on the Congress 23 This elementary proposition of law was confirmed and endorsed time and time again in cases like Cantwell v Connecticut 310 U S 296 303 1940 b and Wooley v Maynard 1977 c 26 The central liberty that unifies the various clauses in the First Amendment is the individual s freedom of conscience 27 Just as the right to speak and the right to refrain from speaking are complementary components of a broader concept of individual freedom of mind so also the individual s freedom to choose his own creed is the counterpart of his right to refrain from accepting the creed established by the majority At one time it was thought that this right merely proscribed the preference of one Christian sect over another but would not require equal respect for the conscience of the infidel the atheist or the adherent of a non Christian faith such as Islam or Judaism But when the underlying principle has been examined in the crucible of litigation the Court has unambiguously concluded that the individual freedom of conscience protected by the First Amendment embraces the right to select any religious faith or none at all This conclusion derives support not only from the interest in respecting the individual s freedom of conscience but also from the conviction that religious beliefs worthy of respect are the product of free and voluntary choice by the faithful and from recognition of the fact that the political interest in forestalling intolerance extends beyond intolerance among Christian sects or even intolerance among religions to encompass intolerance of the disbeliever and the uncertain 28 Establishment of religion See also Establishment Clause nbsp Thomas Jefferson s tombstone The inscription as he stipulated reads Here was buried Thomas Jefferson author of the Declaration of American Independence of the Statute of Virginia for Religious Freedom and father of the University of Virginia The precise meaning of the Establishment Clause can be traced back to the beginning of the 19th century Thomas Jefferson wrote about the First Amendment and its restriction on Congress in an 1802 reply to the Danbury Baptists 29 a religious minority that was concerned about the dominant position of the Congregational church in Connecticut who had written to the newly elected president about their concerns Jefferson wrote back Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between Man amp his God that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only and not opinions I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof thus building a wall of separation between Church amp State Adhering to this expression of the supreme will of the nation in behalf of the rights of conscience I shall see with sincere satisfaction the progress of those sentiments which tend to restore to man all his natural rights convinced he has no natural right in opposition to his social duties 30 In Reynolds v United States 1878 the Supreme Court used these words to declare that it may be accepted almost as an authoritative declaration of the scope and effect of the amendment thus secured Congress was deprived of all legislative power over mere religious opinion but was left free to reach only those religious actions which were in violation of social duties or subversive of good order Quoting from Jefferson s Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom the court stated further in Reynolds In the preamble of this act religious freedom is defined and after a recital that to suffer the civil magistrate to intrude his powers into the field of opinion and to restrain the profession or propagation of principles on supposition of their ill tendency is a dangerous fallacy which at once destroys all religious liberty it is declared that it is time enough for the rightful purposes of civil government for its officers to interfere only when religious principles break out into overt acts against peace and good order In these two sentences is found the true distinction between what properly belongs to the church and what to the State nbsp An April 22 1885 cartoon from the Puck magazine depicting an army of clergymen assaulting a fortress defended by newspaper editors including from Puck while atop a hill in the background a statue labeled Constitution that states Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion can be seenReynolds was the first Supreme Court decision to use the metaphor a wall of separation between Church and State American historian George Bancroft was consulted by Chief Justice Morrison Waite in Reynolds regarding the views on establishment by the Founding Fathers Bancroft advised Waite to consult Jefferson and Waite then discovered the above quoted letter in a library after skimming through the index to Jefferson s collected works according to historian Don Drakeman 31 The Establishment Clause 32 forbids federal state and local laws which purpose is an establishment of religion The term establishment denoted in general direct aid to the church by the government 33 In Larkin v Grendel s Den Inc 1982 the Supreme Court stated that the core rationale underlying the Establishment Clause is preventing a fusion of governmental and religious functions Abington School District v Schempp 374 U S 203 374 U S 222 1963 34 The Establishment Clause acts as a double security for its aim is as well the prevention of religious control over government as the prevention of political control over religion 14 The First Amendment s framers knew that intertwining government with religion could lead to bloodshed or oppression because this happened too often historically To prevent this dangerous development they set up the Establishment Clause as a line of demarcation between the functions and operations of the institutions of religion and government in society 35 The Federal government of the United States as well as the state governments are prohibited from establishing or sponsoring religion 14 because as observed by the Supreme Court in Walz v Tax Commission of the City of New York 1970 the establishment of a religion historically implied sponsorship financial support and active involvement of the sovereign in religious activity 36 The Establishment Clause thus serves to ensure laws as said by Supreme Court in Gillette v United States 1970 which are secular in purpose evenhanded in operation and neutral in primary impact 21 The First Amendment s prohibition on an establishment of religion includes many things from prayer in widely varying government settings over financial aid for religious individuals and institutions to comment on religious questions 15 The Supreme Court stated in this context In these varied settings issues of about interpreting inexact Establishment Clause language like difficult interpretative issues generally arise from the tension of competing values each constitutionally respectable but none open to realization to the logical limit 15 The National Constitution Center observes that absent some common interpretations by jurists the precise meaning of the Establishment Clause is unclear and that decisions by the United Supreme Court relating to the Establishment Clause often are by 5 4 votes 37 The Establishment Clause however reflects a widely held consensus that there should be no nationally established church after the American Revolutionary War 37 Against this background the National Constitution Center states Virtually all jurists agree that it would violate the Establishment Clause for the government to compel attendance or financial support of a religious institution as such for the government to interfere with a religious organization s selection of clergy or religious doctrine for religious organizations or figures acting in a religious capacity to exercise governmental power or for the government to extend benefits to some religious entities and not others without adequate secular justification 37 Originally the First Amendment applied only to the federal government and some states continued official state religions after ratification Massachusetts for example was officially Congregational until the 1830s 38 In Everson v Board of Education 1947 the Supreme Court incorporated the Establishment Clause i e made it apply against the states The establishment of religion clause of the First Amendment means at least this Neither a state nor the Federal Government can set up a church Neither can pass laws which aid one religion aid all religions or prefer one religion to another in the words of Jefferson the First Amendment clause against establishment of religion by law was intended to erect a wall of separation between church and State That wall must be kept high and impregnable We could not approve the slightest breach 39 nbsp The Founding of Maryland 1634 depicts Father Andrew White a Jesuit missionary in the left and colonists meeting the people of the Yaocomico branch of the Piscatawy Indian Nation in St Mary s City Maryland the site of Maryland s first colonial settlement 40 Citing Justice Hugo Black in Torcaso v Watkins 1961 the Supreme Court repeated its statement from Everson v Board of Education 1947 in Abington School District v Schempp 1963 We repeat and again reaffirm that neither a State nor the Federal Government can constitutionally force a person to profess a belief or disbelief in any religion Neither can it constitutionally pass laws or impose requirements which aid all religions as against non believers and neither can it aid those religions based on a belief in the existence of God as against those religions founded on different beliefs 41 At the core of the Establishment Clause lays the core principle of denominational neutrality 42 In Epperson v Arkansas 1968 the Supreme Court outlined the broad principle of denominational neutrality mandated by the First Amendment Government in our democracy state and national must be neutral in matters of religious theory doctrine and practice It may not be hostile to any religion or to the advocacy of no religion and it may not aid foster or promote one religion or religious theory against another or even against the militant opposite The First Amendment mandates governmental neutrality between religion and religion and between religion and nonreligion 43 The clearest command of the Establishment Clause is according to the Supreme Court in Larson v Valente 456 U S 228 1982 that one religious denomination cannot be officially preferred over another 44 In Zorach v Clauson 1952 the Supreme Court further observed Government may not finance religious groups nor undertake religious instruction nor blend secular and sectarian education nor use secular institutions to force one or some religion on any person But we find no constitutional requirement which makes it necessary for government to be hostile to religion and to throw its weight against efforts to widen the effective scope of religious influence The government must be neutral when it comes to competition between sects It may not thrust any sect on any person It may not make a religious observance compulsory It may not coerce anyone to attend church to observe a religious holiday or to take religious instruction But it can close its doors or suspend its operations as to those who want to repair to their religious sanctuary for worship or instruction 45 In McCreary County v American Civil Liberties Union 2005 the Court explained that when the government acts with the ostensible and predominant purpose of advancing religion then it violates that central Establishment Clause value of official religious neutrality because there being no neutrality when the government s ostensible object is to take sides 46 In Torcaso v Watkins 1961 the Supreme Court ruled that the Constitution prohibits states and the federal government from requiring any kind of religious test for public office The Supreme Court in the same case made it also clear that state governments and the federal government are prohibited from passing laws or imposing requirements which aid all religions as against non believers as well as aiding those religions based on a belief in the existence of God as against those religions founded on different beliefs In Board of Education of Kiryas Joel Village School District v Grumet 1994 47 the Court concluded that government should not prefer one religion to another or religion to irreligion 48 In a series of cases in the first decade of the 2000s Van Orden v Perry 2005 49 McCreary County v ACLU 2005 50 and Salazar v Buono 2010 51 the Court considered the issue of religious monuments on federal lands without reaching a majority reasoning on the subject Separationists nbsp President Thomas Jefferson wrote in 1802 of a wall of separation 52 Everson used the metaphor of a wall of separation between church and state derived from the correspondence of President Thomas Jefferson It had been long established in the decisions of the Supreme Court beginning with Reynolds v United States 1878 when the Court reviewed the history of the early Republic in deciding the extent of the liberties of Mormons Chief Justice Morrison Waite who consulted the historian George Bancroft also discussed at some length the Memorial and Remonstrance against Religious Assessments by James Madison 53 who drafted the First Amendment Madison used the metaphor of a great barrier 54 In Everson the Court adopted Jefferson s words 52 The Court has affirmed it often with majority but not unanimous support Warren Nord in Does God Make a Difference characterized the general tendency of the dissents as a weaker reading of the First Amendment the dissents tend to be less concerned about the dangers of establishment and less concerned to protect free exercise rights particularly of religious minorities 55 Beginning with Everson which permitted New Jersey school boards to pay for transportation to parochial schools the Court has used various tests to determine when the wall of separation has been breached Everson laid down the test that establishment existed when aid was given to religion but that the transportation was justifiable because the benefit to the children was more important Felix Frankfurter called in his concurrence opinion in McCollum v Board of Education 1948 for a strict separation between state and church Separation means separation not something less Jefferson s metaphor in describing the relation between Church and State speaks of a wall of separation not of a fine line easily overstepped The great American principle of eternal separation Elihu Root s phrase bears repetition is one of the vital reliances of our Constitutional system for assuring unities among our people stronger than our diversities It is the Court s duty to enforce this principle in its full integrity 56 In the school prayer cases of the early 1960s Engel v Vitale and Abington School District v Schempp aid seemed irrelevant The Court ruled on the basis that a legitimate action both served a secular purpose and did not primarily assist religion In Walz v Tax Commission of the City of New York 1970 the Court ruled that a legitimate action could not entangle government with religion In Lemon v Kurtzman 1971 these points were combined into