SCOTUS Declines To Punish the Feds for Suppressing Social Media Speech
The verdict in Murthy v. Missouri is a big, flashing green light that jawboning may resume.

The Supreme Court will allow federal agencies to resume widespread communication with social media companies for the purposes of suppressing controversial speech. For everyone who was perturbed by the Twitter Files and Facebook Files—which revealed a vast web of government pressure on private actors, called jawboning—this is a regrettable outcome.
The case was Murthy v. Missouri—also known as Missouri v. Biden—and involved a group of individuals who were kicked off Facebook and Twitter. They contended that the platforms took such actions at the behest of the federal government. The Court held 6-3 that the plaintiffs lacked standing to bring such a case and thus the lower court, the 5th Circuit, erred in prohibiting the government from engaging in said communications with social media companies.
Writing for the majority, Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett explained that the plaintiffs failed to offer up overwhelming evidence that government malfeasance was the cause of their woe.
"The primary weakness in the record of past restrictions is the lack of specific causation findings with respect to any discrete instance of content moderation," she wrote. "And while the record reflects that the Government defendants played a role in at least some of the platforms' moderation choices, the evidence indicates that the platforms had independent incentives to moderate content and often exercised their own judgment. The Fifth Circuit, by attributing every platform decision at least in part to the defendants, glossed over complexities in the evidence."
In his writeup for The Volokh Conspiracy, Case Western Reserve University law professor Jonathan Adler notes other standing issues: The plaintiffs failed to show that a repeat injury was likely, for instance, which is a requirement for injunctive relief.
"The Court emphasizes that it is always more difficult to show standing when the alleged injury 'results from the independent action of some third party not before the court,' in this case the social media companies," writes Adler.
Three of the justices—Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, and Neil Gorsuch—saw matters differently. In dissent, Alito expressed the view that the plaintiffs were being held to too high a standard, and that the evidence of government suppression was quite extensive.
"In sum, the officials wielded potent authority," wrote Alito. "Their communications with Facebook were virtual demands. And Facebook's quavering responses to those demands show that it felt a strong need to yield."
Alito's dissent includes a lengthy summary of the dubious actions taken by the federal government to induce social media companies to remove contrarian COVID-19 content; the justice concludes that White House communications staffers badgered Facebook into compliance.
"They browbeat the platform for months and made it clear that if it did not do more to combat what they saw as misinformation, it might be called to account for its shortcomings," wrote Alito. "And as for the supposedly 'fleeting' nature of the numerous references to potential consequences, death threats can be very effective even if they are not delivered every day."
Indeed, in the summer of 2021, President Joe Biden accused Facebook of "killing people" because it had not removed all content that allegedly promoted vaccine hesitancy. Soon thereafter, the company fell in line.
While this case was before the Court, government agencies had dramatically scaled back their communications with social media platforms. It's possible that the Court could rule differently in the future, if civil liberties groups brought a case in which the standing issues could be overcome. But for now, the verdict in Murthy v. Missouri is a big, flashing green light that jawboning may resume. That's a discouraging development for free speech online.
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It's apparently only a preliminary injunction.
It's also a travesty fully in line with every other excuse to not see government overreach.
Whatever happened to keeping even Caesar's wife above suspicion? Oh, right, it's government employees judging other government employees.
It’s apparently only a preliminary injunction.
What do you mean?
The case involved a nationwide preliminary injunction as the Missouri case moves through the system.
But then again a standing issue terminates the entire suit. Unless the standing issue is scoped only against future harms as mentioned in the article. Maybe prior harms will be allowed through.
Who knows. It makes no sense. States and those censored were plaintiffs. Not sure who would ever have standing.
""Not sure who would ever have standing.""
Just figure out how to blame it on Trump. Then it will go to court.
Writing for the majority, Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett explained that the plaintiffs failed to offer up overwhelming evidence that government malfeasance was the cause of their woe.
I said a couple of years ago that this method of government censorship was genius.
"It doesn't matter if the cat is black or white, as long as it catches mice" -- Deng Xiaoping
Everyone was harmed by the government encouraged censorship. Everyone should have standing. The failure to have a completely open and honest debate regarding the covid policies, treatments and vaccines has harmed pretty much everyone in the world.
