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d-32566House OversightOther

Constitutional analysis of First Amendment scope and incorporation doctrine

The document is a scholarly discussion of constitutional interpretation with no specific allegations, names, transactions, or actionable leads involving powerful actors. It offers no novel or controve Explains how the 14th Amendment incorporated the First Amendment to apply to states. Argues that modern jurisprudence extends free‑speech protections to all branches of government. Discusses Justice

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #017174
Pages
1
Persons
6
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The document is a scholarly discussion of constitutional interpretation with no specific allegations, names, transactions, or actionable leads involving powerful actors. It offers no novel or controve Explains how the 14th Amendment incorporated the First Amendment to apply to states. Argues that modern jurisprudence extends free‑speech protections to all branches of government. Discusses Justice

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first-amendmentlegal-theoryhouse-oversightconstitutional-law

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
4.2.12 WC: 191694 declaration protecting the right of free speech from abridgment by any government. For example: “the freedom of speech shall not be abridged by Congress or by the states.” Indeed, many scholars and judges believe that this was accomplished three quarters of a century later when the 14" Amendment was ratified. It provides in relevant part: “nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” The current judicial view is that the words in the 14 Amendment “incorporated” the First Amendment (along with most but not all of the others) and applied it to the states. According to this view, the First Amendment now reads, in effect, as follows: “Congress and the state legislatures shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech.” Actually, it now reads even more broadly, since the courts have not limited the prohibitions of the First Amendment to the legislative branches, but have extended them to the executive and judicial branches—to any governmental action—as well. So the First Amendment now reads, in effect, as follows: “Congress and the state legislatures, as well as the executive and judicial branches of the federal and state governments, shall make no law and shall take no executive or judicial action abridging the freedom of speech.” Thus the first major change—from “Congress” to “government’”—has considerably expanded the meaning of the First Amendment and broadened the right to free speech. The second change has narrowed the right, at least as literally written, by excising the word “no” as in “no law.” The words “no law’”—an absolute prohibition on all legislation abridging any speech—are somewhat understandable if limited to Congress. A democracy can survive if the national legislature has absolutely no power to abridge speech of any kind, no matter how dangerous or harmful, so long as the state legislatures can pick up the slack and enact what all reasonable people would agree are essential limitations on some forms of expression, such as disclosing the names of spies, the locations or warships, the plans for battle, the nature of secret weapons and other matters that must be kept from enemies.*’ But the words “no law” make little sense when applied both to the federal and state legislatures, indeed to all governmental bodies, because there really is no rational case to be made for a total and absolute prohibition by any and all governmental institutions on any and all abridgment of any and all possible utterances. Even those, such as Justice Hugo Black, who purport to be absolutist for the protection of all speech, have figured out ways to finesse the problem. Consider the case of Cohen v. the United States in which an opponent of the Viet Nam War wore to court a jacket displaying the words “Fuck the draft.” Justice Black joined a dissenting opinion that would have affirmed Cohen’s °7 Interestingly, it is the National Congress, rather than the states, that should have the power to protect the national security interests of our nation, but many of the exceptions to an absolute right of speech, that were recognized at the time the First Amendment was ratified, were matters of state concern, such as defamation laws, obscenity laws and blasphemy laws. 87

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