Archive for the ‘First Amendment’ Category

Journalists fear Texas anti-SLAPP law could be weakened – The Texas Tribune

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Journalists and free speech advocates are raising alarms about a bill moving through the Texas Legislature that they worry would make news organizations and regular Texans more susceptible to frivolous lawsuits designed to squash free speech.

At issue is a proposed adjustment to the 2011 Texas Citizens Participation Act, also known as the anti-SLAPP law, which is designed to prevent litigants from weaponizing the legal system to punish people for or dissuade them from exercising their First Amendment rights. The idea is that without such a law, big companies or wealthy individuals could inflict major damage by suing people over speech they dont like. Those suits are known as SLAPP strategic lawsuits against public participation cases. Even if the suits are frivolous, their existence could cost the defendants thousands of dollars or more in court fees and legal bills. Or the threat of those suits could force people to censor themselves.

Under the 2011 law restricting SLAPP suits, a person or company that is sued in what they believe is a SLAPP case can file a motion to dismiss the suit. If the trial court judge denies the motion, the defendant may file an immediate appeal and the case is stayed while the appeals courts take it under consideration.

But Senate Bill 896 would remove that automatic stay from state law, which opponents fear could allow some cases to proceed with expensive, time-consuming demands for evidence. The measure has already passed the Senate and was debated by the House Judiciary and Civil Jurisprudence Committee on Wednesday.

The bill is supported by business groups such as the Texas Association of Business and Texans for Lawsuit Reform. They argue that defendants have misused the automatic stay during appeal to delay legitimate cases, sometimes in proceedings that have nothing to do with the First Amendment.

One civil litigator, Shahmeer Halepota, described a case between a developer and a contractor involving the construction of apartment towers in Houston in which the defendants filed an anti-SLAPP motion three years into the case and a month before it went to trial. That automatically put the case on hold, causing his developer client to miss out on business opportunities, he said. An appeals court later found the anti-SLAPP motion frivolous, he said.

My clients have literally lost millions of dollars, Halepota said Wednesday.

SB 896 would lift the automatic stay on the case if the anti-SLAPP motion were found by the trial court judge to be frivolous or solely filed as a delay tactic. If the anti-SLAPP motion were denied and found not to have been filed in a timely manner, an automatic stay would still go into effect, but would expire in 45 days if an appeals court didnt step in. The idea, proponents say, would be to prevent what is meant to be a legal shield from being turned into a sword used aggressively to needlessly delay legitimate cases.

Opponents of the bill say it would burden an already overwhelmed court system.

The bill would create a two-tier system in which parties, in certain instances, would be forced to litigate their cases simultaneously at the trial and appellate courts, which will cause significant perils for both litigants and courts, Wallace B. Jefferson, who served as chief justice of the Texas Supreme Court from 2004-13, said in prepared testimony.

Media groups have lined up against the proposal, with leaders of the Texas Press Association and the Texas Association of Broadcasters, as well as First Amendment attorneys, speaking out against it at Wednesdays committee meeting. Advocacy groups across the political spectrum from the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas to the Tea Party group True Texas Project and numerous news outlets including The Associated Press, Axios, Fox Television Stations, The Dallas Morning News, The Houston Chronicle, The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Texas Tribune have also registered their opposition.

The groups note that trial court judges often make mistakes and that libel cases are frequently overruled on appeal. They say that not having an automatic stay in cases could force media companies to litigate the same case simultaneously in two venues, trying to have a case tossed out on appeal while also going through arduous and expensive discovery at the trial court level.

Ultimately, they say, SLAPP cases are designed to be punitively expensive, even if the person who filed it knows they will lose. The proposed new law would increase the cost for news outlets to defend themselves from SLAPP cases in courts and would raise media liability insurance premiums, opponents say.

A free press and accurate news reporting depend upon journalists to identify, investigate, and report out stories without concern that the subjects in the story could sap their newsroom of resources through a meritless court case, the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press wrote in a letter to state Rep. Jeff Leach, R-Plano, chair of the judiciary committee and sponsor of the bill. The letter was also signed by 44 news outlets, including the Tribune.

In a letter, editors of the four Hearst Newspapers newspapers in Texas noted a 2016 case in which one of the papers, the Houston Chronicle, was sued by a local bar over a brief article describing a shooting that occurred nearby. The newspaper filed a motion to dismiss; a judge deemed the motion untimely. It took seven months for that ruling to be corrected and another five years before the Chronicle was able to get a court to consider the merits of its motion to dismiss and find that the claims were baseless.

