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First Amendment

Supreme Court Orders Maine Legislator Censured for Social Media Post Must Get Voting Rights Back

On Monday, the court granted an emergency injunction allowing Rep. Laurel Libby to resume voting and speaking after she was censured for a post criticizing trans women in women's sports.

Emma Camp | 5.21.2025 4:30 PM

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Laurel Libby | Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Gage Skidmore | Wikimedia Commons | Midjourney
(Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Gage Skidmore | Wikimedia Commons | Midjourney)

A Maine legislator stripped of her voting rights after a controversial social media post must be allowed to vote and speak again, following a Supreme Court decision on Monday. The legislator, Rep. Laurel Libby (R–Auburn), had filed an application for an emergency injunction last month.

In February, Libby came under fire for a post on Facebook and X criticizing the state's decision to allow a transgender girl, who had previously competed as a boy, to participate in a high school girls' track championship. The student—whose face was shown in the post while other female athletes' faces were blurred—had won the girls' pole vault event. 

Soon after, Libby was censured by the Maine Legislature. When Libby refused to apologize for the post, the speaker of the Maine House, Ryan Fecteau (D–Biddeford), found her in violation of a House rule that strips voting and speaking rights to any member who "is guilty of a breach of any of the rules and orders of the House…until the member has made satisfaction." 

For months, Libby had not been allowed to speak, and her votes were not counted. Despite filing legal challenges to her disenfranchisement, Libby faced initial defeats from both the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit and a lower federal court. In legal filings, Maine government officials argued that their actions against Libby were protected by Maine's absolute legislative immunity protections. However, it's unlikely that such an excuse allows them to deny Libby her right to speak and vote as a legislator over disfavored speech.

"The core of legislative immunity is to shield lawmakers for what they say or how they vote during legislative debate and processes. That makes sense, as we want to promote free and open debate in our Houses and Senates," J.T. Morris, an attorney at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE), a First Amendment group, told Reason earlier this month. "But it's hard to reconcile immunizing lawmakers who engage in free and open debate, and immunizing these Maine lawmakers who are punishing Representative Libby for her speech by stripping her ability to participate in legislative debate and voting."

On Monday, the Supreme Court granted Libby's emergency application. Like in most such decisions, the court did not provide an explanation as to why they granted Libby's request for an injunction. However, Justice Sonia Sotomayor noted that she would have denied the application, and Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote a dissent, which focused primarily on her view that Libby's situation was not a true emergency. 

"The First Circuit is moving quickly to evaluate the legal issues this case presents, with oral argument scheduled to occur in a few weeks. Meanwhile, before us, the applicants have not asserted that there are any significant legislative votes scheduled in the upcoming weeks," Jackson wrote. "Not very long ago, this Court treaded carefully with respect to exercising its equitable power to issue injunctive relief at the request of a party claiming an emergency….Those days are no more."

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Emma Camp is an associate editor at Reason.

First AmendmentCivil LibertiesTransFree SpeechCensorshipDue ProcessSportsSocial MediaState GovernmentsMaine
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  1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

    Saw this in the local news. Good.

    1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

      This has been discussed in the comments multiple times. If it was good why no criticism then?

      1. Rick James   2 months ago

        Given the subject matter, we like to wait for the outcome-- Keir Starmer-like, before we can declare the issue 'settled'.

    2. Bubba Jones   2 months ago

      Who gets to decide what is a significant vote? wtf.

    3. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

      I don't live in Maine and I saw this long before you, and had an opinion long before you. Maybe because I wasn't wasting my time boaf sidezing every fucking thing for the sake of being a troll?

  2. Longtobefree   2 months ago

    "is guilty of a breach of any of the rules and orders of the House…"

    So making true statement is a breach of the rules?
    Oh, yeah, right. Democrats.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      Remember, general, equity, not equality.

  3. Public Entelectual   2 months ago

    a big Annuit coeptis for the Supremes.

  4. Sun Wukong   2 months ago

    Remember the big tongue bath Reason gave Hasaan Piker the other day? It turns out, he is a lying piece of shit. I wonder if reason will ever retract their article? Fat chance.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tdE3t5vPKnU

    1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

      Of course not. The story was known to be false from the outset. Reason doesn't care.

  5. AT   2 months ago

    a transgender girl, who had previously competed as a boy, to participate in a high school girls' track championship. The student—whose face was shown in the post while other female athletes' faces were blurred—had won the girls' pole vault event.

    I'm already friggin' confused. Does this person naturally have a penis or a vagina? Just answer me that so I can meaningfully contribute.

    FFS, why we have to go through these hoops to determine what was once plainly obvious.

    For months, Libby had not been allowed to speak, and her votes were not counted.

    Tell me again that America is a Democracy.

    YOU. YOU SPECIFICALLY, EMMA.

    However, Justice Sonia Sotomayor noted that she would have denied the application, and Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote a dissent

    Of course they did. DEI hires.

    1. Sun Wukong   2 months ago

      A boy who likes to pretend he is a girl competed against girls in a girls' competition. That is what happened there. They only make it confusing because they are lying and want to people to pretend reality is different than what it is.