the Lemon test declaring that an action was an establishment if 57 the statute or practice lacked a secular purpose its principal or primary effect advanced or inhibited religion or it fostered an excessive government entanglement with religion The Lemon test has been criticized by justices and legal scholars but it has remained the predominant means by which the Court enforced the Establishment Clause 58 In Agostini v Felton 1997 the entanglement prong of the Lemon test was converted to simply being a factor in determining the effect of the challenged statute or practice 35 In Zelman v Simmons Harris 2002 the opinion of the Court considered secular purpose and the absence of primary effect a concurring opinion saw both cases as having treated entanglement as part of the primary purpose test 58 Further tests such as the endorsement test and coercion test have been developed to determine whether a government action violated the Establishment Clause 59 60 In Lemon the Court stated that the separation of church and state could never be absolute Our prior holdings do not call for total separation between church and state total separation is not possible in an absolute sense Some relationship between government and religious organizations is inevitable the court wrote Judicial caveats against entanglement must recognize that the line of separation far from being a wall is a blurred indistinct and variable barrier depending on all the circumstances of a particular relationship 61 After the Supreme Court ruling in the coach praying case of Kennedy v Bremerton School District 2022 the Lemon Test may have been replaced or complemented with a reference to historical practices and understandings 62 63 64 Accommodationists Accommodationists 65 in contrast argue along with Justice William O Douglas that w e are a religious people whose institutions presuppose a Supreme Being 66 d Furthermore as observed by Chief Justice Warren E Burger in Walz v Tax Commission of the City of New York 1970 with respect to the separation of church and state No perfect or absolute separation is really possible the very existence of the Religion Clauses is an involvement of sorts one that seeks to mark boundaries to avoid excessive entanglement 36 He also coined the term benevolent neutrality as a combination of neutrality and accommodationism in Walz to characterize a way to ensure that there is no conflict between the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause 67 e Burger s successor William Rehnquist called for the abandonment of the wall of separation between church and State metaphor in Wallace v Jaffree 1985 because he believed this metaphor was based on bad history and proved itself useless as a guide to judging 69 David Shultz has said that accommodationists claim the Lemon test should be applied selectively 66 As such for many conservatives the Establishment Clause solely prevents the establishment of a state church not public acknowledgements of God nor developing policies that encourage general religious beliefs that do not favor a particular sect and are consistent with the secular government s goals 70 71 In Lynch v Donnelly 1984 the Supreme Court observed that the concept of a wall of separation between church and state is a useful metaphor but is not an accurate description of the practical aspects of the relationship that in fact exists The Constitution does not require complete separation of church and state it affirmatively mandates accommodation not merely tolerance of all religions and forbids hostility toward any 72 Free exercise of religion See also Free Exercise Clause nbsp The First Church of Christ Scientist in Boston MassachusettsThe acknowledgement of religious freedom as the first right protected in the Bill of Rights points toward the American founders understanding of the importance of religion to human social and political flourishing The First Amendment makes clear that it sought to protect the free exercise of religion or what might be called free exercise equality 13 Free exercise is the liberty of persons to reach hold practice and change beliefs freely according to the dictates of conscience The Free Exercise Clause prohibits governmental interference with religious belief and within limits religious practice 14 Freedom of religion means freedom to hold an opinion or belief but not to take action in violation of social duties or subversive to good order 73 The clause withdraws from legislative power state and federal the exertion of any restraint on the free exercise of religion Its purpose is to secure religious liberty in the individual by prohibiting any invasions thereof by civil authority 74 The door of the Free Exercise Clause stands tightly closed against any governmental regulation of religious beliefs as such Cantwell v Connecticut 310 U S 296 310 U S 303 Government may neither compel affirmation of a repugnant belief Torcaso v Watkins 367 U S 488 nor penalize or discriminate against individuals or groups because they hold religious views abhorrent to the authorities Fowler v Rhode Island 345 U S 67 nor employ the taxing power to inhibit the dissemination of particular religious views Murdock v Pennsylvania 319 U S 105 Follett v McCormick 321 U S 573 cf Grosjean v American Press Co 297 U S 233 75 The Free Exercise Clause offers a double protection for it is a shield not only against outright prohibitions with respect to the free exercise of religion but also against penalties on the free exercise of religion and against indirect governmental coercion 76 Relying on Employment Division v Smith 1990 77 and quoting from Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye Inc v Hialeah 1993 78 the Supreme Court stated in Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia Inc v Comer 2017 that religious observers are protected against unequal treatment by virtue of the Free Exercise Clause and laws which target the religious for special disabilities based on their religious status must be covered by the application of strict scrutiny 79 In Reynolds v United States 1878 the Supreme Court found that while laws cannot interfere with religious belief and opinions laws can regulate religious practices like human sacrifice or the obsolete Hindu practice of suttee The Court stated that to rule otherwise would be to make the professed doctrines of religious belief superior to the law of the land and in effect permit every citizen to become a law unto himself Government would exist only in name under such circumstances 80 If the purpose or effect of a law is to impede the observance of one or all religions or is to discriminate invidiously between religions that law is constitutionally invalid even though the burden may be characterized as being only indirect But if the State regulates conduct by enacting a general law within its power the purpose and effect of which is to advance the State s secular goals the statute is valid despite its indirect burden on religious observance unless the State may accomplish its purpose by means which do not impose such a burden 81 nbsp Bear Butte in South Dakota is a sacred site for over 30 Plains tribes In Cantwell v Connecticut 1940 the Court held that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment applied the Free Exercise Clause to the states While the right to have religious beliefs is absolute the freedom to act on such beliefs is not absolute 82 Religious freedom is a universal right of all human beings and all religions providing for the free exercise of religion or free exercise equality Due to its nature as fundamental to the American founding and to the ordering of human society it is rightly seen as a capricious right i e universal broad and deep though not absolute 13 Justice Field put it clearly in Davis v Beason 1890 However free the exercise of religion may be it must be subordinate to the criminal laws of the country passed with reference to actions regarded by general consent as properly the subjects of punitive legislation 83 Furthermore the Supreme Court in Employment Division v Smith made clear that the right of free exercise does not relieve an individual of the obligation to comply with a valid and neutral law of general applicability on the ground that the law proscribes or prescribes conduct that his religion prescribes or proscribes United States v Lee 455 U S 252 455 U S 263 n 3 1982 STEVENS J concurring in judgment see Minersville School Dist Bd of Educ v Gobitis supra 310 U S at 310 U S 595 collecting cases f 85 16 Smith also set the precedent 86 that laws affecting certain religious practices do not violate the right to free exercise of religion as long as the laws are neutral generally applicable and not motivated by animus to religion 87 To accept any creed or the practice of any form of worship cannot be compelled by laws because as stated by the Supreme Court in Braunfeld v Brown 1961 the freedom to hold religious beliefs and opinions is absolute 88 Federal or state legislation cannot therefore make it a crime to hold any religious belief or opinion due to the Free Exercise Clause 88 Legislation by the United States or any constituent state of the United States which forces anyone to embrace any religious belief or to say or believe anything in conflict with his religious tenets is also barred by the Free Exercise Clause 88 Against this background the Supreme Court stated that Free Exercise Clause broadly protects religious beliefs and opinions The free exercise of religion means first and foremost the right to believe and profess whatever religious doctrine one desires Thus the First Amendment obviously excludes all governmental regulation of religious beliefs as such Sherbert v Verner supra 374 U S at 374 U S 402 The government may not compel affirmation of religious belief see Torcaso v Watkins 367 U S 488 1961 punish the expression of religious doctrines it believes to be false United States v Ballard 322 U S 78 322 U S 86 88 1944 impose special disabilities on the basis of religious views or religious status see McDaniel v Paty 435 U S 618 1978 Fowler v Rhode Island 345 U S 67 345 U S 69 1953 cf Larson v Valente 456 U S 228 456 U S 245 1982 or lend its power to one or the other side in controversies over religious authority or dogma see Presbyterian Church v Hull Church 393 U S 440 393 U S 445 452 1969 Kedroff v St Nicholas Cathedral 344 U S 94 344 U S 95 119 1952 Serbian Eastern Orthodox Diocese v Milivojevich 426 U S 696 426 U S 708 725 1976 But the exercise of religion often involves not only belief and profession but the performance of or abstention from physical acts assembling with others for a worship service participating in sacramental use of bread and wine proselytizing abstaining from certain foods or certain modes of transportation It would be true we think though no case of ours has involved the point that a state would be prohibiting the free exercise of religion if it sought to ban such acts or abstentions only when they are engaged in for religious reasons or only because of the religious belief that they display It would doubtless be unconstitutional for example to ban the casting of statues that are to be used for worship purposes or to prohibit bowing down before a golden calf 89 In Sherbert v Verner 1963 90 the Supreme Court required states to meet the strict scrutiny standard when refusing to accommodate religiously motivated conduct This meant the government needed to have a compelling interest regarding such a refusal The case involved Adele Sherbert who was denied unemployment benefits by South Carolina because she refused to work on Saturdays something forbidden by her Seventh day Adventist faith 91 In Wisconsin v Yoder 1972 the Court ruled that a law which unduly burdens the practice of religion without a compelling interest even though it might be neutral on its face would be unconstitutional 92 93 nbsp Washington National Cathedral the Episcopal cathedral in Washington D C The need for a compelling governmental interest was narrowed in Employment Division v Smith 1990 94 which held no such interest was required under the Free Exercise Clause regarding a neutral law of general applicability that happens to affect a religious practice as opposed to a law that targets a particular religious practice which does require a compelling governmental interest 95 In Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye v City of Hialeah 1993 96 in which the meaning of neutral law of general applicability was elaborated by the court 97 the Supreme Court ruled Hialeah had passed an ordinance banning ritual slaughter a practice central to the Santeria religion while providing exceptions for some practices such as the kosher slaughter Since the ordinance was not generally applicable the Court ruled that it needed to have a compelling interest which it failed to have and so was declared unconstitutional 98 In this case the Supreme Court also stated that inquiries whether laws discriminate based on religion does not end with the text of the laws at issue Facial neutrality of laws i e laws which are apparently neutral in their language but in reality discriminate against a particular group is not determinative in these inquiries because both the Free Exercise Clause and the Establishment Clause extends beyond facial discrimination 99 The Supreme Court explained that o fficial action that targets religious conduct for distinctive treatment cannot be shielded by mere compliance with the requirement of facial neutrality and t he Free Exercise Clause protects against governmental hostility which is masked as well as overt 99 The neutrality of a law is also suspect if First Amendment freedoms are curtailed to prevent isolated collateral harms not themselves prohibited by direct regulation 100 The Court also observed The Free Exercise Clause protect s religious observers against unequal treatment Hobbie v Unemployment Appeals Comm n of Fla 480 U S 136 148 1987 STEVENS J concurring in judgment and inequality results when a legislature decides that the governmental interests it seeks to advance are worthy of being pursued only against conduct with a religious motivation The principle that government in pursuit of legitimate interests cannot in a selective manner impose burdens only on conduct motivated by religious belief is essential to the protection of the rights guaranteed by the Free Exercise Clause 101 nbsp The U S guarantees freedom of religion and some churches in the U S take strong stances on political subjects In 1993 the Congress passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act RFRA seeking to restore the compelling interest requirement applied in Sherbert and Yoder In City of Boerne v Flores 1997 102 the Court struck down the provisions of RFRA that forced state and local governments to provide protections exceeding those required by the First Amendment on the grounds that while the Congress could enforce the Supreme Court s interpretation of a constitutional right the Congress could not impose its own interpretation on states and localities 103 Congress can enact legislation to expand First Amendment free exercise rights through its enforcement powers in Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment but to do so there must be a congruence and proportionality between the injury to be prevented or remedied and the means adopted to that end 104 The decision in City of Boerne struck down the Religious Freedom Restoration Act RFRA in so far as it applied to states and other local municipalities within them 104 so that partly in response to it 21 states enacted State Religious Freedom Restoration Acts since 1993 105 According to the court s ruling in Gonzales v UDV 2006 106 RFRA remains applicable to federal laws and so those laws must still have a compelling interest 107 RFRA secures Congress view of the right to free exercise under the First Amendment and it provides a remedy to redress violations of that right 108 The Supreme Court decided in light of this in Tanzin v Tanvir 2020 that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act s express remedies provision permits litigants when appropriate to obtain money damages against federal officials in their individual capacities 109 This decision is significant not only for the plaintiffs but also for cases involving violations of religious rights more broadly 110 In the 1982 U S Supreme Court case United States v Lee 1982 1982 the Court declared Congress and the courts have been sensitive to the needs flowing from the Free Exercise Clause but every person cannot be shielded from all the burdens incident to exercising every aspect of the right to practice religious beliefs When followers of a particular sect enter into commercial activity as a matter of choice the limits they accept on their own conduct as a matter of conscience and faith are not to be superimposed on the statutory schemes which are binding on others in that activity 111 112 The Supreme Court in Estate of Thornton v Caldor Inc 1985 echoed this statement by quoting Judge Learned Hand from his 1953 case Otten v Baltimore amp Ohio R Co 205 F 2d 58 61 CA2 1953 The First Amendment gives no one the right to insist that in pursuit of their own interests others must conform their conduct to his own religious necessities 113 In Burwell v Hobby Lobby Stores Inc 2014 the Supreme Court had to decide with a view to the First Amendment s Free Exercise Clause and the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act the profound cultural question of whether a private profit making business organized as a corporation can exercise religion and if it can how far that is protected from government interference 114 The Court decided that closely held for profit corporations have free exercise rights under the RFRA 115 but its decision was not based on the constitutional protections of the First Amendment 116 In Locke v Davey 2004 the Court stated g iven the historic and substantial state interest at issue it cannot be concluded that the denial of funding for vocational religious instruction alone is inherently constitutionally suspect 117 explaining that denying funding a scholarship when it was going to be used for education in theology and when that state s constitution forbids state aid to religious institutions was not presumptively unconstitutional because the state was neither criminalizing nor penalizing the study of theology 118 The Court ruled therefore that a state has a substantial state interest in denying funding a scholarship when it was going to be used for education in theology and when that state s constitution forbids state aid to religious institutions 118 In Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia Inc v Comer 2017 119 the Court ruled that denying a generally available public benefit on account of the religious nature of an institution violates the Free Exercise Clause 120 In Espinoza v Montana Department of Revenue 2020 121 the Court ruled that the Free Exercise Clause forbad a state from denying a tax credit on the basis of a Blaine Amendment in that state s constitution which the Court said is subject to the strictest scrutiny and can only survive if it is narrowly tailored to promote interests of the highest order 122 Citing Lyng v Northwest Indian Cemetery Protective Association 1988 the Supreme Court decided in the Espinoza follow up case Carson v Makin 2022 that the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment protects against indirect coercion or penalties on the free exercise of religion not just outright prohibitions 123 Freedom of speech and of the pressFurther information Freedom of speech in the United States and United States free speech exceptions nbsp Inscription of the First Amendment December 15 1791 in front of Independence Hall in PhiladelphiaThe First Amendment broadly protects the rights of free speech and free press 124 Free speech means the free and public expression of opinions without censorship interference or restraint by the government 125 126 127 128 The term freedom of speech embedded in the First Amendment encompasses the decision what to say as well as what not to say 129 The speech covered by the First Amendment covers many ways of expression and therefore protects what people say as well as how they express themselves 130 Free press means the right of individuals to express themselves through publication and dissemination of information ideas and opinions without interference constraint or prosecution by the government 131 132 In Murdock v Pennsylvania 1943 the Supreme Court stated that Freedom of press freedom of speech freedom of religion are in a preferred position 133 The Court added that a community may not suppress or the state tax the dissemination of views because they are unpopular annoying or distasteful That would be a complete repudiation of the philosophy of the Bill of Rights according to the Court 134 In Stanley v Georgia 1969 the Supreme Court stated that the First Amendment protects the right to receive information and ideas regardless of their social worth and to be generally free from governmental intrusions into one s privacy and control of one s own thoughts 135 The Supreme Court of the United States characterized the rights of free speech and free press as fundamental personal rights and liberties and noted that the exercise of these rights lies at the foundation of free government by free men 136 137 The Supreme Court stated in Thornhill v Alabama 1940 that the freedom of speech and of the press guaranteed by the United States Constitution embraces at the least the liberty to discuss publicly and truthfully all matters of public concern without previous restraint or fear of subsequent punishment 138 In Bond v Floyd 1966 a case involving the Constitutional shield around the speech of elected officials the Supreme Court declared that the First Amendment central commitment is that in the words of New York Times Co v Sullivan 1964 debate on public issues should be uninhibited robust and wide open 139 The Court further explained that just as erroneous statements must be protected to give freedom of expression the breathing space it needs to survive so statements criticizing public policy and the implementation of it must be similarly protected 139 The Supreme Court in Chicago Police Dept v Mosley 1972 said But above all else the First Amendment means that government has no power to restrict expression because of its message its ideas its subject matter or its content To permit the continued building of our politics and culture and to assure self fulfillment for each individual our people are guaranteed the right to express any thought free from government censorship The essence of this forbidden censorship is content control Any restriction on expressive activity because of its content would completely undercut the profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited robust and wide open 124 The level of protections with respect to free speech and free press given by the First Amendment is not limitless As stated in his concurrence in Chicago Police Dept v Mosley 1972 Chief Justice Warren E Burger said Numerous holdings of this Court attest to the fact that the First Amendment does not literally mean that we are guaranteed the right to express any thought free from government censorship This statement is subject to some qualifications as for example those of Roth v United States 354 U S 476 1957 Chaplinsky v New Hampshire 315 U S 568 1942 See also New York Times Co v Sullivan 376 U S 254 1964 140 Attached to the core rights of free speech and free press are several peripheral rights that make these core rights more secure The peripheral rights encompass not only freedom of association including privacy in one s associations but also in the words of Griswold v Connecticut 1965 the freedom of the entire university community i e the right to distribute the right to receive and the right to read as well as freedom of inquiry freedom of thought and freedom to teach 141 The United States Constitution protects according to the Supreme Court in Stanley v Georgia 1969 the right to receive information and ideas regardless of their social worth and to be generally free from governmental intrusions into one s privacy and control of one s thoughts 142 As stated by the Court in Stanley If the First Amendment means anything it means that a State has no business telling a man sitting alone in his own house what books he may read or what films he may watch Our whole constitutional heritage rebels at the thought of giving government the power to control men s minds 143 Wording of the clause The First Amendment bars Congress from abridging the freedom of speech or of the press U S Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens commented about this phraseology in a 1993 journal article I emphasize the word the in the term the freedom of speech because the definite article suggests that the draftsmen intended to immunize a previously identified category or subset of speech Stevens said that otherwise the clause might absurdly immunize things like false testimony under oath 144 Like Stevens journalist Anthony Lewis wrote The word the can be read to mean what was understood at the time to be included in the concept of free speech 145 But what was understood at the time is not 100 clear 146 In the late 1790s the lead author of the speech and press clauses James Madison argued against narrowing this freedom to what had existed under English common law The practice in America must be entitled to much more respect In every state probably in the Union the press has exerted a freedom in canvassing the merits and measures of public men of every description which has not been confined to the strict limits of the common law 147 Madison wrote this in 1799 when he was in a dispute about the constitutionality of the Alien and Sedition Laws which was legislation enacted in 1798 by President John Adams Federalist Party to ban seditious libel Madison believed that legislation to be unconstitutional and his adversaries in that dispute such as John Marshall advocated the narrow freedom of speech that had existed in the English common law 147 Speech critical of the government The Supreme Court declined to rule on the constitutionality of any federal law regarding the Free Speech Clause until the 20th century For example the Supreme Court never ruled on the Alien and Sedition Acts three Supreme Court justices riding circuit presided over sedition trials without indicating any reservations 148 The leading critics of the law Vice President Thomas Jefferson and James Madison argued for the Acts unconstitutionality based on the First Amendment and other Constitutional provisions 149 Jefferson succeeded Adams as president in part due to the unpopularity of the latter s sedition prosecutions he and his party quickly overturned the Acts and pardoned those imprisoned by them 150 In the majority opinion in New York Times Co v Sullivan 1964 151 the Court noted the importance of this public debate as a precedent in First Amendment law and ruled that the Acts had been unconstitutional Although the Sedition Act was never tested in this Court the attack upon its validity has carried the day in the court of history 152 153 World War I Further information Clear and present danger nbsp Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes formulated the clear and present danger test for free speech cases During the patriotic fervor of World War I and the First Red Scare the Espionage Act of 1917 imposed a maximum sentence of twenty years for anyone who caused or attempted to cause insubordination disloyalty mutiny or refusal of duty in the military or naval forces of the United States Specifically the Espionage Act of 1917 states that if anyone allows any enemies to enter or fly over the United States and obtain information from a place connected with the national defense they will be punished 154 Hundreds of prosecutions followed 155 In 1919 the Supreme Court heard four appeals resulting from these cases Schenck v United States Debs v United States Frohwerk v United States and Abrams v United States 156 In the first of these cases Socialist Party of America official Charles Schenck had been convicted under the Espionage Act for publishing leaflets urging resistance to the draft 157 Schenck appealed arguing that the Espionage Act violated the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment In Schenck v United States the Supreme Court unanimously rejected Schenck s appeal and affirmed his conviction 158 Debate continued over whether Schenck went against the right to freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr writing for the Court explained that the question in every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent 159 One week later in Frohwerk v United States the court again upheld an Espionage Act conviction this time that of a journalist who had criticized U S involvement in foreign wars 160 161 In Debs v United States the Court elaborated on the clear and present danger test established in Schenck 162 On June 16 1918 Eugene V Debs a political activist delivered a speech in Canton Ohio in which he spoke of most loyal comrades were paying the penalty to the working class these being Wagenknecht Baker and Ruthenberg who had been convicted of aiding and abetting another in failing to register for the draft 163 Following his speech Debs was charged and convicted under the Espionage Act In upholding his conviction the Court reasoned that although he had not spoken any words that posed a clear and present danger taken in context the speech had a natural tendency and a probable effect to obstruct the recruiting services 164 165 In Abrams v United States four Russian refugees appealed their conviction for throwing leaflets from a building in New York the leaflets argued against President Woodrow Wilson s intervention in Russia against the October Revolution The majority upheld their conviction but Holmes and Justice Louis Brandeis dissented holding that the government had demonstrated no clear and present danger in the four s political advocacy 160 Extending protections nbsp Justice Louis Brandeis wrote several dissents in the 1920s upholding free speech claims The Supreme Court denied a number of Free Speech Clause claims throughout