Weakening the anti-SLAPP law, the letter said, would put defendants in an intolerable situation of having to simultaneously pursue costly litigation at both the trial and appellate levels, or of pursuing settlements that might not go anywhere if the court finds the defendant was lawfully exercising its constitutional right. The letter was signed by Maria Reeve, the Chronicles executive editor, and by top editors in San Antonio, Laredo and Beaumont.

Media advocates also warned about the impact on small news outlets that dont have the resources to defend themselves. Donnis Baggett, executive vice president of the Texas Press Association, told the committee on Wednesday that many of the hundreds of newspapers his organization represents are small-town, family-run newspapers that just cant survive a long, drawn-out lawsuit.

Those papers provide vital information about a community, from high school sports to civic coverage to accountability work about the actions of their local governments, and many would see their survival at risk from SLAPP suits, he said.

If you bleed a small newspaper dry, that community is without a newspaper, he said.

Leach said Wednesday that he will not support any bill that weakens the First Amendment protections of free speech. But he also acknowledged some very real problems and concerns with the law as it is written and expressed a desire to address them while preserving the anti-SLAPP rules.

After hearing emotional and at times tense testimony on the measure, he encouraged advocates on both sides to go to lunch and come up with a solution that worked for all of them. But the bill did not receive a vote Wednesday morning.

Disclosure: Texans for Lawsuit Reform, Texas Association of Business and New York Times have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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Journalists fear Texas anti-SLAPP law could be weakened - The Texas Tribune

They say Im ancient: Biden speech to White House media proves to be one for the ages – The Guardian US

'They say I'm ancient': Joe Biden pokes fun at White House correspondents' dinner video US politics

The 80-year-old US president chooses annual address to have some fun with a crucial voter concern, mixed with digs at Don Lemon and Fox News

Age shall not weary him, but it might provide some good punchlines.

Joe Biden, the oldest president in American history, faced his biggest political liability with a smile on Saturday as he addressed a gathering of Washingtons political and media elites.

The 80-year-old, who this week announced a bid for re-election in 2024, flipped between a pugnacious defence of press freedom and crisp one-liners at the expense of political opponents as he addressed the White House Correspondents Association annual dinner.

As opinion polls show that a majority of Americans have little appetite for a second Biden term, with many citing his age as a defining concern, he chose not to hide from his most obvious vulnerability but run towards it.

I believe in the first amendment, not just because my good friend Jimmy Madison wrote it, he said, referring to one of Americas founding fathers, who died in 1836.

He went on: Look, I get that age is a completely reasonable issue. Its in everybodys mind and by everyone, I mean the New York Times. Headline: Bidens advanced age is a big issue. Trumps, however, is not.

The president had a dig at Don Lemon, a CNN host who was fired this week after a series of missteps including remarks that Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley, 51, isnt in her prime because a woman is considered to be in her prime in her 20s and 30s and maybe 40s.

Biden earned a big laugh when he said on Saturday: They say Im ancient; I say Im wise. They say Im over the hill; Don Lemon would say, Thats a man in his prime.

There was also an indirect pitch that, despite concerns over his readiness for a gruelling election campaign, Biden is spoiling for the fight with Republican opponents.

He said of Marjorie Taylor Greene, a far-right congresswoman from Georgia: I want everybody to have fun tonight but please be safe. If you find yourself disoriented or confused, its either youre drunk or Marjorie Taylor Greene.

Referring to Florida governor and potential presidential candidate Ron DeSantiss protracted battle with Disney, he quipped: I had a lot of Ron DeSantis jokes ready but Mickey Mouse beat the hell out of me and got there first.

And Biden said of House of Representatives speaker Kevin McCarthy: Look, you all keep reporting my approval rating as 42%. I think you dont know this. Kevin McCarthy called me and asked me, Joe, what the hell is your secret? Im not even kidding about that.

Biden also had fun poking fun at the media, especially Fox Corps recent settlement of a defamation lawsuit by Dominion Voting Systems for $787.5m in a case that centred on Fox Newss false claims that the 2020 presidential election had been manipulated in favour of Biden.

Its great the cable news networks are here tonight. MSNBC owned by NBC Universal. Fox News owned by Dominion Voting Systems. That line earned laughter and applause.

Last year your favourite Fox News reporters were able to attend because they were fully vaccinated and boosted. This year, with that $787m settlement, theyre here because they couldnt say no to a free meal.

In a jab at former president Donald Trump, Biden quipped that comedian Roy Wood Jr, who also was a featured speaker at the dinner, had offered him $10 to keep his speech short. Thats a switch a president being offered hush money.

