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Federal Court in Kohls v. Bonta, in Striking Down California Deep Fake Law on First Amendment Grounds, Sees Constitutional Path for More Narrowly Tailored Laws Aimed at False Statements About When, Where, and How People Vote
Via Eugene Volokh (who is cited in the court’s opinion), here’s a snippet from Kohls v. Bonta:
AB 2839 regulates a broad spectrum of election-related content that is “materially deceptive” and permits any recipient of this content to sue for general or special damages. Cal. Elec. Code §§ 20012(b)(1), 20012(d). AB 2839 defines “materially deceptive” content as “audio or visual media that is intentionally digitally created or modified, … such that the content would falsely appear to a reasonable person to be an authentic record of the content depicted in the media.” AB 2839 includes exceptions for candidates who make and share deepfake content of themselves and for satire or parody. In both these cases, the content must include a disclaimer that meets AB 2839’s formatting requirements and must state that the content has been digitally manipulated….
The Court finds that AB 2839 discriminates based on content, viewpoint, and speaker and targets constitutionally protected speech.
The Court’s preliminary injunction Order recognized that AB 2839 was likely unconstitutional because it was content-based. By its terms, AB 2839 prohibits “materially deceptive” (defined as content that would falsely appear to a reasonable person to be an authentic record) audio or visual communications that portray a candidate or elected official doing or saying things he or she didn’t do or say and that are likely to harm a candidate’s reputation or electoral prospects. The statute also punishes such altered content that depicts an “elections official” or “voting machine, ballot, voting site, or other property or equipment” that is “reasonably likely” to falsely “undermine confidence” in the outcome of an election contest. As evidenced by the statutory language, AB 2839 facially regulates based on content because the “law applies to particular speech because of the topic” —a political candidate, elected official, elections official, ballot, or voting mechanism. Moreover, it delineates acceptable and unacceptable speech based on its purported truth or falsity meaning that non-materially deceptive content is excluded. See Order at 11.
On top of the content-based distinctions, AB 2839 regulates speech based on viewpoint and speaker. The state law only punishes content that could “harm” a candidate’s electoral prospects or content that could “undermine confidence” in the outcome of an election while leaving positive representations unregulated. In other words, materially deceptive content that helps a candidate or promotes confidence would not be subject to penalty under AB 2839….
Moreover, AB 2839 also engages in speaker-based discrimination because the law imposes different obligations on different speakers depending on who they are. Under AB 2839, candidates posting about themselves, broadcasters, and internet websites are subject to more lenient rules while other speakers, such as Plaintiffs, are categorically barred. Candidates and broadcasters can post “materially deceptive” content as long as they attach disclaimers. Additionally, broadcasters and internet sites are exempt from “general or special damages.” AB 2839 treats different speakers dissimilarly, subjecting certain individuals to stricter rules and other speakers to more lenient rules. All together, these content, viewpoint, and speaker-based distinctions at minimum trigger strict scrutiny….
Attempting to avoid the content, viewpoint, and speaker- based problems with AB 2839, Defendants analogize the statute to narrow categories of historically recognized exceptions to the First Amendment such as defamation or fraud…. However, AB 2839 goes beyond these historical categories. For example, the statute diverges from defamation law because it proscribes content that is merely “reasonably likely” to cause harm, which is speculative and prophylactic rather than remedial or concrete. Moreover, the statute also goes beyond reputational harms to include amorphous harms to the “electoral prospects” of a candidate.
So too do AB 2839’s regulations go beyond the definition of fraud because unlike fraud, AB 2839 does not require reliance or actual injury. See United States v. Alvarez (2012) (Breyer, J., concurring). California responds that falsehoods “meant to deceive viewers and manipulate voters to change their voting behavior” do cause legally cognizable harm, but intent to “deceive and manipulate” alone is not sufficient under Alvarez, which recognized that even knowing falsehoods are constitutionally protected….
Notably, the most significant manner in which AB 2839 goes beyond historically recognized exceptions to the First Amendment is by deputizing a much more expansive category of plaintiffs. Unlike defamation or other tort remedies that limit plaintiffs to persons actually harmed, the category of plaintiffs AB 2839 cognizes is almost boundless because it allows the government as well as any recipient of materially deceptive content to “seek injunctive or other equitable relief.” Plus, these recipients can seek “general or special damages” and “attorney’s fees and costs,” even against a person who merely “republishe[s]” prohibited content. Allowing almost any person to file a complaint creates the “real risk” of malicious lawsuits that could chill protected speech. Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus (2014).
Rather than targeting content that procures tangible harms or materially benefits a speaker, AB 2839 attempts to stifle speech before it occurs or actually harms anyone as long as it is “reasonably likely” to do so and it allows almost anyone to act as a censorship czar….