the 1920s including the appeal of a labor organizer Benjamin Gitlow who had been convicted after distributing a manifesto calling for a revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat 166 In Gitlow v New York 1925 the Court upheld the conviction but a majority also found that the First Amendment applied to state laws as well as federal laws via the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment 167 168 Holmes and Brandeis dissented in several more cases in this decade however advancing the argument that the Free Speech Clause protected a far greater range of political speech than the Court had previously acknowledged In Whitney v California 1927 169 in which Communist Party USA organizer Charlotte Anita Whitney had been arrested for criminal syndicalism Brandeis wrote a dissent in which he argued for broader protections for political speech Those who won our independence believed that freedom to think as you will and to speak as you think are means indispensable to the discovery and spread of political truth that without free speech and assembly discussion would be futile that with them discussion affords ordinarily adequate protection against the dissemination of noxious doctrine that the greatest menace to freedom is an inert people that public discussion is a political duty and that this should be a fundamental principle of the American government 170 In Herndon v Lowry 1937 the Court heard the case of African American Communist Party organizer Angelo Herndon who had been convicted under the Slave Insurrection Statute for advocating black rule in the southern United States The Court reversed Herndon s conviction holding that Georgia had failed to demonstrate any clear and present danger in Herndon s political advocacy 171 The clear and present danger test was again invoked by the majority in the 1940 Thornhill v Alabama decision in which a state antipicketing law was invalidated 172 173 174 The importance of freedom of speech in the context of clear and present danger was emphasized in Terminiello v City of Chicago 1949 175 where the Supreme Court noted that the vitality of civil and political institutions in society depends on free discussion 176 Democracy requires free speech because it is only through free debate and free exchange of ideas that government remains responsive to the will of the people and peaceful change is effected 176 Restrictions on free speech are only permissible when the speech at issue is likely to produce a clear and present danger of a serious substantive evil that rises far above public inconvenience annoyance or unrest 176 Justice William O Douglas wrote for the Court that a function of free speech under our system is to invite dispute It may indeed best serve its high purpose when it induces a condition of unrest creates dissatisfaction with conditions as they are or even stirs people to anger 176 Although the Court referred to the clear and present danger test in a few decisions following Thornhill 177 the bad tendency test was not explicitly overruled 172 and the clear and present danger test was not applied in several subsequent free speech cases involving incitement to violence 178 In 1940 Congress enacted the Smith Act making it illegal to advocate the propriety of overthrowing or destroying any government in the United States by force and violence 179 The statute provided law enforcement a tool to combat Communist leaders Eugene Dennis was convicted in the Foley Square trial for attempting to organize a Communist Party 180 In Dennis v United States 1951 181 the Court upheld the Smith Act g 182 Chief Justice Fred M Vinson relied on Holmes clear and present danger test as adapted by Learned Hand In each case courts must ask whether the gravity of the evil discounted by its improbability justifies such invasion of free speech as necessary to avoid the danger 183 Clearly Vinson suggested clear and present danger did not intimate that before the Government may act it must wait until the putsch is about to be executed the plans have been laid and the signal is awaited 184 In a concurring opinion Justice Felix Frankfurter proposed a balancing test which soon supplanted the clear and present danger test The demands of free speech in a democratic society as well as the interest in national security are better served by candid and informed weighing of the competing interests within the confines of the judicial process 182 In Yates v United States 1957 the Supreme Court limited the Smith Act prosecutions to advocacy of action rather than advocacy in the realm of ideas Advocacy of abstract doctrine remained protected while speech explicitly inciting the forcible overthrow of the government was punishable under the Smith Act 185 186 During the Vietnam War the Court s position on public criticism of the government changed drastically Though the Court upheld a law prohibiting the forgery mutilation or destruction of draft cards in United States v O Brien 1968 187 fearing that burning draft cards would interfere with the smooth and efficient functioning of the draft system 188 189 the next year the court handed down its decision in Brandenburg v Ohio 1969 190 expressly overruling Whitney v California 191 Brandenburg discarded the clear and present danger test introduced in Schenck and further eroded Dennis 192 193 Now the Supreme Court referred to the right to speak openly of violent action and revolution in broad terms Our decisions have fashioned the principle that the constitutional guarantees of free speech and free press do not allow a State to forbid or proscribe advocacy of the use of force or law violation except where such advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or cause such action 194 In Cohen v California 1971 195 the Court voted reversed the conviction of a man wearing a jacket reading Fuck the Draft in the corridors of a Los Angeles County courthouse Justice John Marshall Harlan II wrote in the majority opinion that Cohen s jacket fell in the category of protected political speech despite the use of an expletive One man s vulgarity is another man s lyric 196 Political speech The ability to publicly criticize even the most prominent politicians and leaders without fear of retaliation is part of the First Amendment because political speech is core First Amendment speech As the Supreme Court stated with respect to the judicial branch of the government exemplarily that the First Amendment prohibits any law abridging the freedom of speech or of the press It must be taken as a command of the broadest scope that explicit language read in the context of a liberty loving society will allow The assumption that respect for the judiciary can be won by shielding judges from published criticism wrongly appraises the character of American public opinion For it is a prized American privilege to speak one s mind although not always with perfect good taste on all public institutions And an enforced silence however limited solely in the name of preserving the dignity of the bench would probably engender resentment suspicion and contempt much more than it would enhance respect 197 Anonymous speech In Talley v California 1960 198 the Court struck down a Los Angeles city ordinance that made it a crime to distribute anonymous pamphlets Justice Hugo Black wrote in the majority opinion There can be no doubt that such an identification requirement would tend to restrict freedom to distribute information and thereby freedom of expression Anonymous pamphlets leaflets brochures and even books have played an important role in the progress of mankind 199 In McIntyre v Ohio Elections Commission 1995 200 the Court struck down an Ohio statute that made it a crime to distribute anonymous campaign literature 201 However in Meese v Keene 1987 202 the Court upheld the Foreign Agents Registration Act of 1938 under which several Canadian films were defined as political propaganda requiring their sponsors to be identified 203 Campaign finance See also Campaign finance reform in the United States nbsp U S Senator Mitch McConnell plaintiff in McConnell v Federal Election CommissionIn Buckley v Valeo 1976 204 the Supreme Court reviewed the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 and related laws which restricted the monetary contributions that may be made to political campaigns and expenditure by candidates The Court affirmed the constitutionality of limits on campaign contributions saying they serve d the basic governmental interest in safeguarding the integrity of the electoral process without directly impinging upon the rights of individual citizens and candidates to engage in political debate and discussion 205 However the Court overturned the spending limits which it found imposed substantial restraints on the quantity of political speech 206 207 The court again scrutinized campaign finance regulation in McConnell v Federal Election Commission 2003 208 The case centered on the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 BCRA a federal law that imposed new restrictions on campaign financing The Supreme Court upheld provisions which barred the raising of soft money by national parties and the use of soft money by private organizations to fund certain advertisements related to elections However the Court struck down the choice of expenditure rule which required that parties could either make coordinated expenditures for all its candidates or permit candidates to spend independently but not both which the Court agreed placed an unconstitutional burden on the parties right to make unlimited independent expenditures 209 The Court also ruled that the provision preventing minors from making political contributions was unconstitutional relying on Tinker v Des Moines Independent Community School District In Federal Election Commission v Wisconsin Right to Life Inc 2007 210 the Court sustained an as applied challenge to BCRA holding that issue ads may not be banned from the months preceding a primary or general election In Davis v Federal Election Commission 2008 211 the Supreme Court declared the Millionaire s Amendment provisions of the BCRA to be unconstitutional The Court held that easing BCRA restrictions for an opponent of a self financing candidate spending at least 350 000 of his or her own money violated the freedom of speech of the self financing candidate 212 In Citizens United v Federal Election Commission 2010 213 the Court ruled that the BCRA s federal restrictions on electoral advocacy by corporations or unions were unconstitutional for violating the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment The Court overruled Austin v Michigan Chamber of Commerce 1990 214 which had upheld a state law that prohibited corporations from using treasury funds to support or oppose candidates in elections did not violate the First or Fourteenth Amendments The Court also overruled the portion of McConnell that upheld such restrictions under the BCRA 215 In other words the ruling was considered to hold that political spending is a form of protected speech under the First Amendment 216 In McCutcheon v Federal Election Commission 2014 217 the Court ruled that federal aggregate limits on how much a person can donate to candidates political parties and political action committees combined respectively in a two year period known as an election cycle violated the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment 218 Flag desecration The divisive issue of flag desecration as a form of protest first came before the Supreme Court in Street v New York 1969 219 In response to hearing an erroneous report of the murder of civil rights activist James Meredith Sidney Street burned a 48 star U S flag Street was arrested and charged with a New York state law making it a crime publicly to mutilate deface defile or defy trample upon or cast contempt upon either by words or act any flag of the United States 220 The Court relying on Stromberg v California 1931 221 found that because the provision of the New York law criminalizing words against the flag was unconstitutional and the trial did not sufficiently demonstrate he had been convicted solely under the provisions not yet deemed unconstitutional the conviction was unconstitutional The Court however resist ed the pulls to decide the constitutional issues involved in this case on a broader basis and left the constitutionality of flag burning unaddressed 222 223 The ambiguity with regard to flag burning statutes was eliminated in Texas v Johnson 1989 224 In that case Gregory Lee Johnson burned an American flag at a demonstration during the 1984 Republican National Convention in Dallas Texas Charged with violating a Texas law prohibiting the vandalizing of venerated objects Johnson was convicted sentenced to one year in prison and fined 2 000 The Supreme Court reversed his conviction Justice William J Brennan Jr wrote in the decision that if there is a bedrock principle underlying the First Amendment it is that government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because society finds the idea offensive or disagreeable 225 Congress then passed a federal law barring flag burning but the Supreme Court struck it down as well in United States v Eichman 1990 226 227 A Flag Desecration Amendment to the U S Constitution has been proposed repeatedly in Congress since 1989 and in 2006 failed to pass the Senate by a single vote 228 Falsifying military awards While the unauthorized wear or sale of the Medal of Honor has been a punishable offense under federal law since the early twentieth century 229 230 the Stolen Valor Act criminalized the act of not only wearing but also verbally claiming entitlement to military awards a person did not in fact earn 231 In United States v Alvarez 2012 the Supreme Court struck down the Act ruling that the First Amendment bars the government from punishing people for making false claims regarding military service or honors where the false claim was not made to effect a fraud or secure moneys or other valuable considerations The Supreme Court could not agree on a single rationale for its decision 232 Compelled speech Main article Compelled speech The Supreme Court has determined that the First Amendment also protects citizens from being compelled by the government to say or to pay for certain speech In West Virginia State Board of Education v Barnette 1943 the Court ruled that school children could not be punished for refusing either to say the pledge of allegiance or salute the American flag The Court also overruled Minersville School District v Gobitis 1940 which had upheld such punishments of school children 233 In National Institute of Family and Life Advocates v Becerra 2018 the Court ruled that a California law requiring crisis pregnancy centers to post notices informing patients they can obtain free or low cost abortions and include the number of the state agency that can connect the women with abortion providers violated those centers right to free speech 234 In Janus v AFSCME 2018 the Court ruled that requiring a public sector employee to pay dues to a union of which he is not a member violated the First Amendment According to the Court the First