Earlier this month Trump was charged with 34 felony counts in a case involving an alleged $130,000 hush payment to an adult film star during his 2016 presidential campaign.

Biden assured Wood: Im going to be fine with your jokes but he put on his trademark sunglasses Im not sure about Dark Brandon. This was a nod to an internet meme that began as a rightwing attack but has been co-opted by Bidens supporters.

Wood, a regular on Comedy Centrals The Daily Show, naturally could not resist making Bidens age a target. He said: We should be inspired by the events in France. They rioted when the retirement age went up two years to 64. Meanwhile in America, we have an 80-year-old man, begging us for four more years.

For all the comedy, Biden also used his speech to issue forceful denunciations of attacks on press freedom and on misinformation that threatens to undermine democracy.

The president and first lady Jill Biden met privately with the parents of Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich upon arriving at the dinner. Gershkovich has been imprisoned in Russia since March after being charged with spying, despite strong denials from his employer and the US government.

Also among the 2,600 guests in a cavernous hotel ballroom was Debra Tice, the mother of Austin Tice, who has not been heard from since disappearing at a checkpoint in Syria in 2012.

Biden said: Journalism is not a crime. Evan and Austin should be released immediately along with every other American detained abroad. I promise you, I am working like hell to get them home.

The president acknowledged Brittney Griner, a basketball player who was detained in Russia for nearly 10 months last year before her release in a prisoner swap. Griner attended with her wife, Cherelle, as guests of CBS News. This time last year we were praying for you, Brittney, Biden said.

In another preview of a 2024 campaign theme, Biden condemned news outlets that use lies told for profit and power to stir up hatred. Lies told for profit and power. Lies of conspiracy and malice repeated over and over again designed to generate a cycle of anger and hate and even violence.

The Washington black-tie dinner returned last year after being sidelined by the pandemic in 2020 and 2021. Biden was the first president in six years to accept the invitation after Trump shunned the event while in office.

This year the gala drew politicians including Vice-President Kamala Harris and celebrities such as actor Liev Schreiber and singer John Legend and his wife, Chrissy Teigen, a model and television personality.

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They say Im ancient: Biden speech to White House media proves to be one for the ages - The Guardian US

Melbourne City Councilman Tim Thomas Urged Support of Senate … – SpaceCoastDaily.com

Senate legislation advanced on a 28-12 party-line vote, largely aimed at stopping children from attending Drag showDue to the passage of SB 1423 and likely signing by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Space Coast Daily reached out to Melbourne City Councilman Tim Thomas, above, who, in November 2022, sent a letter to the Brevard County Legislative delegation urging them to pass a bill protecting children from exposure to Drag Queens in public places.

BREVARD COUNTY, FLORIDA Due to the passage of SB 1423 and likely signing by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, Space Coast Daily reached out to Melbourne City Councilman Tim Thomas, who, in November 2022, sent a letter to the Brevard County Legislative delegation urging them to pass a bill protecting children from exposure to Drag Queens in public places.

The Senate legislation, which advanced on a 28-12 party-line vote, is largely aimed at stopping children from attending Drag shows.

It authorizes state government officials within the Department of Business and Professional Regulation to suspend or revoke the liquor license of any establishment that admits minors to a live, adult performance.

Prohibited performances would be those that include lewd conduct, or the lewd exposure of prosthetic or imitation genitals or breasts, meant to appeal to prurient, shameful, or morbid interests, and displays that are patently offensive and without serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value for the age of the child present.

A person who admits a child to such a performance, as the bill defines it, would face a first-degree misdemeanor, punishable by up to $1,000 in fines and up to a year in prison.

Following is Melbourne City Councilman Tim Thomas letter to the Brevard County Legislative delegation:

As a Melbourne City Councilman, Im proud to stand against Drag Queens having access to underaged children on public property, to read them books, or through exposure to Drag Queen shows, exposing them to sexually explicit themes and concepts.

The First Amendment has limits; You cant yell fire in a theater. As a result of SB 1438, the protection of our children trumps the Drag Queens First Amendment to indoctrinate them with these sexualized concepts.

Ten years ago, it would have been unheard of for a municipality to issue a permit for Drag Queen Story Time or a Drag Queen show in the middle of downtown. The public outcry would have been significant, and the event seen as perverse. Today, municipalities cow tail to the woke mob and routinely permit such events for fear of being sued or being canceled if they dont.

According to the Drag Time Story Hours own website, their purpose is to capture the imagination and play of the gender fluidity of childhood and gives kids glamorous, positive and unabashedly queer role models.