I think the idea is that nobody is harmed when they’re shielded from bullshit. Question though is who decides. If they’re right then there’s no harm. If they’re wrong that’s a different story. Seems the court just assumes they’re right. And that ain’t right. The libertarian answer is to let the audience decide. Believing in stupid shit is what America is all about. MAGA!
Sometimes it makes sense to require that someone show actual, specific damage to have standing to sue. But it has always seemed to me that in a case like this where a basic, constitutional right is in play that the assumption should be that any infringement is generally harmful and the burden should be entirely on the government to demonstrate that their actions were legal.
But it has always seemed to me that in a case like this where a basic, constitutional right is in play that the assumption should be that any infringement is generally harmful and the burden should be entirely on the government to demonstrate that their actions were legal.
I agree.
Bastiat talked about the seen and the unseen. I think this applies to more than just economics. Infringements upon basic rights might not cause easily observable and quantifiable harm, but that doesn't mean the harm is not there.
Broken. And for years you defended the censorship lol.
As long as it comes from his precious democrats that he always reflexively defends.
Everyone was harmed by the government encouraged censorship. Everyone should have standing.
This is a major problem with how our legal system works. "Standing" means that you need to demonstrate that you are the person in particular who is being harmed. If the injury is generalized to the entire public, then nobody can have standing. This is also a major issue in election cases, where voters who may suffer from being defrauded can't demonstrate that the fraud hurts them in any particular way, so you can't create a class for a suit.
"Standing" is a problematic legal doctrine.
I can understand standing in the sense that if a company makes a faulty product and I never purchase it and thus am not harmed so how can I expect to be compensated.
But the idea that the government passing laws or strong arming people doesn’t affect every other citizen is just ludicrous in my mind.
It's also why no taxpayer has standing to sue for illegal appropriations, like Trump's wall or the student loans.
Our legal system favors ritual over justice.
As elections and the courts continue to fail us, true justice will be delivered in the street.
The majority used a standard for determining standing much more exacting than any standard applied in many cases where the Court found standing. Those cases would have come out differently under the standard used in this case. The majority clearly did not want to reach the merits and so it copped-out by breaking with precedent regarding standing.
Alito’s dissenting opinion fully explains how the Plaintiffs/Respondents unquestionably have standing and how the majority pulled this stricter standard for standing out of its ass. He also explains how the First Amendment was definitely violated by the Biden Administration.
Murthy v. Missouri is a cowardly decision based on the fears of at least Chief Justice Roberts, Justice Kavanaugh, and Justice Barrett. They have disgraced themselves today.
These are the kinds of decisions that I was worried about Kavanaugh making.
Yes, but Amy. She was feted here for years. What a disappointment!!
Precisely, and except for Thomas, we know who the SCOTUS justices that actually enforce the Constitution are, Alito and Gorsuch. Thomas is just a super conservative Biden hater.
"SCOTUS Declines To Punish the Feds for Suppressing Social Media Speech."
Fascists defending other fascists.
Gee, what a surprise.
Also, the dissenting justices here demonstrate a bit of the court dynamics. Alito wrote the dissent, while Thomas and Gorsuch joined.
You've actually 3 blocks of justices, now, not two. You've got the compassionate (read: big government) conservatives of ACB, Roberts, and Kavanaugh, sometimes joined by Alito. Then you have the more constitutionalists, which are Thomas and Gorsuch, and Alito sometimes with them. Then you've got the "living constitution" liberals of Jackson, Sotomayor, and Kagan-at least two of which argue backward from outcomes. Then again, that's true often of Alito and Barret, at least.
Excellent summary!
When you've lost "muh private companies" at Reason...
"The primary weakness in the record of past restrictions is the lack of specific causation findings with respect to any discrete instance of content moderation," she wrote.
Any bets on if the 6 person majority switches sides in the immunity case regarding Trumps J6 speech?
He threatened democracy!!!1!!1!!
The tree of liberty gets closer to getting watered.
If the democrats and RINOs don’t back off soon it will be watered with their blood.