      1. AT   2 months ago

        So penis. In girls sports.

        Got it.

        I'm on board so long as you castrate him first. If he consents to that, then let him play all the girls sports he wants.

        Wait, no I take it back. Make a eunuch league.

        1. Eeyore   2 months ago

          Agree a eunuch league makes total sense. It has to be the Chinese/Korean style that takes off the entire dick and balls. If they want some plastic surgery labia that is ok.

          I can see it now. Child protective services removing a child from their parents because they refused to have them made into a eunuch.

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

            It takes a village to castrate your child.

  6. AT   2 months ago

    Y'know, NGL, I really wish I could go to law school a hundred years from now - just to participate in discussions about Ketanji decisions/dissents.

    One of those few times I'm genuinely curious about the whole Barack/Marx "history will judge you..." response.

    Hey Hillary, um... Ketanji knows about you and Epstein. So... deal with that how you usually do maybe?

  7. Rick James   2 months ago

    Man alive, I was out of the news cycle for about a week and a half and... holeeee crap the news media is in full "How do you do my fellow kids" mode.

  8. Eeyore   2 months ago

    Which country or state will be the first one to make it a crime to not have sex with a trans person, because it doesn't validate their identity or is hate speech?

    1. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

      And in union utopia, the old tranny prostitutes will get first dibs cuz they got seniority.

      1. Eeyore   2 months ago

        Whore house roulette.

      2. charliehall   2 months ago

        Why should prostitution be illegal?

    2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

      That's the first step. In subsequent stages, we will have sex only with state-appointed partners, according to DEI regulations. Refusal will be a felony offense.

      If you need help imagining this, think of fucking the people at the DMV.

      1. Gaear Grimsrud   2 months ago

        Wow sounds like trying to elect the officers of the DNC.

    3. Lester75   2 months ago

      Maybe some state will pass a bill making it a crime not to have at least 3 children by age 30 if you are a white woman. Seems about as likely.

      1. charliehall   2 months ago

        Don't tell MAGA. Musk needs more women to impregnate.

  9. Dan S.   2 months ago

    The student—whose face was shown in the post while other female athletes' faces were blurred—had won the girls' pole vault event.

    Why should anyone's face be blurred? Aren't the competitions of high-school athletes meant to be public events? When the focus is simply on the game, their names and pictures are often printed in local news media, are they not?

  10. Rick James   2 months ago

    This would have been a nice sub-post in the one about why people believe in scams and hoaxes.

  11. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 months ago

    'On Monday, the court granted an emergency injunction allowing Rep. Laurel Libby to resume voting and speaking after she was censured for a post criticizing trans women in women's sports.'

    See? SCOTUS hates democracy!

  12. Longtobefree   2 months ago

    "On Monday, the court granted an emergency injunction allowing Rep. Laurel Libby to resume voting and speaking after she was censured for a post criticizing trans women in women's sports."

    Where is the reason in Reason?
    Should be:
    On Monday, the court granted an emergency injunction allowing Rep. Laurel Libby to resume voting and speaking after she was censured for a post criticizing men in women's sports.

    Stick with the facts. She criticized MEN in WOMEN's sports.
    There is no such thing as "trans women". It is a made up thing, like the flat earth.

  13. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   2 months ago

    Emma Camp is either evil, or has been fooled by evil.

    Either way, nothing she says should be considered as anything other than the word of evil.

    1. Bipedal Humanoid   2 months ago
  14. Bipedal Humanoid   2 months ago
  15. Bipedal Humanoid   2 months ago

    The sentence structure in the title of this piece hurts my brain.

  16. Lester75   2 months ago

    I didn’t think Maine was quite that woke.

  17. KiwiDude   2 months ago

    “ had won the girls' pole vault event”

    The jokes just write themselves with that story

  18. Anastasia Beaverhausen   2 months ago

    Yet again, the right-wing Supreme Court gets it wrong. Every organization, group, etc., has the right to set its own rules. If she can't follow the rules of the body of which she is a member, she must suffer the consequences.

    1. charliehall   2 months ago

      Every group can make its own membership rules unless they conflict with MAGA.

      1. Sailor1989   2 months ago

        You misspelled "reality" as MAGA that is strange.

    2. Rossami   2 months ago

      When that organization or group is the government (or a subsidiary thereof), it's rules are subject to the supremacy clause. So, no, they can't enforce laws that violate the First Amendment.

  19. TJJ2000   2 months ago

    Welcome to another Democrat / [Na]tional So[zi]alist State / Stunt.

  20. MWAocdoc   2 months ago

    "Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote a dissent, which focused primarily on her view that Libby's situation was not a true emergency."

    So, violation of a citizen's First Amendment Rights is not an emergency?! Jackson should be ashamed of itself! If the citizen in question had not been an elected representative and the offenders had not been the Legislature, would the First Circuit have acted expeditiously? Would that have made it an emergency, Ketanji? It's not only hard to reconcile the Legislature revoking legislative immunity while invoking its own legislative immunity, it's IMPOSSIBLE! If the government fines you for a violation repeatedly for every day you fail to correct the violation, how is it okay to let the Legislature off the hook for every day they violate the legislator's rights?

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