Amendment does not permit the government to compel a person to pay for another party s speech just because the government thinks that the speech furthers the interests of the person who does not want to pay The Court also overruled Abood v Detroit Board of Education 1977 which had upheld legally obligating public sector employees to pay such dues 235 Commercial speech Main article Commercial speech Commercial speech is speech done on behalf of a company or individual for the purpose of making a profit Unlike political speech the Supreme Court does not afford commercial speech full protection under the First Amendment To effectively distinguish commercial speech from other types of speech for purposes of litigation the Court uses a list of four indicia 236 The contents do no more than propose a commercial transaction The contents may be characterized as advertisements The contents reference a specific product The disseminator is economically motivated to distribute the speech Alone each indicium does not compel the conclusion that an instance of speech is commercial however t he combination of all these characteristics provides strong support for the conclusion that the speech is properly characterized as commercial speech 237 In Valentine v Chrestensen 1942 238 the Court upheld a New York City ordinance forbidding the distribution in the streets of commercial and business advertising matter ruling the First Amendment protection of free speech did not include commercial speech 239 In Virginia State Pharmacy Board v Virginia Citizens Consumer Council 1976 240 the Court overturned Valentine and ruled that commercial speech was entitled to First Amendment protection What is at issue is whether a State may completely suppress the dissemination of concededly truthful information about entirely lawful activity fearful of that information s effect upon its disseminators and its recipients W e conclude that the answer to this one is in the negative 241 In Ohralik v Ohio State Bar Association 1978 242 the Court ruled that commercial speech was not protected by the First Amendment as much as other types of speech We have not discarded the common sense distinction between speech proposing a commercial transaction which occurs in an area traditionally subject to government regulation and other varieties of speech To require a parity of constitutional protection for commercial and noncommercial speech alike could invite a dilution simply by a leveling process of the force of the First Amendment s guarantee with respect to the latter kind of speech 243 In Central Hudson Gas amp Electric Corp v Public Service Commission 1980 244 the Court clarified what analysis was required before the government could justify regulating commercial speech Is the expression protected by the First Amendment Lawful Misleading Fraud Is the asserted government interest substantial Does the regulation directly advance the governmental interest asserted Is the regulation more extensive than is necessary to serve that interest Six years later the U S Supreme Court applying the Central Hudson standards in Posadas de Puerto Rico Associates v Tourism Company of Puerto Rico 1986 245 affirmed the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico s conclusion that Puerto Rico s Games of Chance Act of 1948 including the regulations thereunder was not facially unconstitutional The lax interpretation of Central Hudson adopted by Posadas was soon restricted under 44 Liquormart Inc v Rhode Island 1996 246 when the Court invalidated a Rhode Island law prohibiting the publication of liquor prices School speech Main article Freedom of speech in schools in the United States In Tinker v Des Moines Independent Community School District 1969 247 the Supreme Court extended free speech rights to students in school The case involved several students who were punished for wearing black armbands to protest the Vietnam War The Court ruled that the school could not restrict symbolic speech that did not materially and substantially interrupt school activities 248 Justice Abe Fortas wrote First Amendment rights applied in light of the special characteristics of the school environment are available to teachers and students It can hardly be argued that either students or teachers shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate S chools may not be enclaves of totalitarianism School officials do not possess absolute authority over their students Students are possessed of fundamental rights which the State must respect just as they themselves must respect their obligations to the State 249 In Healy v James 1972 the Court ruled that Central Connecticut State College s refusal to recognize a campus chapter of Students for a Democratic Society was unconstitutional reaffirming Tinker 250 However since 1969 the Court has also placed several limitations on Tinker In Bethel School District v Fraser 1986 251 the Court ruled that a student could be punished for his sexual innuendo laced speech before a school assembly and in Hazelwood v Kuhlmeier 1988 252 the Court found that schools need not tolerate student speech that is inconsistent with their basic educational mission 253 In Morse v Frederick 2007 254 the Court ruled that schools could restrict student speech at school sponsored events even events away from school grounds if students promote illegal drug use 255 In 2014 the University of Chicago released the Chicago Statement a free speech policy statement designed to combat censorship on campus This statement was later adopted by a number of top ranked universities including Princeton University Washington University in St Louis Johns Hopkins University and Columbia University 256 257 Internet access In Packingham v North Carolina 2017 the Supreme Court held that a North Carolina law prohibiting registered sex offenders from accessing various websites impermissibly restricted lawful speech in violation of the First Amendment 258 The Court held that a fundamental principle of the First Amendment is that all persons have access to places where they can speak and listen and then after reflection speak and listen once more 259 260 Obscenity Further information United States obscenity law nbsp Justice Potter Stewart wrote that while he could not precisely define pornography he knew it when he saw it According to the U S Supreme Court the First Amendment s protection of free speech does not apply to obscene speech Therefore both the federal government and the states have tried to prohibit or otherwise restrict obscene speech in particular the form that is now update called pornography As of 2019 update pornography except for child pornography is in practice free of governmental restrictions in the United States though pornography about extreme sexual practices is occasionally prosecuted The change in the twentieth century from total prohibition in 1900 to near total tolerance in 2000 reflects a series of court cases involving the definition of obscenity The U S Supreme Court has found that most pornography is not obscene a result of changing definitions of both obscenity and pornography 38 The legal tolerance also reflects changed social attitudes one reason there are so few prosecutions for pornography is that juries will not convict 261 In Rosen v United States 1896 the Supreme Court adopted the same obscenity standard as had been articulated in a famous British case Regina v Hicklin 1868 262 The Hicklin test defined material as obscene if it tended to deprave or corrupt those whose minds are open to such immoral influences and into whose hands a publication of this sort may fall 263 In the early twentieth century literary works including An American Tragedy Theodore Dreiser 1925 and Lady Chatterley s Lover D H Lawrence 1928 were banned for obscenity In the federal district court case United States v One Book Called Ulysses 1933 Judge John M Woolsey established a new standard to evaluate James Joyce s novel Ulysses 1922 stating that works must be considered in their entirety rather than declared obscene on the basis of an individual part of the work 264 The Supreme Court ruled in Roth v United States 1957 265 that the First Amendment did not protect obscenity 264 It also ruled that the Hicklin test was inappropriate instead the Roth test for obscenity was whether to the average person applying contemporary community standards the dominant theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to the prurient interest 266 This definition proved hard to apply however and in the following decade members of the Court often reviewed films individually in a court building screening room to determine if they should be considered obscene 267 Justice Potter Stewart in Jacobellis v Ohio 1964 268 famously said that although he could not precisely define pornography I know it when I see it 269 270 The Roth test was expanded when the Court decided Miller v California 1973 271 Under the Miller test a work is obscene if a the average person applying contemporary community standards would find the work as a whole appeals to the prurient interest b the work depicts or describes in a patently offensive way sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law and c the work taken as a whole lacks serious literary artistic political or scientific value 272 Community standards not national standards are applied to determine whether allegedly obscene material appeals to the prurient interest and is patently offensive 264 By contrast the question whether a work lacks serious value depends upon whether a reasonable person would find such value in the material taken as a whole 273 Child pornography is not subject to the Miller test as the Supreme Court decided in New York v Ferber 1982 and Osborne v Ohio 1990 274 275 ruling that the government s interest in protecting children from abuse was paramount 276 277 Personal possession of obscene material in the home may not be prohibited by law In Stanley v Georgia 1969 278 the Court ruled that i f the First Amendment means anything it means that a State has no business telling a man sitting in his own house what books he may read or what films he may watch 143 However it is constitutionally permissible for the government to prevent the mailing or sale of obscene items though they may be viewed only in private Ashcroft v Free Speech Coalition 2002 279 further upheld these rights by invalidating the Child Pornography Prevention Act of 1996 holding that because the act p rohibit ed child pornography that does not depict an actual child simulated child pornography it was overly broad and unconstitutional under the First Amendment 280 and First Amendment freedoms are most in danger when the government seeks to control thought or to justify its laws for that impermissible end The right to think is the beginning of freedom and speech must be protected from the government because speech is the beginning of thought 281 In United States v Williams 2008 282 the Court upheld the PROTECT Act of 2003 ruling that prohibiting offers to provide and requests to obtain child pornography did not violate the First Amendment even if a person charged under the Act did not possess child pornography 283 284 Memoirs of convicted criminals In some states there are Son of Sam laws prohibiting convicted criminals from publishing memoirs for profit 285 These laws were a response to offers to David Berkowitz to write memoirs about the murders he committed The Supreme Court struck down a law of this type in New York as a violation of the First Amendment in the case Simon amp Schuster v Crime Victims Board 1991 286 That statute did not prohibit publication of a memoir by a convicted criminal Instead it provided that all profits from the book were to be put in escrow for a time The interest from the escrow account was used to fund the New York State Crime Victims Board an organization that pays the medical and related bills of victims of crime Similar laws in other states remain unchallenged 287 Defamation Further information United States defamation law nbsp Justice William J Brennan Jr wrote the landmark decision New York Times Co v Sullivan requiring the demonstration of actual malice in libel suits against public figures American tort liability for defamatory speech or publications traces its origins to English common law For the first two hundred years of American jurisprudence the basic substance of defamation law continued to resemble that existing in England at the time of the Revolution An 1898 American legal textbook on defamation provides definitions of libel and slander nearly identical to those given by William Blackstone and Edward Coke An action of slander required the following 288 Actionable words such as those imputing the injured party is guilty of some offense suffers from a contagious disease or psychological disorder is unfit for public office because of moral failings or an inability to discharge his or her duties or lacks integrity in profession trade or business That the charge must be false That the charge must be articulated to a third person verbally or in writing That the words are not subject to legal protection such as those uttered in Congress and That the charge must be motivated by malice An action of libel required the same five general points as slander except that it specifically involved the publication of defamatory statements 289 For certain criminal charges of libel such as seditious libel the truth or falsity of the statements was immaterial as such laws were intended to maintain public support of the government and true statements could damage this support even more than false ones 290 Instead libel placed specific emphasis on the result of the publication Libelous publications tended to degrade and injure another person or bring him into contempt hatred or ridicule 289 Concerns that defamation under common law might be incompatible with the new republican form of government caused early American courts to struggle between William Blackstone s argument that the punishment of dangerous or offensive writings was necessary for the preservation of peace and good order of government and religion the only solid foundations of civil liberty and the argument that the need for a free press guaranteed by the Constitution outweighed the fear of what might be written 290 Consequently very few changes were made in the first two centuries after the ratification of the First Amendment The Supreme Court s ruling in New York Times Co v Sullivan 1964 151 fundamentally changed American defamation law The case redefined the type of malice needed to sustain a libel case Common law malice consisted of ill will or wickedness Now a public officials seeking to sustain a civil action against a tortfeasor needed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that there was actual malice The case involved an advertisement published in The New York Times indicating that officials in Montgomery Alabama had acted violently in suppressing the protests of African Americans during the civil rights movement The Montgomery Police Commissioner L B Sullivan sued the Times for libel saying the advertisement damaged his reputation The