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Lawyered Up

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“The first thing we do,” declaims Dick the butcher, “let’s kill all the lawyers.”

Last night, as I dined with attorneys David Langdon and Joshua Bolinger, in town representing the Susan B. Anthony List and the Coalition Opposed to Additional Spending and Taxes before the U.S. Supreme Court today, echoes of Henry VI could be heard amongst the clinking of glasses, the “dead lawyer” jokes, and other minor eruptions of mirth. Shoring up for the big case, you see.

Susan B. Anthony List v. Steven Driehaus involves an Ohio law designating it a crime to knowingly or recklessly make a false statement about a political candidate or ballot measure.

But who is to determine what is false or true in the heat of a campaign?

A government board? 

Well, yes. Funny you should ask.

Back in 2010, the Susan B. Anthony List began publicizing that various members of Congress, including Ohio Congressman Steve Driehaus, had voted for federal funding of abortion when they voted for Obamacare. The group planned billboards, to read: “Shame on Steve Driehaus! Driehaus voted FOR taxpayer-​funded abortion.”

Driehaus quickly filed a complaint with the Ohio Elections Commission (OEC). While people of good will can honestly disagree as to the “truthiness” of the charge (as an amusing amicus brief filed by the Cato institute dubbed it), the OEC decided there was probable cause to prosecute the Susan B. Anthony List.

So the billboard company refused the group’s ads. The Coalition Opposed to Additional Spending and Taxes also dropped their plans to similarly publicize Driehaus’s record.

Ohio Attorney General Michael DeWine has admitted harboring “serious concerns” about the constitutionality of the Ohio law. However, today’s issue before the High Court isn’t the policing of campaign speech itself, but whether these groups have standing to challenge the law.

Both issues should be 9 – 0 decisions.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

3 replies on “Lawyered Up”

Apparently the two defendants did not understand that they can freely speak in any manner supportive of those currently in power.
Let us pray that this restriction on free speech, indeed political free speech, is recognized as absolutely unconstitutional.

Government board? Of course not. Jury? Yes, indeed.

There should be no need for the Ohio law. Our libel and slander laws should cover this kind of thing, but for some reason, the courts have decided that there can be no libel or slander if you’re a political candidate. I was taught that it was merely a looser standard, but obviously, every citizen’s right of protection from false and defaming statements is stripped from them the second they run for office.

Let’s see. If you lie in order to steal someone’s money, that’s fraud, a felony. But if you lies to steal government power, that’s your right!

The problem, of course, is the danger of a jury finding wrongly. Guess what? That’s a risk in every trial. Deal with it. Secondly, there’s an absolute protection for all candidates. Just tell the truth without skirting the line.

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