֭

Table of Contents

Floyd Abrams, ‘Journalists need stronger protections than the Supreme Court has recognized’ — First Amendment News 443

Floyd Abrams at his desk

Floyd Abrams

(aka “Mr. First Amendment”) may be 88 years old, but he continues to pad his resume with ever more impressive accomplishments. Consider, for example, his recent op-ed in The Wall Street Journal (“”) in which he describes his latest project:

For the past two years, three colleagues and I have worked on a project at Yale Law School to assess whether the constitutional promise of freedom of the press has been fulfilled. After conferring with journalists, media lawyers, historians and other scholars, we conclude that it has not. Our report will be released later this month.  

The basic legal problem is that while free speech protections remain generally robust in our nation, the press requires certain additional protections that are not applicable to other forms of speech. For example, when the police break up protests or impose a curfew during times of civil unrest, reporters are often prohibited from staying and reporting on what has occurred. Some police allow journalists to stay, but the Supreme Court has yet to hold that this protection is constitutionally required.

The report will be published in the  sometime very soon and will simultaneously be disseminated in stand-alone form by the Yale Law School. What follows is the table of contents of the forthcoming report along with its appendix, which lists the workshop participants who helped prepare the report.

The Press Clause: The Forgotten First Amendment

A Report from the Floyd Abrams Institute for Freedom of Expression

Floyd Abrams, Sandra Baron, Lee Levine, and Jacob M. Schriner-Briggs

I. Introduction                                                                    2

II. The Press: Importance and Challenges          5

A. The Press Matters                                                                       5

B. Legal and Political Challenges                                              6

  1. Legal Challenges                                                                                                7
  2. Political Challenges                                                                                         16

C. Economic Challenges                                                              17

III. The Constitutional Status Quo                          18

IV. Revitalizing the Press Clause                             23

A. Constitutional Interpretation and the First Amendment      23

  1. Originalism                                                                                                            23
  2. Traditionalism                                                                                                     26
  3. Living Constitutionalism                                                                              27

B. Historical Arguments                                                                 28

  1. Seditious Libel and the Historical Role of American Printers 28
  2. The Press Clause: Pre- and Post-Ratification                                      38
  3. Republican Precepts                                                                                            41
  4. Making Historical Arguments                                                                        42

C. Functional Arguments                                                        45

  1. The Press-as-Proxy                                                                                                 45
  2. The Checking Value                                                                                                46
  3. Informing Public Discourse and Convening the Public Square 47

D. Precedential Arguments                                                            48

  1. Judicial Language: Recognizing Press Functions                              49
  2. Judicial Action: Treating the Press Differently                                    54

E. Analogical Arguments and the Free Exercise Clause  56

V. What Might the Press Clause Do?                         57

A. Access                                                                                                   57

B. Newsgathering Conduct                                                              58

C. Editorial Autonomy                                                                         61

D. Publication                                                                                          62

E. Economic Viability                                                                           63

VI. Defining the Press                                                         64

A. The Institutional Approach                                                         65

B. The Functional Approach                                                            66

C. Toward a Multi-Factor Test                                                        68

VII. Conclusion                                                                      70

Appendix A. List of Workshop Participants           71

Appendix A. List of Workshop Participants

The following participated in the workshops that helped shape the ideas and direction of this report. We are grateful for their assistance and insights. The affiliations listed are for identification purposes only.

  • Floyd Abrams — Cahill Gordon & Reindel LLP

  • Joseph M. Adelman — Framingham University

  • RonNell Andersen Jones — University of Utah School of Law

  • David S. Ardia — University of North Carolina School of Law

  • Jack M. Balkin — Yale Law School

  • Sandra Baron — Yale Law School

  • Seth D. Berlin — Ballard Spahr LLP

  • Fabio B. Bertoni — New Yorker Magazine

  • Erik Bierbauer — NBCUniversal Media, LLC

  • Vincent Blasi — Columbia Law School

  • David Bralow — First Look Institute

  • Bruce Brown — Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

  • Jay Ward Brown — Ballard Spahr LLP

  • Erin Carroll — Georgetown University Law Center

  • Erwin Chemerinsky — University of California Berkeley School of Law

  • Dale Cohen — UCLA School of Law

  • Jay Conti — Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

  • Tom Curley — Gannett Co., Inc.