Supreme Court unanimously reversed the 500 000 judgment against the Times Justice Brennan suggested that public officials may sue for libel only if the statements in question were published with actual malice knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not 291 292 In sum the court held that the First Amendment protects the publication of all statements even false ones about the conduct of public officials except when statements are made with actual malice with knowledge that they are false or in reckless disregard of their truth or falsity 293 While actual malice standard applies to public officials and public figures 294 in Philadelphia Newspapers v Hepps 1988 295 the Court found that with regard to private individuals the First Amendment does not necessarily force any change in at least some features of the common law landscape 296 In Dun amp Bradstreet Inc v Greenmoss Builders Inc 1985 297 the Court ruled that actual malice need not be shown in cases involving private individuals holding that i n light of the reduced constitutional value of speech involving no matters of public concern the state interest adequately supports awards of presumed and punitive damages even absent a showing of actual malice 298 299 In Gertz v Robert Welch Inc 1974 the Court ruled that a private individual had to prove malice only to be awarded punitive damages not actual damages 300 301 In Hustler Magazine v Falwell 1988 302 the Court extended the actual malice standard to intentional infliction of emotional distress in a ruling which protected parody in this case a fake advertisement in Hustler suggesting that evangelist Jerry Falwell s first sexual experience had been with his mother in an outhouse Since Falwell was a public figure the Court ruled that importance of the free flow of ideas and opinions on matters of public interest and concern was the paramount concern and reversed the judgement Falwell had won against Hustler for emotional distress 303 In Milkovich v Lorain Journal Co 1990 304 the Court ruled that the First Amendment offers no wholesale exception to defamation law for statements labeled opinion but instead that a statement must be provably false falsifiable before it can be the subject of a libel suit 305 Nonetheless it has been argued that Milkovich and other cases effectively provide for an opinion privilege 306 Private action Despite the common misconception that the First Amendment prohibits anyone from limiting free speech 2 the text of the amendment prohibits only the federal government the states and local governments from doing so 307 State constitutions provide free speech protections similar to those of the U S Constitution In a few states such as California a state constitution has been interpreted as providing more comprehensive protections than the First Amendment The Supreme Court has permitted states to extend such enhanced protections most notably in Pruneyard Shopping Center v Robins 308 In that case the Court unanimously ruled that while the First Amendment may allow private property owners to prohibit trespass by political speakers and petition gatherers California was permitted to restrict property owners whose property is equivalent to a traditional public forum often shopping malls and grocery stores from enforcing their private property rights to exclude such individuals 309 However the Court did maintain that shopping centers could impose reasonable restrictions on expressive activity 310 Subsequently New Jersey Colorado Massachusetts and Puerto Rico courts have adopted the doctrine 311 312 California s courts have repeatedly reaffirmed it 313 Freedom of the press Further information Freedom of the press in the United States The free speech and free press clauses have been interpreted as providing the same protection to speakers as to writers except for radio and television wireless broadcasting which have for historical reasons been given less constitutional protections 314 The Free Press Clause protects the right of individuals to express themselves through publication and dissemination of information ideas and opinions without interference constraint or prosecution by the government 131 132 This right was described in Branzburg v Hayes as a fundamental personal right that is not confined to newspapers and periodicals but also embraces pamphlets and leaflets 315 In Lovell v City of Griffin 1938 316 Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes defined press as every sort of publication which affords a vehicle of information and opinion 317 This right has been extended to media including newspapers books plays movies and video games 318 While it is an open question whether people who blog or use social media are journalists entitled to protection by media shield laws 319 they are protected equally by the Free Speech Clause and the Free Press Clause because both clauses do not distinguish between media businesses and nonprofessional speakers 131 132 320 321 This is further shown by the Supreme Court consistently refusing to recognize the First Amendment as providing greater protection to the institutional media than to other speakers 322 323 324 For example in a case involving campaign finance laws the Court rejected the suggestion that communication by corporate members of the institutional press is entitled to greater constitutional protection than the same communication by non institutional press businesses 325 Justice Felix Frankfurter stated in a concurring opinion in another case succinctly T he purpose of the Constitution was not to erect the press into a privileged institution but to protect all persons in their right to print what they will as well as to utter it 326 In Mills v Alabama 1943 the Supreme Court laid out the purpose of the free press clause nbsp The Newseum s depiction of the five freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment to the US Constitution in Washington D C Whatever differences may exist about interpretations of the First Amendment there is practically universal agreement that a major purpose of that Amendment was to protect the free discussion of governmental affairs This of course includes discussions of candidates structures and forms of government the manner in which government is operated or should be operated and all such matters relating to political processes The Constitution specifically selected the press which includes not only newspapers books and magazines but also humble leaflets and circulars see Lovell v Griffin 303 U S 444 to play an important role in the discussion of public affairs Thus the press serves and was designed to serve as a powerful antidote to any abuses of power by governmental officials and as a constitutionally chosen means for keeping officials elected by the people responsible to all the people whom they were selected to serve Suppression of the right of the press to praise or criticize governmental agents and to clamor and contend for or against change which is all that this editorial did muzzles one of the very agencies the Framers of our Constitution thoughtfully and deliberately selected to improve our society and keep it free 327 A landmark decision for press freedom came in Near v Minnesota 1931 328 in which the Supreme Court rejected prior restraint pre publication censorship In this case the Minnesota legislature passed a statute allowing courts to shut down malicious scandalous and defamatory newspapers allowing a defense of truth only in cases where the truth had been told with good motives and for justifiable ends 329 The Court applied the Free Press Clause to the states rejecting the statute as unconstitutional Hughes quoted Madison in the majority decision writing The impairment of the fundamental security of life and property by criminal alliances and official neglect emphasizes the primary need of a vigilant and courageous press 330 nbsp The leak of the Pentagon Papers by Daniel Ellsberg pictured here in 2018 led to New York Times Co v United States 1971 a landmark press freedom decision However Near also noted an exception allowing prior restraint in cases such as publication of sailing dates of transports or the number or location of troops 331 This exception was a key point in another landmark case four decades later New York Times Co v United States 1971 332 in which the administration of President Richard Nixon sought to ban the publication of the Pentagon Papers classified government documents about the Vietnam War secretly copied by analyst Daniel Ellsberg The Court found that the Nixon administration had not met the heavy burden of proof required for prior restraint Justice Brennan drawing on Near in a concurrent opinion wrote that only governmental allegation and proof that publication must inevitably directly and immediately cause the occurrence of an evil kindred to imperiling the safety of a transport already at sea can support even the issuance of an interim restraining order Justices Black and Douglas went still further writing that prior restraints were never justified 333 The courts have rarely treated content based regulation of journalism with any sympathy In Miami Herald Publishing Co v Tornillo 1974 334 the Court unanimously struck down a state law requiring newspapers criticizing political candidates to publish their responses The state claimed the law had been passed to ensure journalistic responsibility The Supreme Court found that freedom but not responsibility is mandated by the First Amendment and so it ruled that the government may not force newspapers to publish that which they do not desire to publish 335 Content based regulation of television and radio however have been sustained by the Supreme Court in various cases Since there is a limited number of frequencies for non cable television and radio stations the government licenses them to various companies However the Supreme Court has ruled that the problem of scarcity does not allow the raising of a First Amendment issue The government may restrain broadcasters but only on a content neutral basis In Federal Communications Commission v Pacifica Foundation 336 the Supreme Court upheld the Federal Communications Commission s authority to restrict the use of indecent material in broadcasting State governments retain the right to tax newspapers just as they may tax other commercial products Generally however taxes that focus exclusively on newspapers have been found unconstitutional In Grosjean v American Press Co 1936 337 the Court invalidated a state tax on newspaper advertising revenues holding that the role of the press in creating informed public opinion was vital 338 Similarly some taxes that give preferential treatment to the press have been struck down In Arkansas Writers Project v Ragland 1987 339 for instance the Court invalidated an Arkansas law exempting religious professional trade and sports journals from taxation since the law amounted to the regulation of newspaper content In Leathers v Medlock 1991 340 the Supreme Court found that states may treat different types of the media differently such as by taxing cable television but not newspapers The Court found that differential taxation of speakers even members of the press does not implicate the First Amendment unless the tax is directed at or presents the danger of suppressing particular ideas 341 In Branzburg v Hayes 1972 342 the Court ruled that the First Amendment did not give a journalist the right to refuse a subpoena from a grand jury The issue decided in the case was whether a journalist could refuse to appear and testify before state and Federal grand juries basing the refusal on the belief that such appearance and testimony abridges the freedom of speech and press guaranteed by the First Amendment 343 The decision was that such a protection was not provided by the First Amendment However a concurring opinion by Justice Lewis F Powell in which he said a claim for press privilege should be judged on its facts by the striking of a proper balance between freedom of the press and the obligation of all citizens to give relevant testimony with respect to criminal conduct The balance of these vital constitutional and societal interests on a case by case basis accords with the tried and traditional way of adjudicating such questions has been frequently cited by lower courts since the decision 344 Petition and assemblyFurther information Right to petition in the United States and Freedom of assembly nbsp Chief Justice Morrison Waite ruled in United States v Cruikshank 1875 that the right of assembly was a secondary right to the right to petition The Petition Clause protects the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances 131 The right expanded over the years It is no longer confined to demands for a redress of grievances in any accurate meaning of these words but comprehends demands for an exercise by the government of its powers in furtherance of the interest and prosperity of the petitioners and of their views on politically contentious matters 345 The right to petition the government for a redress of grievances therefore includes the right to communicate with government officials lobbying government officials and petitioning the courts by filing lawsuits with a legal basis 321 The Petition Clause first came to prominence in the 1830s when Congress established the gag rule barring anti slavery petitions from being heard the rule was overturned by Congress several years later Petitions against the Espionage Act of 1917 resulted in imprisonments The Supreme Court did not rule on either issue 345 In California Motor Transport Co v Trucking Unlimited 1972 346 the Supreme Court said the right to petition encompasses the approach of citizens or groups of them to administrative agencies which are both creatures of the legislature and arms of the executive and to courts the third branch of Government Certainly the right to petition extends to all departments of the Government The right of access to the courts is indeed but one aspect of the right of petition 347 Today thus this right encompasses petitions to all three branches of the federal government the Congress the executive and the judiciary and has been extended to the states through incorporation 345 348 According to the Supreme Court redress of grievances is to be construed broadly it includes not solely appeals by the public to the government for the redressing of a grievance in the traditional sense but also petitions on behalf of private interests seeking personal gain 349 The right protects not only demands for a redress of grievances but also demands for government action 345 349 The petition clause includes according to the Supreme Court the opportunity to institute non frivolous lawsuits and mobilize popular support to change existing laws in a peaceful manner 348 In Borough of Duryea v Guarnieri 2011 350 the Supreme Court stated regarding the Free Speech Clause and the Petition Clause It is not necessary to say that the two Clauses are identical in their mandate or their purpose and effect to acknowledge that the rights of speech and petition share substantial common ground Both speech and petition are integral to the democratic