News

Lawfully present non-citizens in the United States likely have the same First Amendment rights as US citizens, a federal ...
If the U.S. Supreme Court’s current term ended tomorrow, its decisions in Gonzalez v.Google and Twitter v. Taamneh would suffice to call this year an important one for free speech, if mostly in the ...
A pressing challenge for state governments is to reconcile an expanded 2nd Amendment “right to bear arms” with the 1st Amendment’s “right of the people peaceably to assemble.” ...
Social Media. Kids Have First Amendment Rights Too, Federal Judge Reminds State Lawmakers Banning people under age 16 from accessing social media without parental consent "is a breathtakingly ...
First Amendment experts told The Arizona Republic and azcentral.com that modest permits generally are permissible, but how far the government can go in regulating expressive conduct depends on ...
The First Amendment and other constitutional rights generally only apply to government actors, officials and institutions. Facebook, Twitter and other platforms are private entities. As such, under ...
The California-based First Amendment Coalition, ... In a June 9 letter to DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, more than two dozen organizations expressed alarm over how the events have unfolded.
The First Amendment is a mere 45 words. But it's still giving lawmakers and judges fits 227 years after its adoption. The government can't establish religion, but federal, state and municipal ...
First Amendment freedoms were under fire by community members and a nonprofit group when a scheduled in-service meeting for teachers and staff of the Jackson-Madison County School System included ...
But deporting activists violates the 1st Amendment and does nothing to combat antisemitism. March 11, 2025 The administration has proclaimed that it is deporting noncitizen students, using their ...
If it’s a student publication, it’s a First Amendment issue. Nott points to a landmark Supreme Court cases from 1969 that has acted as a standard for cases involving free speech at public ...
The First Amendment does not command Congress to grant the freedom of speech (it is not Congress’ to grant); rather, it commands that Congress shall not interfere with it. The Bill of Rights ...