  • Lucy Dalglish — Merrill College of Journalism, University of Maryland

  • Jonathan R. Donnellan — The Hearst Corporation

  • Samuel Fifer — Dentons

  • Jacob P. Goldstein — Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

  • John C. Greiner — Faruki PLL

  • Paul Horwitz — University of Alabama School of Law

  • Vicki C. Jackson — Harvard Law School

  • Jean-Paul Jassy — Jassy Vick Carolan LLP

  • Bruce E. H. Johnson — Davis Wright Tremaine LLP

  • Karen Kaiser — Associated Press

  • Jane E. Kirtley — Silha Center for the Study of Media Ethics and Law, University of Minnesota

  • Heidi Kitrosser — Northwestern Pritzker School of Law

  • Christina Koningisor — University of California College of the Law, San Francisco 

  • Tom Leatherbury — Southern Methodist University Dedman School of Law

  • Lee Levine — Ballard Spahr LLP (ret.)

  • Lyrissa Barnett Lidsky — University of Florida Levin College of Law

  • Adam Liptak — The New York Times

  • David Loy — First Amendment Coalition

  • Rachel Matteo-Boehm — Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner LLP

  • David McCraw — The New York Times

  • Ashley Messenger — National Public Radio

  • Martha Minow — Harvard Law School

  • Leonard M. Niehoff — University of Michigan Law School

  • Helen Norton — University of Colorado Law School

  • Lynn Oberlander — Ballard Spahr LLP

  • Mary-Rose Papandrea — University of North Carolina School of Law

  • Francesca L. Procaccini — Vanderbilt Law School

  • Gabe Rottman — Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

  • Kelli L. Sager — Davis Wright Tremaine LLP

  • Matthew L. Schafer — Paramount Global

  • Jacob M. Schriner-Briggs — Yale Law School

  • Dave A. Schulz — Yale Law School 

  • Susan Seager — University of California, Irvine School of Law

  • Amanda Shanor — Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania 

  • Brian Sher — Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner LLP

  • Jeffery A. Smith — University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (Ret.)

  • Paul M. Smith — Georgetown University Law Center

  • Stephen D. Solomon — Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute, New York University

  • Geoffrey R. Stone — University of Chicago Law School

  • Charles D. Tobin — Ballard Spahr LLP

  • Richard Tofel — Gallatin Advisory LLC

  • Katie Townsend — Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

  • Erik Ugland — Marquette University, Diedrich College of Communication

  • Leita Walker — Ballard Spahr LLP

  • Stephen Wermiel — Washington College of Law, American University

  • Sonja R. West — University of Georgia Law School

  • Steven D. Zansberg — Zansberg Beylkin LLC

Related: Recent event (unrecorded)

  • Professor Matthew Schafer, “,” American Constitution Society event, Georgetown Law School (Oct. 10) 

For more than a decade, Professor Eugene Volokh’s article — “” — has been recognized as the authoritative work on the meaning of press freedom at the Founding. In it, Volokh argued that the Press Clause’s reference to “the Press” meant the printing press as a technology rather than as the journalistic enterprise we recognize today. On that basis, he concluded that the Founding Generation understood the Press Clause not as providing special rights for the institutional press but as securing every man’s right to use the printing press. Those in favor of a Press Clause that specially protected the press, he said, must look elsewhere than the text or history of that Clause. 

Matthew L. Schafer
Prof. Matthew Schafer

[Matthew Schafer's] Article calls Volokh’s into doubt. By examining his sources and reasoning, I show how he misunderstood the historical record and drew conclusions unsupported by it. Specifically, Volokh’s inquiry suffered from three problems: conceptual (defining “the Press” does not define the meaning of the Press Clause at the Founding), evidentiary (too little, too unpersuasive), and methodological (he followed none). I then explain that two premises on which Volokh based his article — that the newspaper industry at the Founding was insignificant and practiced no real journalism — are contrary to the historical record and academic consensus. Contrary to Volokh’s view that press-specific rights are a modern invention. I finally provide examples of them from the Founding era and posit that early Americans recognized such rights because they understood them ultimately to inure to the benefit of the public in the form of the news. The news, in turn, helped secure public liberty. I close by calling on Volokh to revisit his thesis.