process although not necessarily in the same way The right to petition allows citizens to express their ideas hopes and concerns to their government and their elected representatives whereas the right to speak fosters the public exchange of ideas that is integral to deliberative democracy as well as to the whole realm of ideas and human affairs Beyond the political sphere both speech and petition advance personal expression although the right to petition is generally concerned with expression directed to the government seeking redress of a grievance 350 The right of assembly is the individual right of people to come together and collectively express promote pursue and defend their collective or shared ideas 351 This right is equally important as those of free speech and free press because as observed by the Supreme Court of the United States in De Jonge v Oregon 299 U S 353 364 365 1937 the right of peaceable assembly is cognate to those of free speech and free press and is equally fundamental It is one that cannot be denied without violating those fundamental principles of liberty and justice which lie at the base of all civil and political institutions principles which the Fourteenth Amendment embodies in the general terms of its due process clause The holding of meetings for peaceable political action cannot be proscribed Those who assist in the conduct of such meetings cannot be branded as criminals on that score The question is not as to the auspices under which the meeting is held but as to its purpose not as to the relations of the speakers but whether their utterances transcend the bounds of the freedom of speech which the Constitution protects 345 The right of peaceable assembly was originally distinguished from the right to petition 345 In United States v Cruikshank 1875 352 the first case in which the right to assembly was before the Supreme Court 345 the court broadly declared the outlines of the right of assembly and its connection to the right of petition The right of the people peaceably to assemble for the purpose of petitioning Congress for a redress of grievances or for anything else connected with the powers or duties of the National Government is an attribute of national citizenship and as such under protection of and guaranteed by the United States The very idea of a government republican in form implies a right on the part of its citizens to meet peaceably for consultation in respect to public affairs and to petition for a redress of grievances 353 Justice Morrison Waite s opinion for the Court carefully distinguished the right to peaceably assemble as a secondary right while the right to petition was labeled to be a primary right Later cases however paid less attention to these distinctions 345 An example for this is Hague v Committee for Industrial Organization 1939 where it was decided that the freedom of assembly covered by the First Amendment applies to public forums like streets and parks 354 345 In Hague the right of assembly was given a broad meaning because the right of assembly can be used for communication of views on national questions 355 as well as for holding meetings and disseminating information whether for the organization of labor unions or for any other lawful purpose 356 In two 1960s decisions collectively known as forming the Noerr Pennington doctrine h the Court established that the right to petition prohibited the application of antitrust law to statements made by private entities before public bodies a monopolist may freely go before the city council and encourage the denial of its competitor s building permit without being subject to Sherman Act liability 357 Freedom of associationFurther information Freedom of association United States Constitution Although the First Amendment does not explicitly mention freedom of association the Supreme Court ruled in NAACP v Alabama 1958 358 359 that this freedom was protected by the amendment and that privacy of membership was an essential part of this freedom 360 In Roberts v United States Jaycees 1984 the Court stated that implicit in the right to engage in activities protected by the First Amendment is a corresponding right to associate with others in pursuit of a wide variety of political social economic educational religious and cultural ends 361 In Roberts the Court held that associations may not exclude people for reasons unrelated to the group s expression such as gender 362 However in Hurley v Irish American Gay Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston 1995 363 the Court ruled that a group may exclude people from membership if their presence would affect the group s ability to advocate a particular point of view 364 Likewise in Boy Scouts of America v Dale 2000 365 the Court ruled that a New Jersey law which forced the Boy Scouts of America to admit an openly gay member to be an unconstitutional abridgment of the Boy Scouts right to free association 366 In Americans for Prosperity Foundation v Bonta 2021 the Court ruled that California s requiring disclosure of the identities of nonprofit companies big money donors did not serve a narrowly tailored government interest and thus violated those donors First Amendment rights 367 See alsoCensorship in the United States First Amendment audits Free speech zone Freedom of speech Government speech List of amendments to the United States Constitution List of United States Supreme Court cases involving the First Amendment Marketplace of ideas Military expression Photography Is Not a Crime Section 116 of the Constitution of Australia United States Postal Service United States free speech exceptions Williamsburg Charter Canadian Charter of Rights and FreedomsExplanatory notes See for the topic First Amendment and state actor exemplarily the 2019 United States Supreme Court case Manhattan Community Access Corp v Halleck No 17 1702 587 U S 2019 Writing for a unanimous Court in Cantwell v Connecticut 310 U S 296 303 1940 Justice Roberts explained We hold that the statute as construed and applied to the appellants deprives them of their liberty without due process of law in contravention of the Fourteenth Amendment The fundamental concept of liberty embodied in that Amendment embraces the liberties guaranteed by the First Amendment The First Amendment declares that Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof The Fourteenth Amendment has rendered the legislatures of the states as incompetent as Congress to enact such laws The constitutional inhibition of legislation on the subject of religion has a double aspect On the one hand it forestalls compulsion by law of the acceptance of any creed or the practice of any form of worship Freedom of conscience and freedom to adhere to such religious organization or form of worship as the individual may choose cannot be restricted by law On the other hand it safeguards the free exercise of the chosen form of religion 24 Enlarging on this theme THE CHIEF JUSTICE recently wrote We begin with the proposition that the right of freedom of thought protected by the First Amendment against state action includes both the right to speak freely and the right to refrain from speaking at all See West Virginia State Board of Education v Barnette 319 U S 624 319 U S 633 634 1943 id at 319 U S 645 Murphy J concurring A system which secures the right to proselytize religious political and ideological causes must also guarantee the concomitant right to decline to foster such concepts The right to speak and the right to refrain from speaking are complementary components of the broader concept of individual freedom of mind Id at 319 U S 637 25 The quote from Justice William O Douglas comes from his majority opinion in Zorach v Clauson 1952 This case centered on a program by the state of New York which allowed children to leave school during school hours to receive religious instruction outside the school In upholding the New York program Justice Douglas stated We are a religious people whose institutions presuppose a Supreme Being We guarantee the freedom to worship as one chooses We make room for as wide a variety of beliefs and creeds as the spiritual needs of man deem necessary We sponsor an attitude on the part of government that shows no partiality to any one group and that lets each flourish according to the zeal of its adherents and the appeal of its dogma When the state encourages religious instruction or cooperates with religious authorities by adjusting the schedule of public events to sectarian needs it follows the best of our traditions For it then respects the religious nature of our people and accommodates the public service to their spiritual needs To hold that it may not would be to find in the Constitution a requirement that the government show a callous indifference to religious groups That would be preferring those who believe in no religion over those who do believe Government may not finance religious groups nor undertake religious instruction nor blend secular and sectarian education nor use secular institutions to force one or some religion on any person But we find no constitutional requirement which makes it necessary for government to be hostile to religion and to throw its weight against efforts to widen the effective scope of religious influence The government must be neutral when it comes to competition between sects It may not thrust any sect on any person It may not make a religious observance compulsory It may not coerce anyone to attend church to observe a religious holiday or to take religious instruction But it can close its doors or suspend its operations as to those who want to repair to their religious sanctuary for worship or instruction 67 68 Burger explained the term benevolent neutrality with respect to the interplay of the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause in this way in Walz The course of constitutionality neutrality in this area cannot be an absolutely straight line rigidity could well defeat the basic purpose of these provisions which is to insure that no religion be sponsored or favored none commanded and none inhibited The general principle deducible from the First Amendment and all that has been said by the Court is this that we will not tolerate either governmentally established religion or governmental interference with religion Short of those expressly proscribed governmental acts there is room for play in the joints productive of a benevolent neutrality which will permit religious exercise to exist without sponsorship and without interference 67 The inofficial non binding Syllabus for Employment Division v Smith states Although a State would be prohibiting the free exercise of religion in violation of the Clause if it sought to ban the performance of or abstention from physical acts solely because of their religious motivation the Clause does not relieve an individual of the obligation to comply with a law that incidentally forbids or requires the performance of an act that his religious belief requires or forbids if the law is not specifically directed to religious practice and is otherwise constitutional as applied to those who engage in the specified act for nonreligious reasons See e g Reynolds v United States 98 U S 145 98 U S 166 167 The only decisions in which this Court has held that the First Amendment bars application of a neutral generally applicable law to religiously motivated action are distinguished on the ground that they involved not the Free Exercise Clause alone but that Clause in conjunction with other constitutional protections See e g Cantwell v Connecticut 310 U S 296 310 U S 304 307 Wisconsin v Yoder 406 U S 205 Pp 494 U S 876 882 84 Justice Tom C Clark did not participate because he had ordered the prosecutions when he was Attorney General Eastern Railroad presidents Conference v Noerr Motor Freight Inc 1961 and United Mine Workers v Pennington 1965 ReferencesCitations Lecher Colin June 17 2019 First Amendment constraints don t apply to private platforms Supreme Court affirms The Verge Archived from the original on July 19 2023 Retrieved June 18 2019 a b McGregor Jena August 8 2017 The Google memo is a reminder that we generally don t have free speech at work The Washington Post Archived from the original on January 25 2020 Retrieved March 1 2019 What Does Free Speech Mean United States Courts Archived from the original on January 4 2022 First Amendment Cornell University Law School Legal Information Institute Archived from the original on May 1 2013 Retrieved May 3 2013 Lewis 2007 pp 6 7 Beeman 2009 pp 341 43 Haynes Charles et al The First Amendment in Schools A Guide from the First Amendment Center p 13 Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development 2003 Madison also proposed a similar limitation upon the states which was completely rejected No State shall violate the equal rights of conscience or the freedom of the press or the trial by jury in criminal cases Madison James House of Representatives Amendments to the Constitution June 8 1789 via The Founders Constitution Jasper 1999 p 2 Lewis 2007 p 10 Bill of Rights National Archives Archived from the original on April 4 2013 Retrieved April 4 2013 The New United States of America Adopted the Bill of Rights December 15 1791 Library of Congress Archived from the original on December 25 2012 Retrieved April 4 2013 American History Massachusetts Bay Colony Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on December 4 2020 Retrieved December 15 2020 a b c d e Farr Thomas November 1 2019 What in the World is Religious Freedom Religious Freedom Institute Archived from the original on May 14 2020 a b c d Director Religious Freedom Education Project Charles C Haynes December 26 2002 History of Religious Liberty in America Written for Civitas A Framework for Civic Education 1991 by the Council for the Advancement of Citizenship and the Center for Civic Education Archived from the original on May 25 2020 Retrieved May 25 2020 a b c d McCreary County v American Civil Liberties Union of Ky 545 U S 844 2005 at Part IV Justia US Supreme Court Center June 27 2005 Retrieved November 8 2020 a b Michelle Boorstein November 3 2020 Religion Religious conservatives hopeful new Supreme Court majority will redefine religious liberty precedents The Washington Post Archived from the original on November 5 2020 Retrieved November 10 2020 a b Murdock v Pennsylvania 319 U S 105 1943 at 115 Justia US Supreme Court Center May 3 1943 Retrieved January 10 2022 McGowan v Maryland 366 U S 420 1961 Justia US Supreme Court Center Retrieved May 25 2020 Sandra Day O Connor June 27 2005 McCreary County vs American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky Legal Information Institute Cornell university Law Department Retrieved September 13 2012 Walz v Tax Comm n of City of New York 397 U S 664 1970 at 669 Justia US Supreme Court Center Justia US Supreme Court Center May 4 1970 Archived from the original on July 16 2023 Retrieved July 16 2023 a b John R Vile Gillette v United States 1971 The First Amendment Encyclopedia presented by the John Seigenthaler Chair of Excellence in First Amendment Studies Archived from the original on June 14 2020 Retrieved June 14 