A case alleging the Biden administration unlawfully forced social media companies to remove posts about COVID-19 and the 2020 election that were deemed to be false was denied by the Supreme Court.
Five social media users filed the lawsuit, claiming that the Biden administration’s pressure on firms like Facebook and X, the former Twitter, infringed their constitutional right to free speech. The action was filed with the help of the attorneys general from Louisiana and Missouri.
The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 on Wednesday, finding that the plaintiffs lacked the necessary legal standing to file a lawsuit.
The ruling was challenged by the three conservative justices, led by Justice Samuel Alito, who penned a 34-page dissenting opinion that called the case “one of the most important free speech cases to reach this court in years.”
President Joe Biden won even though the decision concerned a technical matter rather than the main contention of the lawsuit.
An injunction that prohibited social media businesses and government personnel from communicating was overturned. This implies that content and accounts that the FBI and other agencies deem to be a threat to national security can now be reported to platforms.
The plaintiffs had claimed that federal agents “jawboned” or coerced the corporations into stifling speech that disagreed with the government, primarily about the coronavirus outbreak. They cited the platforms’ removal of postings or account suspensions following consultation with the White House.
In response, the Biden administration said it was influencing social media companies to remove offensive material that contained false information and exaggerated assertions, which the surgeon general had cautioned could endanger lives. Many of the posts that were highlighted also violated the internal policies of the companies, it was claimed. In most cases, the plaintiffs are unable to establish a connection between the defendants’ communications with the platforms and their prior social media limitations.” The majority was written by Justice Amy Coney Barrett.
Chief Justice John Roberts, Justice Brett Kavanaugh, and the three liberal members of the court joined her.
Justice Alito characterized the “jawboning” as “blatantly unconstitutional” in a dissent that included information from emails, news conferences, and earlier rulings.
The decision handed down on Wednesday, he said, “permits the successful campaign of coercion, in this case, to stand as an attractive model for future officials who want to control what the people say, hear, and think”.
The court contributed to sending a message by dismissing the case, saying, “If a coercive campaign is carried out with enough sophistication, it may get by.”
Before Wednesday’s ruling, a federal district judge in Louisiana had agreed that White House representatives had infringed on the right to free speech and had sided with social media users. Later, a federal appeals court upheld that decision but limited its applicability to a smaller number of federal employees.
The nation’s top court has dismissed cases twice before, in this instance because it did not think the plaintiffs had the right to file a lawsuit. Due to standing, it also dismissed a case regarding the abortion medication mifepristone.