Forthcoming First Amendment summit

  • “,” First Amendment Watch (Oct. 1)

Co-hosted by ֭ and NYU’s First Amendment Watch, the National Constitution Center’s 2024 First Amendment Summit convenes America’s leading thinkers for a vigorous discussion of the state of free speech in America and around the globe. A keynote conversation about global free speech with  of The Washington Post will be followed by discussions of free speech on campus and online. Panelists include FIREVice President of Campus Advocacy Alex Morey; , author of Free Speech: What Everyone Needs to Know; , author of the new book The Indispensable Right: Free Speech in an Age of Rage; , author of the new book Fearless Speech: Breaking Free from the First Amendment; , author of You Can’t Teach That!: The Battle over University Classrooms; and  of NYU School of Law.

A welcome reception with access to the National Constitution Center’s new First Amendment gallery will take place from 4:30–5:30 p.m. The program will directly follow from 5:30–7 p.m.

This event is presented in partnership with FIREand NYU’s First Amendment Watch.

  • Register to attend in person 
  • Register to attend online 

Free Speech Week and Vanderbilt University event

Vanderbilt Free Speech Week 2024 Speakers
  • “”

Vanderbilt will host its second annual Free Speech Week, Oct. 15–22, with a variety of events and guest speakers to foster and celebrate its commitment to civil discourse and freedom of expression across campus. Free Speech Week will feature three student debates, a lecture by American Civil Liberties Union President , and the inaugural , a two-day symposium with renowned national and international guests advancing efforts for free speech around the globe.

“Vanderbilt’s Free Speech Week emphasizes our university’s enduring commitment to bringing diverse perspectives to campus, inviting our community to engage with complex and timely issues,” Chancellor Daniel Diermeier said. “We’re proud to offer students opportunities to not only hear from experts, but join those conversations through several open forums in the spirit of civil discourse.” 

  • RSVP 

Scholarly articles from ‘The Future of Free Speech’ symposium

  • ” Journal of Free Speech Law, Volume 5, Issue 2 (2024)

Lee C. Bollinger & Geoffrey R. Stone, 

Vincent Blasi, 

Danielle Keats Citron & Jonathan Penney, 

Richard A. Clarke, 

Nick Clegg, 

Olivia Eve Gross, 

Brian Leiter, 

Nicholas Lemann, 

Suzanne Nossel, 

Robert C. Post, 

Joan Wallach Scott, 

Robert Mark Simpson, 

Allison Stanger, 

Alexander Tsesis, 

Eugene Volokh, 

Keith E. Whittington, 

New book on how the press has been portrayed in movies

  • Helen J. Knowles-Gardner, Bruce E. Altschuler, and Brandon T. Metroka, “” (Lexington Books, Oct. 2024)
Cover of the book "Filming the First: Cinematic Portrayals of Freedom of the Press"

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution prohibits Congress from abridging freedom of the press. But, as the printed press has been transformed into mass media with Americans now more likely to get their political information from television or social media than from print, confidence in this important, mediating institution has fallen dramatically. 

Movies, in their role as cultural artifacts, have long reflected and influenced those public attitudes, inventing such iconic phrases as “follow the money” from All the President’s Men and “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take this anymore” from Network

Filming the First: Cinematic Portrayals of Freedom of the Press analyzes eighteen films that span from Citizen Kane to Spotlight showing changes in how the press have been portrayed over time, which voices receive the most attention and why, the relationship between the press’s “Fourth Estate” role and the imperatives of capitalism, and how, despite the First Amendment’s seemingly absolute language, the government has sometimes been able to limit what the public can read or view.

YouTube: City Lights Bookstore hosts dialogue on book bans

  • “,” YouTube

City Lights in conjunction with PEN America present “From ‘Howl’ to Now: Books Bans in the US 2024.”

Moderated by Ipek S. Burnett with appearances by Ronald K. L. Collins, Summer Lopez, David M. Skover, and Trey Walk. During Banned Books Week, City Lights and PEN America bring human rights advocates and legal experts to discuss the alarming rise in book bans across the country.

They share insights, observations, and methods to counter the suppression of books that address issues pertaining to race, gender, and sexuality. Ever timely, their conversation is a powerful call to action to stand up for the freedom to read.

