By: Mark Glennon*
This shouldn’t be hard to understand: If you think government should have the power to censor what it says is false, then you don’t believe in the bedrock of a democratic republic: free speech.
But a group of progressive state attorneys general apparently think government should have that power because that’s exactly what they recently asked the U.S Supreme Court to make the law of the land.
It’s in an amicus brief signed by 23 state attorneys general in what will be a historic case now pending before the Supreme Court on whether the government can bypass the First Amendment using private sector tech platforms as its agents to censor what the government doesn’t like. Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul is among the signers.
The case is Murthy v. Missouri, formerly called Biden v. Missouri.
The Supreme Court “has rarely been faced with a coordinated campaign of this magnitude orchestrated by federal officials that jeopardized a fundamental aspect of American life,” wrote the federal appellate court in its ruling against the government.
In a fitting and splendid gift to America last Independence Day, a federal trial judge issued a 154-page ruling on the case laying out the facts against the government in detail. The evidence of tech manipulation directed by the government was so strong and the matter so important that the judge issued a temporary, sweeping order barring the Biden Administration and the rest of the federal government from most all contact with social media platforms.

The federal appellate court upheld the ruling though it changed the wording of the order.
Now comes the Supreme Court, which will hear the case this spring.
And enter the group of state A.G.s
The government will lose. The lawsuit will not be vacated. The only real issue is on what terms they will lose, which is what the A.G.s should have addressed. The evidence is simply too overwhelming to deny. The Biden Administration, including the FBI and the Centers for Disease Control, strongarmed social media platforms to squelch unfavorable stories and elevate its narrative of the news about the Hunter Biden laptop scandals, Covid, President Biden, election integrity and more. It’s all laid out in the trial court’s ruling. Thousands of pages of evidence showing it are summarized therein. Read the trial court’s memorandum yourself.
In a ruling of such importance and with such broad consequences, however, there’s reasonable disagreement over exactly how to write out what the government must not be allowed to censor.
But the A.G.’s brief doesn’t do that, asking the Supreme Court to throw the case out entirely: Vacate the lower court’s ruling entirely, the brief expressly requests.
Censor away, in other words.
To be specific, this is about stopping the government from skirting its First Amendment obligations by outsourcing censorship to private parties not bound by the First Amendment, like tech platforms, that can censor what they choose if acting on their own.
Government often publishes guidelines and information on foreign travel warnings, cybersecurity threats, scam artists, public health and the like. No problem. But free speech is denied when the government imposes its messaging on private news platforms to suppress competing viewpoints. Those efforts usually travel under the label of combating “misinformation,” hate speech or the like.
The line can be difficult to draw. When does the government wrongly coerce and encourage censorship by tech platforms?
Suppose the FBI “suggests” you censor something. Maybe it would be like saying this, as one of the appellate judges put it perfectly during oral arguments: “That’s a really nice social media platform you got there – it would be a shame if something happened to it.”
The appellate court drew the line between harmless government guidance and unconstitutional strongarming by issuing an order saying this:
The appellate court Defendants, and their employees and agents, shall take no actions, formal or informal, directly or indirectly, to coerce or significantly encourage social-media companies to remove, delete, suppress, or reduce, including through altering their algorithms, posted social-media content containing protected free speech. That includes, but is not limited to, compelling the platforms to act, such as by intimating that some form of punishment will follow a failure to comply with any request, or supervising, directing, or otherwise meaningfully controlling the social-media companies’ decision-making processes.
It reached that conclusion based after a long analysis in its opinion of court precedent, logic and practicality. That temporary order was put on hold by the Supreme Court pending its review, but it’s all but certain to be made permanent in some fashion, the appellate court concluded, and that’s surely true – subject only to whatever adjustments the Supreme Court sees fit.

How does the A.G.s’ brief justify throwing out the case entirely, disregarding rafts of evidence and precedent?
It doesn’t.
It resorts to red herrings, first with a big list of ways government publishes routine guidance that should be permissible on matters that nobody has a problem with.
When it comes to what’s at issue – actually censoring what the government doesn’t like – Raoul’s brief claims the appellate court ruled that the mere existence of government amounts to coercion, and that it relied on a vague “entanglement” standard about government involvement with tech companies.
Those, too, are red herrings. Those factors had little role in the appellate court’s ruling. Insofar as they were part of the analysis and should be downplayed, fine, tweak the ruling to fix that. The A.G.s might plausibly have argued for the Supreme Court to do that.