This is nothing but an attempt to indoctrinate young children through visual presentation and interaction to be gender fluid or even question their biological sex. Young children cant comprehend these sensitive concepts, nor should they need to.

Im very pleased and proud our State legislature had the courage to take on the woke mob and pass this bill. The House and the Senate overwhelmingly voted in support. Our legislative delegation, including Representatives Altman, Fine, Sirois, and Tramont, as well as Senators Mayfield and Wright unanimously voted in support.

Once this bill is signed by Governor Desantis, I hope the guidance from Attorney General Ashley Moody to municipalities is perfectly clear for the implementation of the law as well as the punishment for non-compliance. If municipalities cant protect the innocence of our children in public from Drag Queen shows and Drag Queen Story Hour, you can rest assured it wont stop there. The next venues they will demand access to will be churches and synagogues.

We can bury our heads in the sand and sing Zippity Doo Dah, or we can fight to have some sort of control over what our young children are exposed to. I choose to fight and will continue to do so as your elected official.

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Melbourne City Councilman Tim Thomas Urged Support of Senate ... - SpaceCoastDaily.com

Drop all charges filed against the African People’s Socialist Party … – The Militant

Striking a serious blow at constitutional protections, Department of Justice prosecutors got a federal grand jury in Florida April 18 to indict three members of the African Peoples Socialist Party and Uhuru Movement on trumped-up charges of being foreign agents. This pretext has been used by the government for decades to go after militant workers, Black rights fighters, the Socialist Workers Party and others.

Omali Yeshitela, Penny Joanne Hess and Jesse Nevel are charged with acting as an agent of a foreign government and foreign officials, to wit, the Russian Federation, and doing so without prior notification to the Attorney General. Along with former APSP member Augustus C. Romain, now a member of Black Hammer, they are also charged with defrauding the U.S.

Three Russians no longer in the U.S. are named in the indictment. Federal prosecutors claim Aleksey Sukhodolov and Yegor Popov work for the FSB, Vladimir Putins political police. A third, Aleksandr Ionov, is alleged to have worked with the APSP to advance Moscows interference in an election in St. Petersburg, Florida, in 2019. The APSP ran Eritha Akile Cainion for City Council there.

Founded in 1972, the Black nationalist party runs a range of small businesses and has engaged in constitutionally protected political activity for decades.

The indictment says Ionov gave money to APSP members to build support for Moscows agenda in the U.S., especially Putins seizure of parts of Ukraine. APSP leaders have never made any secret of their support for the Kremlins attempt to crush Ukraines independence. And that opinion is shared by others, including a number of Stalinist-trained groups here. All of them collaborate with forces abroad who share their views, as is their right.

Prosecutors lost no time making clear their real target is the Constitutions protections of free political expression. Russian spies weaponized our First Amendment rights, complained Assistant Attorney General Matthew G. Olsen of the Justice Departments National Security Division. Whenever the government says someone is weaponizing the First Amendment, it means theyre voicing opinions it wants to shut up.

Throughout the indictment prosecutors target APSP members political activities. These include campaigning for reparations for descendants of slaves, and publishing articles by Ionov. It also cites a visit by Yeshitela to Moscow in 2015. Prosecutors charge the groups members because they didnt sign up as Moscows agents with the U.S. attorney general. If convicted, they face up to 15 years in prison.

Heavily armed FBI agents raided the APSP and Uhuru Movements offices in St. Petersburg last July, battering down the doors, throwing flashbang grenades inside and handcuffing those there at gunpoint, as they seized computers, financial records and files. They also raided the homes of APSP and Uhuru members.

This case is not about whether or not I have a position around the war in Ukraine that was the same as what the Russians had, Yeshitela, chairman of the APSP, wrote late last year. This attack was perpetrated against us because we have always fought for the liberation of Africa. The group also supports the Cuban Revolution and one of its members is currently on a delegation from the U.S. to Havana to take part in activities around May Day.

Foreign agent laws are a key part of the governments national security arsenal a direct attack on First Amendment protections. If any of your political positions are similar to some other countrys government, youre fair game to be spied on, disrupted and prosecuted.

The Foreign Agents Registration Act was adopted in 1938 by the Democratic Party administration of Franklin Roosevelt. It was part of a package of laws attacking political rights in preparation for crushing opposition to Washingtons entry into the second imperialist world war.

The FBI launched an assault on the Socialist Workers Party for building opposition in the labor movement to the U.S. rulers imperialist war drive in the late 1930s. The attack began under the Foreign Agents Act. It led to the frame-up and conviction of 18 SWP leaders and Teamsters union members under the thought-control Smith Act in 1941.

