First Amendment Applications
Applications of the First Amendment
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects the American people against laws made by Congress that would restrict the right to free speech or a free press, however, with the advancement of technology Americans have created new mediums of communication and the rights guaranteed in the Constitution have had to be applied to these new mediums. As a result, the Supreme Court has determined that the different types of medium involved in communication are protected in different ways. Therefore the freedom of speech and press, guaranteed in the Constitution, has been applied to legal cases involving these differing mediums of communication in quite different ways.
When the Constitution was written the main means of communication in the public arena was the newspaper, and the founding fathers wanted to ensure that these newspapers had the freedom to print what they liked. In 1974 this freedom was tested when a political candidate demanded that a Miami newspaper, which had recently printed a critical editorial of him, print his written reply. When the paper refused, he sued and the case eventually made its way to the U.S. Supreme Court in the form of the case of Miami Herald Publishing Company v. Tornillo. The law that the candidate relied upon for the basis of his legal case had been enacted in 1913 and required that any newspaper printing an article critical of a political candidate offer equal space for a reply from that candidate. However, the Supreme Court determined that this "right of reply" was a case of government interfering in the freedom of the press and the law was unconstitutional.
In his opinion, Chief Justice Burger stated that "The choice of material to go into a newspaper, and the decision made as to limitation on the size and content of the paper, and treatment of public issues and public officials-whether fair of unfair-constitute the exercise of editorial control and judgment." (Miami Herald Publishing v. Tornillo, 1974) In effect, the court...
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