Instead, they asked the Supreme Court to throw out the whole lawsuit.
That result would gut free speech and lobotomize democracy.

For a more scholarly summary of the First Amendment infractions in Raoul’s brief, see the recent column here by my brother, Mike, a law professor. Better yet, read his new book on the full subject of the modern assault on free speech: Free Speech and Turbulent Freedom: The Dangerous Allure of Censorship in the Digital Era.
Illinois is among the worst offenders in that modern allure of censorship. Its long train of abuse and usurpations is often flagrant, listed in the columns linked below. Making that assault on free speech more terrifying is the abandonment by most media of its traditional role defending free speech. You will find little if anything in Illinois legacy media on the matters in that list.
Above all, know this: Your rights include the right to hear. The right to hear what the government doesn’t want you to hear is a corollary of your First Amendment right to free speech, as the courts long ago ruled. It’s that right to hear that is being stolen from you, and that right is directly at issue in Murthy v. Missouri.
That right was not given to you by anybody in any level of government. Give it up and you’ve given up your democratic republic.
*Mark Glennon is founder of Wirepoints.
The column was updated to show the number of attorneys general signing the brief as 23.
Illinois’ recent, long train of free speech abuses:
- Illinois Attorney General cries uncle in free speech case but tries to hide it
- With no introspection but statism and taxes galore, Illinois journalism task force delivers its report surrenders in free speech case, but tries to hide it
- Scorching court opinion posted: Federal judge ridicules ‘stupid’ Illinois abortion ‘misinformation’ law and Attorney General Raoul
- Illinois ‘anti-doxing’ bill becomes law – the latest attack on free speech
- Illinois delegated control over its ‘ban on book bans’ to an organization now run by a self-described Marxist
- Illinois’ new ban on book bans is an empty and hypocritical stunt
- Woke cancel culture’s new low: Chicago native Glenn Loury’s podcast banned by YouTube as ‘hate speech’
- Gov. JB Pritzker’s new assault on free speech
- Response by Illinois progressives to Friday’s Supreme Court rulings was shameful, irresponsible and dishonest
- Hypocrisy unbridled as Pritzker claims opposition to ‘book banning’ will make Illinois a destination state
- Universities better get ahead of surging anti-woke backlash. The University of Illinois should go first.
- Chicago Tribune and Sun-Times suppress news of national scandals
- Two ‘Compelled Speech’ Matters Beg For Litigation In Illinois
- Chicago Fed’s Woke Enemy Of Free Speech Heading For Promotion To Federal Reserve Board
- Money talks: Donors show the path to restoring freedom of thought and speech in higher education
- The Illinois Attorney General Should Join This Historic, Critical Lawsuit — Missouri v. Biden
- Tech Censorship Hits Illinois: Center Square Tweets Blocked
- Illinois Senators Durbin and Duckworth Are Among The Book Burners Happy With Big Tech Censorship
- The Capitol Building, Illinois And The Suppression Of Political Dissent
- An important lesson from Chicago on confronting the enemies of free speech
- Buzz Off, Attorney General Garland. Furious School Parents Will Not Be Silenced
- The battle between free speech and censorship takes center stage in Illinois and across the country – Podcast
- On This Independence Day, Commit Never to Kneel Before the Tyranny
Audio and summary
A largely unasked question is becoming glaring: Is Illinois doing all it should to use artificial intelligence to make government cost less and work better? So far, the evidence says no.
Audio and summary
Great piece Mark!! their whole amicus brief stinks of–its only ELITIST progressive types that are entitled to know what TRUTH is and are therefore righteously empowered to disseminate it to ignorant masses.
I like when Micheal G writes:
I can’t think of a greater threat to democracy.
The supreme court was all we had, I’m afraid we don’t have it anymore. I think the members of the court are afraid if they don’t agree with anything having to do with by Biden, they will pack the court and take away the powers of the majority (Republicans). it’s not looking to me that Republicans on the court have the guts to stand up for themselves and country. Fear has no place on the Supreme Court.
All we had? What are you talking about? Everybody is against censorship. The Supreme Court hasn’t made a decision yet.
Look at the latest decisions they’ve made. I just reviewed them again. I’m just saying don’t be surprised when they do make a decision on this and many other cases. And NO, everybody IS NOT against censorship. Try watching MSNBC and CNN every now and then.
