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Day 100! Abridging the First Amendment: Zick releases major resource report on Trump鈥檚 executive orders 鈥 First Amendment News 468聽

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First Amendment News is a weekly blog and newsletter about free expression issues by Ronald K. L. Collins. It is editorially independent from 果冻传媒app官方.

鈥淯nder my watch, the partisan weaponization of the Department of Justice will end. America must have one tier of justice for all.鈥 鈥 Pamela Bondi ( for U.S. attorney general, Jan. 15, 2025)

鈥淎fter years and years of illegal and unconstitutional federal efforts to restrict free expression, I will also sign an executive order to immediately stop all government censorship and bring back free speech to America.鈥 鈥 Donald J. Trump (Jan. 20, 2025, )

鈥淕overnment censorship of speech is intolerable in a free society.鈥 鈥 Donald J. Trump (Jan. 20, 2025, )

So many lies, so many orders, so much suppression. The 鈥渇lood鈥 of free expression abridgments continues to be dizzying and depressing. 

Unprecedented! That is the word for this new form of silencing that is spreading like a deadly cancer.

The rules of the past cease to be honored. Retribution has replaced righteousness. Fear triumphs over courage. A one-party-led Congress has abdicated its authority. Judicial review is derided. And our system of justice as constituted is unable to adequately address the wrongs perpetuated by an authoritarian figure aided by his confederates. A blitzkrieg takeover of the federal government seeks to vest unchecked power in the Executive while normalizing suppression on the vile pretense of advancing free speech and equality 鈥 a page right out of Orwell鈥檚 鈥1984.鈥

In some respects, we are witnessing what constitutes a threat perhaps as great as the Sedition Act of 1798, the Civil War actions taken by Lincoln, and the World War I, Cold War, and Vietnam War abridgments of free speech. Nonetheless, the number and frequency of such abridgments make it difficult to comprehend the cumulative gravity of this threat to our First Amendment freedoms.

Within the Trump administration鈥檚 first 100 days, the government has ushered in a new era of direct and indirect suppression of speech. Meanwhile, cases are being litigated, individuals and institutions are being silenced, books banned, 鈥渟ettlements鈥 coerced, scientific research squelched, history erased, while lower court rulings struggle to be relevant. And all of this, in its many forms, has occurred in the absence of any near-final resolution by the Supreme Court, as if that too might be slighted someday soon.

We are beyond any 鈥渢here are evils on both sides鈥 mentality, much as we were beyond it in 1798. Recall that while John Adams, the lawyer, championed free speech in his writings, he later backed the Alien and Sedition Acts as 鈥渢he Federalist鈥 president. 

Calling out tyranny is not partisan; it is American! And yet, many are relatively detached, silent, and clueless.

罢谤耻尘辫鈥檚&苍产蝉辫; have taxed the American mind to such an extent that few can barely, if at all, remember yesterday鈥檚 free speech abridgments let alone those of last week or last month. The result: who remembers all of the trees leveled not to mention any big picture of the forest devastated in the process? What to do?

Enter 鈥淔irst Amendment Watch鈥 and the Zick Resource Report 

Thanks to Professor Stephen Solomon and Susanna Granieri over at  (FAW), there is a meaningful way to begin to get a conceptual hold on what has occurred within the first 100 days of the Trump administration and its attacks on free speech.

Happily, FAW today released what is surely the most important First Amendment resource documenting the numerous First Amendment abridgments committed by the Trump administration within its first 100 days. This invaluable resource was prepared by Professor . 

Timothy Zick William and Mary Law School
Professor Timothy Zick

Though the full resource repository is available over at , its table of contents is reproduced below:

Introduction by Timothy Zick

I. First Amendment-Related Executive Orders and Memoranda 

A. Freedom of Speech and Censorship
B. Foreign Terrorism and National Security
C. Law Firms
D. Retribution Against Former Government Officials
E. Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
F. Gender and Gender Identity
G. K-12 Education
H. Museums, Libraries, and Public Broadcasting
I. Political Donations
J. University Accreditors 

II. First Amendment-Related Litigation

A. Lawsuits Challenging Executive Orders, Guidance, and Policies

1. Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
2. Immigration 
3. Educational Funding
4. Law Firms
5. Gender and Gender Identity
6. Data and Scientific Inquiry
7. Libraries and Museums
8. Public Broadcasting

B. Retaliatory Dismissal and Other Employment Lawsuits
C. Lawsuits Filed by Media and Journalists
D. Defamation and Other Civil Lawsuits Filed By Donald Trump

III. Commentary and Analysis

A. Actions Against the Press and Journalists
B. Defamation and Other Civil Lawsuits
C. Broadcast Media
D. Social Media
E. Education 