Class action suits against FB et al are still possible, no?
For what? They're not bound by 1A in the way that the Government is. Best case, a civil suit might get their Section 230 protection stripped as long as they're choosing to "act as a publisher" and curate user posts based on ideological criteria.
If you really want to see FB and most of the other platforms squirm, build a coalition to lobby the FCC to include "platform" companies which hold monopolistic market shares in the category of companies subject to "Title II" regulation which was created to manage the legally established monopoly held by AT&T until the 1970s.
Holy crap that was one of the dumbest excuses by SCOTUS I’ve ever heard.
Oh surely ‘authority’ figures have no ‘authority’ right, right? /s
You just ‘volunteered’ to do everything they demand of you. /s
Truth: SCOTUS declines to uphold the US Constitution..... again!
So, I've been reading hot-takes on this all day long. And a lot of them are missing (or intentionally ignoring) the most important parts here. I'll cite them:
First, they argue that they suffer “continuing, present adverse effects” from their past restrictions, as they must now self-censor on social media. But the plaintiffs “cannot manufacture standing merely by inflicting harm on themselves based on their fears of hypothetical future harm that is not certainly impending.” And as we explained, the plaintiffs have not shown that they are likely to face a risk of future censorship traceable to the defendants. Indeed, even before the defendants entered the scene, the plaintiffs “had a similar incentive to engage in” self-censorship, given the platforms’ independent content moderation.
...
Attempting to satisfy this requirement, the plaintiffs emphasize that hearing unfettered speech on social media is critical to their work as scientists, pundits, and activists. But they do not point to any specific instance of content moderation that caused them identifiable harm. They have therefore failed to establish an injury that is sufficiently “concrete and particularized.” The state plaintiffs, claiming their own version of the “right to listen” theory, assert a sovereign interest in hearing from their citizens on social media. But this theory suffers from the same flaws as the individual plaintiffs’ theory. The States have not identified any specific speakers or topics that they have been unable to hear or follow.
These were the big takeaways, IMCO:
1) They never lost any free speech. There's nobody in America who social media or the government (working hand-in-glove or otherwise) has caused to be denied the ability to speak their mind. Bhattacharya, Kulldorff, and Kheriarty are all still respected in their fields and communicating their ideas to others; Jim Hoft is still publishing daily at his The Gateway Dumbsh**; Jill Hines is still at Health Freedom Louisiana getting its message out. Nobody can possibly pretend that they don't have free speech when they're out freely speaking to this very day. They're ALL still getting their message out. Their complaint was that they COULDN'T do it on someone else's lawn, and because the government was involved they asserted some "oppression" that didn't deny them anything they were entitled to in the first place.
2) Social media has been censoring long before the government got involved, and it was in no way violative of 1A. All those "BuH mAh SeCtiOn 230!!!!" knobs have always failed to realize a basic truth: there is NO right to social media. I don't have a Constitutional right, for example, to post on this website. It's not mine. I'm here at its owner's sufferance and to the extent they ALLOW me to be. It's not a "virtual public square" and it never has been. It goes back to the most fundamental basic principle behind rights: if someone has to provide it to you, by definition it cannot be a right.
3) The fact of the matter is, government coercion wasn't necessary - these guys would have been censored either way. If the government had specifically identified the plaintiffs as subjects for censoring, that might have helped their case (well, the first half of it anyway). But the open secret is that social media owners/controllers have clear biases to the left, are completely within their right to allow/deny whatever they want posted to their website; and a left-wing government simply aligns with their interests, nudging them with specific stuff they might not think to censor on their own. Now, let me be clear - I'm not defending the government in doing that sort of thing; that's the exact OPPOSITE of what they should be doing. And I take Alito's point that even "nudging" them is problematic because it comes with the implicit knowledge that the federal government can (and likely will) really ruin your day if they don't get their way. But, this goes back to the question I always have on the subject: why post to a place where you KNOW you'll be deplatformed? Especially when there are literally infinite alternatives to it.