Unfortunately, Dave, you are badly mistaken saying “everybody is against censorship.” 55% want more government censorship of false information. Even on the right, 39% support that. Our stand against censorship, I am sad to say, is among the very few issues where Wirepoints is not in agreement with the general public. https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2023/07/20/most-americans-favor-restrictions-on-false-information-violent-content-online/#:~:text=Support%20for%20both%20technology%20companies,2018%20to%2055%25%20in%202023.
The good news is that I think Marie is wrong, too. I am highly confident the Supreme Court will rule against the government.
That’s a terrible poll with a misleading title. “Americans favoring restrictions on false information, violent content online” doesn’t necessarily equate to censorship of political speech. In the questions, they used “EXTREMELY VIOLENT,” not violent content as the title implies. The extremely violent questions precede the false content questions and can easily prime and skew the results, depending on situational factors. Take note that they wrote false content in the web page title first for exactly this reason. Linking extremely violent with false content can cause all sorts of strange poll results. Some jurisdictions purposely restrict legislative bills with multiple subjects… Read more »
I never said the Supreme Court would NOT rule against the government. I’m just saying don’t be surprised.
Fair enough.
Senate Majority Leader Democrat Schumer publicly threatened the SCOTUS if ‘they didn’t go along’ Biden and Democrats have everyone under the threat of FBI/ DOJ Stasi prosecution. Only PDJT has been fighting them.
At least 60% of America disproves of Biden. I’m not sure where you got Trump’s the only one. Entire football stadiums jeer Biden in unison.
A large contingent of women, blacks, Hispanics, Government employees and the ever growing free stuff army supports Biden…and that’s a lot of votes.
This is true. But will you act shocked when Biden wins 3 important swing states by 40,000 votes again?
Should this fail Pritzker has a backup plan as far as Illinois is concerned. The push for taxpayer subsidies to the print media is sure to have the media toeing Pritzker’s line.
Pritzker, is that you?
Raoul has always performed as an AA hire is expected to. When he’s not filing lawsuits he openly admitted were frivolous and unwinnable ( gaining the ire of the judge) he’s in other states telling them how to run their business re trans rights, etc. His Safe T Act and it’s lame premise ( “too many poc in jail “) will come back to haunt him when the bodies are tallied after a full year of implementation, a tally you can bet won’t come from any local media. Frankly, I feel he’s on a par with that Slaughter stooge that… Read more »
The goal was always to transform the budget of the AG’s office into a partisan Lawfare organization on behalf of the Democrat Party.
The Republicans have kind of done this too, with the AGs of TX, MO and TN filing the same sorts of briefs. But the Democrats have taken it to another level, by completely abandoning any pretense of supporting the people of IL, and the instead use the $$$$$ and power of state AG’s office to affect progressive legal policies throughout the country.
A very very dangerous individual, doing what his overlord in Springfield tell’s him what to do no other reason or explanation as to why.
The Robert’s SCOTUS has been tossed a lazy bowl of applesauce. Let’s see how Robert’s twists this one – that’s the only hope of the Leftist AG’s, just like with ‘Obamacare’. A normal SCOTUS would have refused this Leftist claptrap.
Dumb as a brick diversity hire of the century, the gene pool is definitely going lower when it comes to this clown
Thanks for this! I really appreciate it! I’ve studied censorship in times of crisis all the way back to WWI. Even Byron Price, WWII U.S. Director of Censorship, understood that the only limited purpose censorship could serve in a free country was to prevent military secrets from reaching the enemy. He understood enlightenment principles very well and that individuals are ultimately the best judges of the truth. Price also understood that preventing leaks ultimately rested on individuals. He understood that censorship abuse would eventually destroy a voluntary and contributory system and the whole program would collapse. “Least said, soonest mended,”… Read more »
How many republican attorneys general signed that brief to the Supreme Court ? Just another example of the democrats trying to copy their favorite idol, Josef Stalin
Like the migration invasion. This too is part of the globalist plan for authoritarian government everywhere. America will be the hardest, that is why our military will need to be replaced by a military with no love for American values. At Davos they said this part out loud, that they are losing grip of controlling the media, basically that it will be harder to propagandize. The plan is all about resources, things of real value and wealth, gold, mining, industrial capacity, highly educated populations, etc. not about what America currently calls “wealth” which is really just selling money and debt.… Read more »