Ipek S. Burnett, PhD, is the author of A Jungian Inquiry into the American Psyche: The Violence of Innocence and the editor of Re-Visioning the American Psyche: Jungian, Archetypal, and Mythological Reflections. She is a contributing writer at CounterPunch and a Turkish novelist. Dr. Burnett is the Co-Chair of Human Rights Watch Executive Committee in San Francisco and serves on the board of 826 Valencia, a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting under-resourced students with their writing skills.

Ronald K. L. Collins is the co-founder and co-director (emeritus) of the History Book Festival and co-founder and co-chair of the First Amendment Salons. He is the editor of the weekly online blog First Amendment News and editor of Attention (an online journal on the life and legacy of Simone Weil) He is also the Lewes Public Library’s Distinguished Lecturer. He is the co-author of numerous books that include: “First Things First: A Modern Coursebook on Free Speech Fundamentals” as well as the book “MANIA: The Story of the Outraged and Outrageous Lives That Launched a Cultural Revolution”. Together with David M. Skover he co-authored the book “The People v. Ferlinghetti: The Fight to Publish Allen Ginsberg’s Howl”.

Summer Lopez is PEN America’s Chief Program Officer, Free Expression. She has been with the organization since November 2017 and oversees PEN America’s advocacy, research, and programming in defense of free expression in the U.S. and globally. Lopez has worked to advance democracy and human rights in the nonprofit and government sectors, including for eight years with the U.S. Agency for International Development and three years with The AjA Project, a San Diego-based nonprofit providing participatory media programming for immigrant and refugee youth. She has lived and worked in Zimbabwe, Egypt, Nepal, India, and Ghana, and holds a BA from Harvard University and a master’s in public affairs from the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs.

David Skover is the former Fredric C. Tausend Professor of Law at the Seattle University School of Law. He has taught, wrote, and lectured in the fields of federal constitutional law, federal courts, free speech & the internet, and mass communications theory. He has also taught at Seattle University School of Law and was a visiting professor at the University of Indiana Law School in Bloomington. He has authored numerous books together with Ronald Collins which include: The Trials of Lenny Bruce, Mania: The Story of the Outraged and Outrageous Lives, On Dissent: Its Meaning in America, and of course: “The People v. Ferlinghetti: The Fight to Publish Allen Ginsberg’s Howl.”

Trey Walk is democracy researcher and advocate for Human Rights Watch’s US Program. In this role Trey documents and challenges threats to voting rights, access to truthful information, and civic engagement, and he collaborates with movements working to promote robust multiracial democracy in the United States. He has previously worked with Groundwork Project and served as project manager at the Equal Justice Initiative.

WATCH VIDEO: CITY LIGHTS LIVE! FROM HOWL TO NOW: BOOK BANS IN THE U.S. 2024

‘So to Speak’ podcast on deepfake laws, hate speech, and mask bans

The FIREteam discusses Tim Walz's controversial comments on hate speech and "shouting fire in a crowded theater." We also examine California's AI deepfake laws, the punishment of tenured professors, and mask bans.

Joining us are:

Aaron Terr, ֭'s director of Public Advocacy;

Connor Murnane, ֭'s Campus Advocacy chief of staff; and

Adam Goldstein, ֭'s vice president of strategic initiatives.

WATCH VIDEO: "So to Speak" podcast

More in the news

  • Eugene Volokh, “,” The Volokh Conspiracy (Oct. 14)
  • Anne Herbst, “,” 9News (Oct. 14)
  • Jonathan Turley, “” New York Post (Oct. 14)

2024-2025 SCOTUS term: Free expression and related cases

Cases decided

  • (“The petition for a writ of certiorari is granted. The judgment is vacated, and the case is remanded to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit for further consideration in light of Gonzalez v. Trevino, 602 U. S. (2024) (per curiam).”)

Pending petitions

  •  

Petitions denied

Last FAN

FAN 442: “Seth Berlin: Some further thoughts about K-12 student speech, including the on-campus/off-campus distinction

This article is part of First Amendment News, an editorially independent publication edited by Ronald K. L. Collins and hosted by FIREas part of our mission to educate the public about First Amendment issues. The opinions expressed are those of the article’s author(s) and may not reflect the opinions of FIREor Mr. Collins.

Recent Articles

FIRE’s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Share