4) And this is the big one a lot of people are missing - how do you assert the likelihood of future harm to those specific plaintiffs, expressly by those specific defendants (some of whom no longer exist, and therefore CAN'T do that alleged future harm) whom the plaintiffs want to enjoin. Now, this is where Alito - and Conservative America - is particularly upset, because they recognize that the issue isn't about the specific plaintiffs, but about viewpoint suppression in general with a government hand helping steer it. There's a valid argument to be had there, and I could very easily see the left shell-gaming this sort of behavior to avoid getting called on this. But at the end of the day, the government telling Facebook "suppress things contrary to our bogus COVID narrative" is not quite the same thing as "target and silence Jill Hines" (especially if/when Facebook had been deplatforming her in the first place) and it's certainly not "and keep silencing her even though COVID isn't a thing we're pretending to do anymore".
Now, I get it. Alito both disagrees with that point, and considers this side-stepping the REAL issue. And he's probably right. But ACB didn't just invent some magical fairy jurisprudence like Roe vs Wade did. And what Alito fails to point out is that NONE of these people were ever flat stopped from producing and disseminating their materials. They were just frustrated, if not locked out of, doing it in certain places that they never had a right to in the first place. (And if you think the Court had ANY intention of touching the question "is there a right to social media?" with a 10' pole, then you don't understand SCOTUS at all.)
And yes, I also agree with Alito that the Court should address the overall question: IS there something unconstitutional about the State pressuring social media to advance one narrative and suppress another? Because there probably is, but we're not going to get that questioned answered making broad accusations that can't point to specific, lasting, and future harm in anything other than a general way. "Conservative Americans" can't be a plaintiff. Maybe if they get together and point to specific subjects where they're ALL being suppressed, all with continuing individual illustrative examples they can show, and can make the case that they wouldn't be but for inter-agency aligned government meddling - but that's not what happened here.
But, I think the case WAS correctly decided based on the way it was brought and presented by the plaintiffs. (And I think, and ACB even hinted, that they should have named the social media companies as defendants if they'd wanted a better shot at getting the real question on the table addressed.)
As an aside, I love how ACB essentially called Jim Hoft a clown. Because Jim Hoft is a clown. He's a wannabe Alex Jones that often DOES peddle in outright fake news. I laughed so hard at this: Plus, it was Hoft’s brother, Joe Hoft, who posted this tweet; Twitter therefore suspended Joe Hoft’s account. It is unclear why Jim Hoft would have standing to sue for his brother’s injury. Answer: because Jim Hoft is a retard.
AT provides a good summary of the fundamental issues of this case. As in some other recent cases, rather than addressing the matter the plaintiffs tried to force on it, the Court issued a rule of law/Constitution ruling. It is another example of the highest court refusing to abide by the most conservative federal circuit court’s decision to pretend that legal desires are actually legal disputes.
A great analysis! The only point you might be glossing over is that the Constitution forbids any abridgement of free speech, that is a categorical term with a very low bar of evidence required to reach it. Applying a highly-specific requirement of standing to such a categorical rule is what seems totally out of place.
That's a fair point, but I didn't read it as a particularly highly-specific requirement for standing. Remember - the goal here was injunction. I think there's a valid argument for "the government said XYZ to social media on this date, and then the next day my posts were censored on that social media platform." But A) none of them could really illustrate that's what actually happened, let alone argue that it would keep happening unless the injunction was granted; and B) none of them could articulate the harm that caused them (because they were all still getting their message out in other places despite certain social media platform shenanigans).
That's not standing. That's... complaining about a perceived injustice, but not being able to legally articulate it. Which, again, I think Alito is like - "we should really talk about that perceived injustice and it happening in the future because that could have some very serious 1A implications" - and I agree with that. But I don't think the plaintiffs brought enough to the table to make that case.
Thanks for your response and compliment. 🙂
it’s certainly not “and keep silencing her even though COVID isn’t a thing we’re pretending to do anymore”.
If 'her' is a viewpoint; that is exactly what the government did and there are documents proving that.
I don't know if those documents were part of the case but I can't imagine they weren't since they were in the media - unless they magically disappeared like many things against Democrats do just magically disappear (ordered from Democratic Politicians Censoring).