[S]trict scrutiny is the appropriate standard for a content-based restriction that implicates political expression like AB 2839…. To withstand strict scrutiny, AB 2839 must advance a compelling state interest through the least-restrictive means possible….
While the Court acknowledges that California may have a compelling interest in protecting election integrity, the tools it deploys to achieve its interest must be the least restrictive means of achieving such goal when significant speech issues are at stake. As Plaintiffs argue, the most glaring issue with AB 2839 is that the statute is not narrowly tailored because it captures even constitutional deepfakes and all “materially deceptive content.” The First Amendment does not “permit speech-restrictive measures when the state may remedy the problem by implementing or enforcing laws that do not infringe on speech.” “Because restricting speech should be the government’s tool of last resort, the availability of obvious less-restrictive alternatives renders a speech restriction overinclusive” and unconstitutional.
As the Court previously recognized in its preliminary injunction Order, existing statutory causes of action, including “privacy torts, copyright infringement, or defamation already provide recourse to public figures or private individuals whose reputations may be afflicted by artificially altered depictions peddled by satirists or opportunists on the internet.” Indeed, several other narrower constructions might allow the statute to align with historically recognized First Amendment exceptions. For instance, California could limit AB 2839’s reach to false speech that causes legally cognizable harms like false speech that actually causes voter interference, coercion, or intimidation.
California could also limit the statute’s reach to factual statements that are demonstrably false like the time, date, place, or manner of voting. See generally Eugene Volokh, When are Lies Constitutionally Protected?, 4 J. Free Speech L. 685, 704–09 (2024) (contrasting lies about “election procedures”—an area where a “narrower restriction[] might pose fewer problems” with lies about election campaigns and government officials—areas that should be “categorically immune from liability”).
Another narrower construction might be for California to limit potential plaintiffs to political candidates actually harmed by unprotected false speech, which would mirror defamation law more closely. Plaintiffs also suggest that California could encourage alternatives that are already working in the free market such as fact checking or counter speech.
California could even fund its own AI educational campaigns or form committees on combatting false or deceptive election content. While California’s expert explains that political deepfakes are “sticky” and this type of misinformation spreads too quickly for governments to counteract it, Plaintiffs have offered evidence from their expert that shows fact-checking alternatives like “Community Notes and Grok are already … scalable solutions being adopted” in the real world.. These misinformation flagging tools crowdsource identification and labeling to educate citizens rather than relying on censorship to eradicate potentially misleading content. Thus, California provides no substantial evidence that other less restrictive means of regulating deceptive election content are not feasible or effective….
This point about narrow tailoring is important, and it’s why I’ve thought the current California law is unconstitutional but a narrower law could work. I wrote about the case in my Yale Law Journal piece when the court issued a preliminary injunction, and much more in Cheap Speech on why laws that regulate false statements about when, where or how people vote are constitutional, while broader laws targeting campaign lies are likely not.
Here’s what we wrote in our Mackey amicus brief:
[Limiting Section 241’s reach to false statements about when, where or how people vote] eliminates the concerns raised in Alvarez about regulation of false speech about political campaigns and related matters because Section 241, so construed, only incidentally regulates false speech when it is part of a tortious course of conduct imposing “a legally cognizable harm.” 567 U.S. at 719. Statements about when, where, or how people vote are empirically verifiable, and punishing deliberate lies about voting mechanics and procedures does not raise issues of discretion or interpretation: saying “Democrats vote on Tuesday and Republicans vote on Wednesday,” for example, is easily proven false by reference to earlier-published election materials. It has nothing to do with the kind of contested lies warned of in Alvarez. It requires no judgment todetermine the truth of the statement about the mechanics of voting, compared to, say, an arguably false statement that the last election was “rigged.”
“Millions of dollars in special-election redistricting TV ads scheduled to start airing Tuesday”
Millions of dollars worth of political TV ads are expected to start airing Tuesday in an effort to sway Californians on a November ballot measure seeking to send more Democrats to Congress and counter President Trump and the GOP agenda, according to television airtime purchases.
The special-election ballot measure — Prop. 50 — will likely shape control of the U.S. House of Representatives and determine the fate of many of Trump’s far-right policies.
The opposition to the rare California mid-decade redistricting has booked more than $10 million of airtime for ads between Tuesday and Sept. 23 in media markets across the state, according to media buyers who are not affiliated with either campaign. Supporters of the effort have bought at least $2 million in ads starting on Tuesday, a number expected to grow exponentially as they are aggressively trying to secure time in coming weeks on broadcast and cable television.
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“This early start is a bit stealthy on the part of the no side, but has been used as a ploy in past campaigns to try to show strength early and gain advantage by forcing the opposing side to play catch up,” said Sheri Sadler, a veteran Democratic political media operative who is not working for either campaign. “This promises to be an expensive campaign for a special election, especially starting so early.”