2020 Wallace v Jaffree 472 U S 38 1985 at 48 et seq Justia US Supreme Court Center June 4 1985 Retrieved November 8 2020 Wallace v Jaffree 472 U S 38 1985 at 48 49 Justia US Supreme Court Center June 4 1985 Retrieved November 8 2020 Wallace v Jaffree 472 U S 38 1985 at 50 Quoting from Cantwell v Connecticut 310 U S 296 1940 at 303 Justia US Supreme Court Center June 4 1985 Retrieved November 8 2020 Wallace v Jaffree 472 U S 38 1985 at 50 51 Partially quoting from Wooley v Maynard 430 U S 705 1977 at 714 Justia US Supreme Court Center June 4 1985 Retrieved November 8 2020 Wallace v Jaffree 472 U S 38 1985 at 50 52 Justia US Supreme Court Center June 4 1985 Retrieved November 8 2020 Wallace v Jaffree 472 U S 38 1985 at 50 Justia US Supreme Court Center June 4 1985 Retrieved November 8 2020 Wallace v Jaffree 472 U S 38 1985 at 52 54 Justia US Supreme Court Center June 4 1985 Retrieved November 8 2020 Jennifer A Marshall Director of the Richard and Helen DeVos Center for Religion and Civil Society at The Heritage Foundation December 20 2010 REPORT Religious Liberty Why Does Religious Freedom Matter The Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on October 8 2020 Retrieved November 12 2020 Today the religious roots of the American order and the role of religion in its continued success are poorly understood One source of the confusion is the phrase separation of church and state a phrase used by President Thomas Jefferson in a widely misunderstood letter to the Danbury Baptist Association of Connecticut in 1802 Many think this means a radical separation of religion and politics Some have gone so far as to suggest that religion should be entirely personal and private kept out of public life and institutions like public schools That is incorrect Jefferson wanted to protect states freedom of religion from federal government control and religious groups freedom to tend to their internal matters of faith and practice without government interference generally Unfortunately Jefferson s phrase is probably more widely known than the actual text of the Constitution s First Amendment Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof Jefferson s Letter to the Danbury Baptists The Final Letter as Sent on January 1 1802 Library of Congress Retrieved February 13 2014 Mark Movsesian Director of the Center for Law and Religion at St John s University February 13 2013 How the Supreme Court Found the Wall First Things Archived from the original on February 20 2020 Retrieved June 16 2020 Religious liberty in public life Establishment Clause overview First Amendment Center Archived from the original on September 5 2010 Retrieved May 28 2020 Vile John R Established Churches in Early America The First Amendment Encyclopedia presented by the John Seigenthaler Chair of Excellence in First Amendment Studies Archived from the original on August 3 2020 Retrieved August 3 2020 Larkin v Grendel s Den Inc 459 U S 116 1982 at 126 127 Justia US Supreme Court Center December 13 1982 Retrieved January 5 2022 a b Freedom of Religion Lincoln University Pennsylvania Archived from the original on September 10 2020 Retrieved May 28 2020 a b Geoff McGovern Walz v Tax Commission of the City of New York 1970 The First Amendment Encyclopedia presented by the John Seigenthaler Chair of Excellence in First Amendment Studies Archived from the original on June 14 2020 Retrieved June 14 2020 a b c Marci A Hamilton Michael McConnell Common Interpretation The Establishment Clause National Constitution Center Archived from the original on April 15 2020 Retrieved May 12 2020 a b Eugene Volokh First Amendment Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on May 12 2013 Retrieved April 11 2013 Daniel L Driesbach Thomas Jefferson and the Wall of Separation between Church and State NYU Press 2002 unpaginated Archaeology Narrative and the Politics of the Past The View from Southern Maryland p 52 UPCC book collections on Project MUSE Julia A King publisher Univ of Tennessee Press 2012 ISBN 9781572338883 Abington School District v Schempp 374 U S 203 1963 at 220 Justia US Supreme Court Center June 17 1963 Archived from the original on September 11 2023 Retrieved September 11 2023 Elena Kagan February 7 2019 Jefferson S Dunn Commissioner Alabama Department of Corrections Applicant v Domineque Hakim Marcelle Ray on Application Number 18A815 to vacate stay PDF United States Supreme Court Archived from the original PDF on August 6 2020 Retrieved August 20 2020 Epperson v Arkansas 393 U S 97 1968 at 103 104 Justia US Supreme Court Center November 12 1968 Retrieved August 20 2020 Larson v Valente 456 U S 228 1982 at 244 Justia US Supreme Court Center April 21 1982 Retrieved August 20 2020 Zorach v Clauson 343 U S 306 1952 at 314 Justia US Supreme Court Center April 28 1952 Retrieved August 20 2020 McCreary County v American Civil Liberties Union of Ky 545 U S 844 2005 at Part II A Justia US Supreme Court Center June 27 2005 Retrieved November 8 2020 Board of Education of Kiryas Joel Village School District v Grumet 512 U S 687 1994 Grumet 512 U S at 703 Van Orden v Perry 545 U S 677 2005 McCreary County v ACLU 545 U S 844 2005 Salazar v Buono 559 U S 700 2010 a b In the words of Thomas Jefferson the clause against establishment of religion by law was intended to erect a wall of separation between church and State from the Everson decision Madison James June 20 1785 Memorial and Remonstrance against Religious AssessmentsPapers The Founders Constitution University of Chicago Press pp 8 298 304 Retrieved January 26 2017 Edward Mannino Shaping America the Supreme Court and American society University of South Carolina Press 2000 p 149 Daniel L Driesbach Thomas Jefferson and the Wall of Separation between Church and State NYU Press 2002 unpaginated Chap 7 Warren A Nord Does God Make a Difference Oxford University Press 2010 McCollum v Board of Education 333 U S 203 1948 Excerpts From Ruling on Use of Education Money The New York Times June 11 1998 Retrieved May 3 2013 a b Kritzer H M Richards M J 2003 Jurisprudential Regimes and Supreme Court Decisionmaking The Lemon Regime and Establishment Clause Cases Law amp Society Review 37 4 827 40 doi 10 1046 j 0023 9216 2003 03704005 x For the Endorsement test see Lynch v Donnelly 465 U S 668 1984 For the coercion test see Lee v Weisman 505 U S 577 1992 Lemon v Kurtzman 403 U S 602 1971 Lupu Ira Tuttle Robert June 28 2022 Kennedy v Bremerton School District A Sledgehammer to the Bedrock of Nonestablishment American Constitution Society Archived from the original on November 23 2022 Retrieved August 20 2022 Hutchison Harry June 29 2022 The ACLJ Participates in Another Supreme Court Victory as the Court Upholds Coach Kennedy s Right to Pray after Football Games in Kennedy v Bremerton School District American Center for Law and Justice ACLJ Archived from the original on November 23 2022 Retrieved August 20 2022 Kennedy v Bremerton School District PDF Supreme Court of the United States Retrieved July 20 2022 Michael P Bobic John R Vile 2009 Accommodationism and Religion The First Amendment Encyclopedia presented by the John Seigenthaler Chair of Excellence in First Amendment Studies Archived from the original on June 14 2020 Retrieved June 14 2020 a b David Shultz 2005 Encyclopedia of the Supreme Court Infobase Publishing p 144 ISBN 9780816067398 Retrieved December 31 2007 Accommodationists on the other hand read the establishment clause as prohibiting Congress from declaring a national religion or preferring one to another but laws do not have to be shorn of morality and history to be declared constitutional They apply Lemon only selectively because w e are a religious people whose institutions presuppose a Supreme Being as Justice Douglas wrote in Zorach v Clauson 343 U S 306 1952 a b c Vile John R Benevolent Neutrality The First Amendment Encyclopedia presented by the John Seigenthaler Chair of Excellence in First Amendment Studies Archived from the original on August 3 2020 Retrieved August 3 2020 Zorach v Clauson 343 U S 306 1952 at 313 314 Justia US Supreme Court Center April 28 1952 Retrieved August 20 2020 Wallace v Jaffree 472 U S 38 1985 Justia US Supreme Court Center June 4 1985 Retrieved June 25 2020 Warren A Nord November 10 2010 Does God Make a Difference Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199890224 Retrieved December 31 2007 First Amendment Politics At the risk of oversimplifying a very complicated situation I suggest that conservative justices tend to favor a weak reading of both the Free Exercise and Establishment clause while liberals tend to favor strong readings That is conservative justices have been less concerned about the dangers of establishment and less concerned to protect free exercise rights particularly of religious minorities Liberals by contrast have been opposed to any possibility of a religious establishment and they have been relatively more concerned to protect the free exercise rights of minorities Robert Devigne August 28 1996 Recasting Conservatism Oakeshott Strauss and the Response to Postmodernism Yale University Press ISBN 0300068689 Retrieved December 31 2007 Conservatives claim that liberals misinterpret the establishment and free exercise clauses of the First Amendment They point to the opinion written for the Supreme Court by Hugo Black in Everson v Board of Education The establishment of religion clause of the First Amendment means at least this neither a state nor a Federal government can set up a church Neither can pass laws which aid one religion aid all religions or prefer one religion over another The establishment clause conservatives insist precludes the national state from promoting any religious denomination but does not prohibit state governments and local communities from developing policies that encourage general religious beliefs that do not favor a particular sect and are consistent with the secular government s goals Lynch v Donnelly 465 U S 668 1984 Justia US Supreme Court Center Retrieved May 28 2020 Supreme Court Cases Reynolds v United States 1879 PHSchool com Pearson Prentice Hall Archived from the original on October 19 2019 Retrieved August 28 2016 Abington School District v Schempp 374 U S 203 1963 at 222 223 Justia US Supreme Court Center June 17 1963 Retrieved January 5 2022 Sherbert v Verner 374 U S 398 1963 at 402 Justia US Supreme Court Center June 17 1963 Retrieved January 5 2022 Lyng v Northwest Indian Cemetery 485 U S 439 1988 at 450 Justia US Supreme Court Center April 19 1988 Retrieved July 23 2020 Employment Div v Smith 494 U S 872 1990 at 494 Justia US Supreme Court Center April 17 1990 Retrieved July 23 2020 The free exercise of religion means first and foremost the right to believe and profess whatever religious doctrine one desires Thus the First Amendment obviously excludes all governmental regulation of religious beliefs as such Sherbert v Verner supra 374 U S at 374 U S 402 The government may not compel affirmation of religious belief see Torcaso v Watkins 367 U S 488 1961 punish the expression of religious doctrines it believes to be false United States v Ballard 322 U S 78 322 U S 86 88 1944 impose special disabilities on the basis of religious views or religious status see McDaniel v Paty 435 U S 618 1978 Fowler v Rhode Island 345 U S 67 345 U S 69 1953 cf Larson v Valente 456 U S 228 456 U S 245 1982 or lend its power to one or the other side in controversies over religious authority or dogma see Presbyterian Church v Hull Church 393 U S 440 393 U S 445 452 1969 Kedroff v St Nicholas Cathedral 344 U S 94 344 U S 95 119 1952 Serbian Eastern Orthodox Diocese v Milivojevich 426 U S 696 426 U S 708 725 1976 Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye Inc v Hialeah 508 U S 520 1993 at 533 and 542 543 Justia US Supreme Court Center June 11 1993 Retrieved July 23 2020 In McDaniel v Paty 435 U S 618 1978 for example we invalidated a state law that disqualified members of the clergy from holding certain public offices because it impose d special disabilities on the basis of religious status Employment Div Dept of Human Resources of Ore v Smith 494 U S at 877 The Free Exercise Clause protect s religious observers against unequal treatment Hobbie v Unemployment Appeals Comm n of Fla 480 U S 136 148 1987 STEVENS J concurring in judgment and inequality results when a legislature decides that 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Whitney v California 274 U S 357 1927 Lewis 2007 p 36 Jasper 1999 p 26 a b Killian Johnny H Costello George Thomas Kenneth R The Constitution of the United States of America Analysis and Interpretation Library of Congress Government Printing Office 2005 ISBN 978 0160723797 pp 1096 1100 Currie David P The Constitution in the Supreme Court The Second Century 1888 1986 Volume 2 University of Chicago Press 1994 p 269 ISBN 9780226131122 Konvitz Milton Ridvad Fundamental Liberties of a Free People Religion Speech Press Assembly Transaction Publishers 2003 p 304 ISBN 9780765809544 Eastland Terry Freedom of Expression in the Supreme Court The Defining Cases Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers 16 August 2000 p 47 ISBN 978 0847697113 The Court adopted the imminent lawless action test in 1969 s Brandenburg v Ohio 395 U S 444 1969 which some commentators view as a modified version of the clear and present danger test Thornhill v Alabama 310 U S 88 1940 Terminiello v City of Chicago 337 U S 1 1949 a b c d Terminiello at 4 Including Cantwell v Connecticut 310 U S 296 1940 When clear and present danger of riot disorder interference with traffic upon the public streets or other immediate threat to public safety peace or order appears the power of the State to prevent or punish is obvious we think that in the absence of a statute narrowly drawn to define and punish specific conduct as constituting a clear and present danger to a substantial interest of the State the petitioner s communication considered in the light of the constitutional guarantees raised no such clear and present menace to public peace and order as to render him liable to conviction of the common law offense in question And Bridges v California 314 U S 252 1941 And very recently in Thornhill we have also suggested that clear and present danger is an appropriate guide in determining the constitutionality of restrictions upon expression What finally emerges from the clear and present danger cases is a working principle 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Change on Massachusetts Society 1760 1830 University of Georgia Press ISBN 978 0 8203 1587 4 Retrieved April 19 2013 Newell Martin L 1898 The Law of Libel and Slander in Civil and Criminal Cases As Administered in the Courts of the United States of America Callaghan Retrieved April 19 2013 Lewis Anthony 2007 Freedom for the Thought That We Hate A Biography of the First Amendment Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 01819 2 Further readingCurtis Michael Kent 2000 Free Speech The People s Darling Privilege Struggles for Freedom of Expression in American History Duke University Press ISBN 0822325292 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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