I'm indebted to Trump Litigation Seminar student Kevin Burchill, who timely unearthed this interview with the late Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Antonin Scalia by journalist and journalism professor Marvin Kalb. From the cue linked below (at 21:42, for six or so minutes), they discuss New York Times v. Sullivan (U.S. 1964).
Nonetheless a First Amendment advocate, I have long shared Justice Scalia's unpopular position that Sullivan was incorrectly decided. I don't contend that the newspaper should have lost. In the civil rights context in which the case arose, Sullivan played a critical role in relieving segregationists of state tort law as a weapon. However, there were many paths to that outcome that did not require the wholesale federalization and constitutionalization of state defamation torts.
The consequences, as suggested even by chapter 19 ("Back to the Drawing Board?") of Anthony Lewis's classic 1991 panegyric and case biography, Make No Law, have been disastrous, because Sullivan undermined the laboratory of common law experimentation in the states. Today, for example, the "public interest" approach to public-figure defamation in the UK Defamation Act shows great promise as a model to balance the rights of reputation and free speech. And other countries, such as Australia, seem to be getting along well with much more limited Sullivan-like protection for free speech on public affairs, without the big sky of democracy collapsing across the outback. Yet we in the United States remain tethered to a near-immunity doctrine born of a bygone era.
RBG (Kalb Report) |
What if, say, new technology caused mass media entry barriers to fall? And then we had a proliferation of partisan pundits, or even disinformation, pouring through our information flows? If Sullivan were then not up to the job, we might find our hands tied by unyielding constitutional cable. We might flail, helpless, in trying to restore integrity to the democratic space.
Perish the thought.
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