1. DEI Programming and Initiatives
2. Antisemitism Investigations and Demands
3. Academic Freedom
4. K-12 Curriculum

F. Immigration Enforcement 

1. International 果冻传媒app官方
2. Foreign Scholars
3. Immigration Activism

G. Public Employees
H. Private Sector

1. Law Firms
2. Individual Critics and Enemies

I. Transparency, Data, and Information

1. Data, Information, and Scientific Research
2. Museums and Libraries
3. Public Broadcasting
4. Misinformation and Disinformation
5. 鈥淒OGE鈥 and Transparency

J. Grants and Funding
K. Protests and Demonstrations

1. Campus Protests
2. Public Protests

L. Governmental Orthodoxy

1. Race and DEI
2. Gender and Gender Identity
3. History and Patriotism

M. Retribution and Chilling Speech
N. Investigations
O. The Bigger Picture
P. Tracking All Trump 2.0 Lawsuit

Related

  • Grace Abels, 鈥,鈥 PolitiFact (April 29)

Coming Next Week

The next installment of Professor Timothy Zick鈥檚 ongoing posts is titled
鈥淓xecutive Orders and Official Orthodoxies.鈥


Justice Department to go after reporters鈥 records in government leak cases

Senate Judiciary Committee considers the nomination of Pamela Bondi for Attorney General
Senate Judiciary Committee considers the nomination of Pamela Bondi for Attorney General on Jan. 15, 2025. (Maxim Elramsisy / Shutterstock.com)
  • 鈥,鈥 Associated Press / First Amendment Watch (April 28)

The Justice Department is cracking down on leaks of information to the news media, with  saying prosecutors will once again have authority to use subpoenas, court orders and search warrants to hunt for government officials who make 鈥渦nauthorized disclosures鈥 to journalists.

New regulations announced by Bondi in a memo to the staff obtained by The Associated Press on Friday rescind  from having their phone records secretly seized during leak investigations 鈥 a practice long decried by news organizations and press freedom groups.

The new regulations assert that news organizations must respond to subpoenas 鈥渨hen authorized at the appropriate level of the Department of Justice鈥 and also allow for prosecutors to use court orders and search warrants to 鈥渃ompel production of information and testimony by and relating to the news media.鈥

The memo says members of the press are 鈥減resumptively entitled to advance notice of such investigative activities,鈥 and subpoenas are to be 鈥渘arrowly drawn.鈥 Warrants must also include 鈥減rotocols designed to limit the scope of intrusion into potentially protected materials or newsgathering activities,鈥 the memo states.

Former FCC Chairs attack FCC鈥檚 attack on First Amendment principles

Mobile phone with seal of US agency Federal Communications Commission FCC on screen in front of web page
(T. Schneider / Shutterstock.com)
  • Tom Wheeler and Al Sikes, 鈥,鈥 Newsweek (April 28)

As former chairmen of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) 鈥 one appointed by a Democrat, the other by a Republican 鈥 we have seen firsthand how the agency operates when it is guided by its mission to uphold the public interest. But in just over two months, President Donald Trump and his handpicked FCC Chair Brendan Carr have upended 90 years of precedent and congressional mandates to transform the agency into a blatantly partisan tool. Instead of acting as an independent regulator, the agency is being weaponized for political retribution under the guise of protecting the First Amendment.

Their actions fall into two categories. First, the president used executive orders (EOs) to strip the agency of its independence, making it subservient to the White House. Second, the chairman has exploited the commission's powers to undermine the very First Amendment rights it is supposed to uphold.

Mchangama on the 鈥楴ew McCarthyism鈥

Jacob Mchangama in 2024
Jacob Mchangama

Despite being Danish, I鈥檝e always found America鈥檚 civil-libertarian free speech tradition more appealing than the Old World鈥檚 model, with its vague terms and conditions. For much of my career, I鈥檝e been evangelizing a First Amendment approach to free speech to skeptical Europeans and doubtful Americans, who are often tempted by laws banning 鈥渉ate speech,鈥 鈥渆xtremism,鈥 and 鈥渄isinformation.鈥 That appreciation for the First Amendment is something I share with many foreigners 鈥 Germans, Iranians, Russians 鈥 who now call America home.

[ . . . ]

It鈥檚 now clear that the government is targeting noncitizens for ideas and speech protected by the First Amendment. The most worrying example (so far) is a Turkish student at Tufts University, apparently targeted for co-authoring a student op-ed calling for, among other things, Tufts to divest from companies with ties to Israel. One report estimates that nearly 300 students from universities across the country have had their visas revoked so far.