For decades afterward, Democratic and Republican administrations have used foreign agent and a raft of other witch hunt laws as weapons to spy on, harass and disrupt the SWP, Communist Party, opponents of Washingtons wars and others.

Acting as unregistered foreign agents was one of the charges against five Cuban revolutionaries who had come to the U.S. to gather information about counterrevolutionary groups plotting violent assaults on Cuba. The Cuban Five were targeted by the FBI, framed up and imprisoned for up to 16 years. The last of them won their freedom in 2014.

Months before Donald Trump was elected president in 2016, the FBI tried to cook up a case claiming he too was a threat to national security, operating in collusion with Moscow. It raided the homes and offices of Trump supporters.

The FBI broke into Trumps Mar-a-Lago estate last summer under the ruse of protecting national security. The government claimed he improperly took secret documents when he left the White House. It turned out later that many presidents do the same, including Joseph Biden. This assault was a part of the Democrats six-year effort to drive Trump out of politics or to prison.

Whenever one ruling-class party attempts to criminalize its differences with the other, their assaults batter constitutional protections and inevitably come back on the working class. The raid at Mar-a-Lago and against the APSP were followed by another FBI operation, where agents attempted to interrogate some 60 people in Puerto Rico who had taken part in a solidarity brigade to Cuba. So far no charges have been issued.

Defending constitutional freedoms against government assault remains central to advancing the common struggles of workers and the oppressed.

Drop the charges against the APSP!

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Drop all charges filed against the African People's Socialist Party ... - The Militant

Bud Herron: A new political party? Hallelujah! – The Republic

I want you to be the first to know I intend to run for some high political office in the near future.

(I know, I know. I have falsely claimed in the past that I was going to run for office and didnt. And I said last August I had quit writing forever, due to popular demand. So, I lied. That is nothing new in either politics or fringe journalism. Get over it.)

I havent decided what the office will be only that the office will be at the state or national level and will be very powerful. Voters will back me because I know the secret to solving all of our national problems.

Best of all, I will not run as either a Republican or a Democrat. Both of these historic political parties are too much of a mess for even a brilliant person like me to salvage.

Republicans have worked hard at turning their Grand Old Party into a Less Than Adequate New Party. They have been somewhat successful at promoting enough red herrings to distract voters even those who have read more than door hangers from real issues. Yet efforts to become the answer for the world of the 20s seem to be more about the 1920s.

Democrats have risen to the challenge by proving over and over they cannot organize a one-float parade. They continually focus on being a big tent party that embraces the views of both the common folk and the elite egg heads, while never noticing the tent has no center pole.

I will create a new political coalition called the TeePee Party. (Liberals will claim this name is racist and conservatives will see it as a reference to illegal public urination on golf courses. But, I digress.) TeePee will be short for the Thoughts and Prayers Party.

Every patriotic American should be able to get behind T&P as the only solutions to our national woes. Yet, while government leaders say thoughts and prayers solve every problem from gun violence to insurrections to hang nails, no bill has been introduced in either Washington or Indianapolis to turn the solution into enforceable law.

Imagine what our nation would be like if everyone were required by law to both think and pray to think before they pray or pray before they think? And this law needs to have teeth with penalties for violators.

Someone who shares their thoughts in a coffee shop while forgetting to pray before they eat the donut would be fined. Those who bother the deity with a thoughtless, ill-conceived prayer or meditation would likewise pay for the transgression in either civil or religious court.

I predict both learned Republicans and prayerful Democrats will flock to my party.

Democrats likely will complain the new law violates First Amendment guarantees of religious freedom but Republicans will overlook the problem as long as prayers are Christian and the Second Amendment right to own and carry military-type weapons while praying is upheld.

Please support this new party with your donations to build a strong financial war chest. The party will accept cash, checks, electronic transfers, stocks, bonds, bit coin, unredeemed Green Stamps, gently worn MAGA hats and unopened cans of Billy Beer from Jimmy Carters 1980 campaign.

The time has come to end the culture wars. We cannot continue to sidestep our responsibility to solve the pressing problems that threaten the future of our nation. Thoughts and prayers are the proven solution already used extensively and successfully by a wide range of political leaders.

Lets write it into the law.

Bud Herron is a retired editor and newspaper publisher who lives in Columbus. He served as publisher of The Republic from 1998 to 2007. Contact him at [emailprotected]

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Bud Herron: A new political party? Hallelujah! - The Republic