Millions of dollars have already flowed into the nascent campaigns sparring over the Nov. 4 special-election ballot measure that asks voters to set aside the congressional boundaries drawn in 2021 by California’s independent redistricting commission. The panel was created by the state’s voters in 2010 to stop gerrymandering and incumbent protection by both major political parties.
The campaign will be a sprint — glossy multi-page mailers arrived in Californians’ mailboxes before the state Legislature voted in late August to call the special election. Voters will begin receiving mail ballots in early October.
“Do Incumbents Still Enjoy a Financial Advantage? How Individuals Ceased to Advantage Incumbents While Corporate America Continues to Favor Them”
This is an important new study from Andrew C. W. Myers, Maria Silfa, Alexander Fouirnaies,
and Andrew B. Hall.
The paper also illustrates, though it doesn’t emphasize, the role that the rise of donations from individuals — including especially small donors — contributes to polarization. Donors have different motivations. Corporate PACs mainly donate to seek access to officeholders; as a result, they tend to give to incumbents and do so with much less emphasis on ideology. Individual donors, by contrast, are ideologically motivated. I have explored the rise of individual donors and the connection to polarization in my essay, Campaign Finance and Political Polarization.
Here’s the abstract from this new empirical paper:
Incumbents have long enjoyed a substantial fundraising advantage in American elections, but it remains unclear whether this advantage has persisted as elections have become more partisan and nationalized in recent years. Pairing a regression discontinuity design with a comprehensive dataset covering U.S. House, U.S. Senate, gubernatorial, statewide executive, and state legislative elections, we present the first systematic evidence on the evolution of the financial incumbency advantage. Overall, we find that the financial advantage enjoyed by incumbents at all levels of government has declined
25% to 50% over the last decade. This decline, however, is driven entirely by individual donors, and especially small-dollar donors; in contrast, the advantage among corporate PACs has remained stable—or even increased. Taken together, these shifts reveal a campaign finance landscape that is increasingly shaped by partisanship on one side and strategic investment on the other.
And here is part of the abstract from Campaign Finance and Polarization:
In an era I have called “hyperpolarized democracy in America,” delivering effective government has become extremely difficult. Much has been written about various institutional factors that contribute to the rise of polarization. But campaign finance has received minimal attention in these discussions. Most campaign finance discussion focuses on issues of political equality or the risks of political corruption. The failure to focus on the polarizing effects of our privately-financed elections is surprising, because one of the most robust findings in the empirical literature on campaign finance is that donors are much more ideologically extreme than other citizens. Nor has the emergence of small donors in the last several election cycles changed this pattern. Small donors are at least as ideological as large donors, perhaps more so…{This essay} then argues that, once we recognize the relationship between individual donors and polarization, there are implications for the appropriate direction of political reform.
Missouri: “Kehoe calls lawmakers to redraw congressional map, make it harder to amend constitution”
After weeks of internal talks and a pressure campaign by President Donald Trump, Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe on Friday called lawmakers into a special session beginning next week to redraw the state’s congressional maps.
With a long holiday weekend looming, Kehoe issued a press release in the late afternoon to reveal news that along with redistricting, he wants lawmakers to make it harder for residents to alter the state Constitution via the ballot process.
“Today, I am calling on the General Assembly to take action on congressional redistricting and initiative petition reform to ensure our districts and Constitution truly put Missouri values first,” the governor said. “This is about clarity for voters and ownership of our future, and I hope the legislature will work together to pass our Missouri First Map and critically needed IP reform.”
“Lawsuit challenges new proof of citizenship requirement at Ohio BMV for voter registration”
The women’s political organization Red Wine and Blue has sued Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose over changes to the voter registration process at the Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
Thanks to the federal “motor voter” law, car registration agencies around the U.S. have offered voter registration services to applicants since the early 1990s. New state law in Ohio requires applicants provide proof of citizenship before the bureau registers them or updates their registration.
Red Wine and Blue argued the change, passed as part of Ohio’s two-year transportation budget, “makes it harder for lawful, eligible Ohio citizens to exercise their fundamental right to vote.”
“Frank LaRose and Republicans in the state legislature should not be able to disenfranchise anyone,” she continued. “Especially not the rural Ohioans, elderly voters, students, and women who have changed their legal names through marriage and divorce who are disproportionately affected by this legislation.”
In a press release LaRose dismissed the case as a “baseless” and “activist” lawsuit. He added the state of Wyoming instituted similar changes and courts there have already upheld the policy.
“It’s common sense that only U.S. citizens should be on our voter rolls,” LaRose said. “I won’t apologize for, or back down from the work we do to ensure the integrity of our voter rolls.”
“We will win this case,” he insisted, “just like we’ve fought off the other baseless actions that such groups have brought against us.”
At root, the changes shift the burden from state agencies to individuals.
Under prior law, registrants had to attest under penalty of perjury that they are a citizen. Verification then happened behind the scenes with elections officials at the state and local level.