Instead of correcting this overreach, the government has doubled down. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services recently announced that it would begin screening the social media posts of aliens 鈥渨hose posts indicate support for antisemitic terrorism, antisemitic terrorist organizations, or other antisemitic activity.鈥 Shortly after, the X account of USCIS posted about a 鈥渞obust social media vetting program鈥 and warned: 鈥淓VERYONE should be on notice. If you鈥檙e a guest in our country 鈥 act like it.鈥 And four days later, White House homeland security adviser Stephen Miller promised to deport 鈥渁nyone who preaches hate for America.鈥 What that means is anybody鈥檚 guess 鈥 and seems to depend entirely on subjective assessments.

[ . . . ]

Had America been known for deporting, rather than welcoming, dissent, I would never have made it my home. That might not have been much of a loss. But consider this: 35 percent of U.S.-affiliated academic Nobel laureates are immigrants, and nearly half of all American unicorn startups have founders born outside the country. How many of these brilliant minds would have chosen the United States if they risked exile for crossing the speech red lines of the moment?

As a European who owes my freedom in life thus far to the America that fought Nazism and defeated communism, I feel a responsibility to speak out when this country strays from its founding ideals. I came to America for its freedom, not just to enjoy it, but to defend it 鈥 even if that puts me at risk.

Related

New scholarly article on commencement speaker provocateurs

  • Duncan Hosie, 鈥,鈥 William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal (2025)

This Article explores an untheorized area of First Amendment doctrine: students鈥 graduation speeches at public universities or private universities that embrace free speech principles, either by state statute, state constitutional law, or internal policy. Responding to recent graduation speech controversies, it develops a two-tier theory that reconciles a multiplicity of values, including students鈥 expressive interests, universities鈥 institutional interests in curating commencement ceremonies and preventing reputational damage, and the interests of captive audiences in avoiding speech they deem offensive or profane. 

The Article challenges the prevailing view that university students鈥 graduation speeches implicate individual First Amendment rights. It develops a site-specific understanding of the ritualistic sociology of the university commencement speech, which the Article argues is firmly within the managerial purview of the university. But it also argues that heavy-handed administrative regulation of student graduation speeches has the potential to undermine the academic freedom of students and professors.

Reflecting on the history of the university commencement speech in the American intellectual tradition, it urges university administrators to exercise their authority to regulate speeches through transparent standards, a longitudinal view, and collaborative negotiation with student speakers.

It concludes by discussing the conceptual dangers of turning the First Amendment into a metonym for every instance of speech abridgment within a managerial sphere.

鈥楽o to Speak鈥 podcast: Rabban and Chemerinsky on academic freedom

Our guests today signed onto a statement by a group of 18 law professors who opposed the Trump administration's funding threats at Columbia on free speech and academic freedom grounds.

Since then, Northwestern, Cornell, Princeton, Harvard, and nearly 60 other colleges and universities are under investigation with their funding hanging in the balance, allegedly for violations of civil rights law.

To help us understand the funding threats, Harvard's recent lawsuit against the federal government, and where universities go from here are:

  •  鈥 distinguished teaching professor at The University of Texas at Austin School of Law
  •  鈥 distinguished professor of law and dean at UC Berkeley Law.

More in the news

2024-2025 SCOTUS term: Free expression and related cases

Cases decided

  •  (Petition granted. Judgment vacated and case remanded for further consideration in light of Gonzalez v. Trevino, 602 U. S. ___ (2024) (per curiam))
  •  (鈥淭he petition for a writ of certiorari is granted. The judgment is vacated, and the case is remanded to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit for further consideration in light of Gonzalez v. Trevino, 602 U. S. ___ (2024) (per curiam).鈥)
  • (9-0: The challenged provisions of the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act do not violate petitioners鈥 First Amendment rights.)

Review granted

  • (argued Jan. 15)
  • (argued Jan. 10)
  • (argued Jan. 10)

Pending petitions

Petitions denied

Emergency Applications

  • (Kavanaugh, J., 鈥淚T IS  that the March 14, 2025 order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, case No. 2:24-cv-1401, is hereby stayed pending further order of the undersigned or of the Court. It is further ordered that a response to the application be filed on or before Wednesday, April 16, 2025, by 5 p.m. (EDT).鈥)

Free speech related

  • (argued April 22 / free exercise case: issue: Whether public schools burden parents鈥 religious exercise when they compel elementary school children to participate in instruction on gender and sexuality against their parents鈥 religious convictions and without notice or opportunity to opt out.)
  • (decided: 3-21-25/ 9-0 w special concurrences by Alito and Jackson) (interpretation of 18 U. S. C. 搂1014 re 鈥渇alse statements鈥)

Last scheduled FAN

FAN 467: 鈥Thankfully: Larry David mocks Bill Maher

This article is part of First Amendment News, an editorially independent publication edited by Ronald K. L. Collins and hosted by FIREas part of our mission to educate the public about First Amendment issues. The opinions expressed are those of the article鈥檚 author(s) and may not reflect the opinions of FIREor Mr. Collins.

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