"And yes, I also agree with Alito that the Court should address the overall question: IS there something unconstitutional about the State pressuring social media to advance one narrative and suppress another? Because there probably is, but we’re not going to get that questioned answered making broad accusations that can’t point to specific, lasting, and future harm in anything other than a general way."
The State enacting suppression of "inconvenient" narratives in public discourse by directing, leveraging, or suborning cooperation by Private Sector operations which aren't strictly bound by the US Constitution is literally one of the mechanisms by which Fascism operates (and suppression of ideas based on how they serve a particular political agenda is a hallmark of Fascist governance). If literal, dictionary-definition (English dictionaries, anyway, I suspect leftist Newspeak has been using the term to connote a different meaning for several years now) Fascism taking hold in the USA isn't something that it should be important for the US Supreme Court to address, then I'd have to wonder why we should continue to have more than one branch of government anyway.
In the specific case of the suppression (and on Twitter, deactivation) of the NY Post account there would seem to be a serious case (according to recent Dem legal reasoning, anyway) that there was potentially significant fallout. The Post accounts were deactivated, and sharing of the particular story blocked in order to prevent wider awareness of reporting about a laptop which reportedly contained (among other evidence), references to portions of the funds from Hunter's international "influence peddling" operations being kicked back to his father ("the Big Guy"), who as VP once conditioned delivery of US assistance (something for which trump would later be impeached by the House) on changes to the domestic policy of that nation in ways which served the interest of a company which paid Hunter a seven-figure sum for a "do nothing" job on their Board of Directors. That suppression was coincidentally lifted shortly after election day due to the idea that it "no longer mattered".
In the aftermath of a trial in which trump was charged with 34 felony violations predicated on the idea that paying "hush money" (something that hundreds of campaigns throughout the history of the country have done in one form or another, and in the rare cases where a trial resulted every prior case led to an acquittal) constituted criminal "election interference" on the grounds that the public had some unalienable right to know about the story, it's interesting to now see Dem Partisans (on the court, especially, and less so on these kinds of boards) doubling down on the "see no evil" approach to Federal Agents, acting "on the clock" and using their ".gov" email addresses to suppress a story which may polls have indicated might have swung the election if it had garnered more attention before rather than after election day, and which has since proven to have been true (as verified by the same agency whose employees warned social media platforms that a major bit of "Russian Disinformation" was coming in the immediate future).
That's not even getting started on the issues around how the arguable propriety of efforts to suppress anything changed the second the term "malinformation" was coined and conflated into the suppression category with "misinformation" and "disinformation". Once they admit that they're trying to suppress ideas that they know can be supported and/or verified for no reason other than that they might be "inconvenient" to the regime, or could "encourage non-compliance" with unconstitutional mandates, the foundation is blown out from under the house of cards built on the rationale that suppression of "false" ideas has enough utility to justify the danger of making the State the formal arbiter of what is "true" and what if "false".
Not nearly enough people under 50 have ever read the sentence "true freedom is the freedom to say that 2 + 2 = 4, once that is safe, all else will follow" in its original context; it's little wonder they're so timid about accepting that believing that 2 + 2 = 5 if the "experts" say that belief will make them "safe".
The State enacting suppression of “inconvenient” narratives in public discourse by directing, leveraging, or suborning cooperation by Private Sector operations which aren’t strictly bound by the US Constitution is literally one of the mechanisms by which Fascism operates
Indeed it is. As is crushing the private sector through inflation in order to force dependency on the State. But it’s not the job of the Supreme Court to prevent fascism. It’s their job to uphold the Constitution and respect jurisprudence in doing so.
In the specific case of the suppression (and on Twitter, deactivation) of the NY Post account there would seem to be a serious case (according to recent Dem legal reasoning, anyway) that there was potentially significant fallout.
Makes you wonder why they weren’t a plaintiff, eh?
Like I said to this and your subsequent points: IS there something unconstitutional about the State pressuring social media to advance one narrative and suppress another? Because there probably is, but we’re not going to get that questioned answered making broad accusations that can’t point to specific, lasting, and future harm in anything other than a general way.