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Thursday, December 21, 2023

TWH Wants Curbs Lifted On Contact With Social Platforms


The Biden Administration is urging the Supreme Court to strike down a lower court injunction that could prevent officials from discussing controversial subjects with personnel at social media platforms.

MediaPost reports the injunction, issued in September by the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, prohibits officials in the White House, Surgeon General's office, Federal Bureau of Investigation and Centers for Disease Control from attempting to “coerce or significantly encourage a platform’s content-moderation decisions.”

The appellate court said when it issued the injunction that federal officials likely violated the First Amendment by pressuring social media platforms to suppress posts about topics including vaccines and COVID-19 and other topics.

The Supreme Court temporarily halted the injunction in September, but hasn't considered whether to more permanently set it aside.


On Tuesday, Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar argued in a written appeal to the Supreme Court that the injunction, if allowed to take effect, “would impose grave harms on the government and the public because it could chill vital governmental communications.”

She also urged the Supreme Court to reject the finding that the administration violated the First Amendment.

“Government officials are and must be free to inform, to persuade, and to criticize,” she wrote.

The solicitor general added that the 5th Circuit's injunction “imposed unprecedented limits on the ability of the president’s closest aides to speak about matters of public concern, on the FBI’s ability to address threats to the Nation’s security, and on CDC’s ability to relay public-health information.”

The dispute dates to last year, when attorneys general in Louisiana and Missouri, and several individuals alleged in that their social media posts relating to COVID-19 policies and vaccines were suppressed due to government pressure. The attorneys general and individuals specifically claimed that federal officials violated the First Amendment by wrongly pressuring tech platforms to “censor disfavored speakers and viewpoints.”

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