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First Amendment

Commercial speech

UF Law Faculty Publications

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Speech V. Conduct, Surcharges V. Discounts: Testing The Limits Of The First Amendment And Statutory Construction In The Growing Credit Card Quagmire, Clay Calvert, Rich Shumate, Stephanie Mcneff, Stephenson Waters Jan 2017

Speech V. Conduct, Surcharges V. Discounts: Testing The Limits Of The First Amendment And Statutory Construction In The Growing Credit Card Quagmire, Clay Calvert, Rich Shumate, Stephanie Mcneff, Stephenson Waters

UF Law Faculty Publications

This article examines First Amendment speech concerns and related issues of statutory construction raised by anti-surcharge statutes that prohibit merchants from imposing "surcharges" on credit card purchases, but allow them to offer "discounts" to cash-paying customers. The article uses the split of authority created by the November 2015 opinion of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit in Dana's Railroad Supply v. Florida and the September 2015 decision by the Second Circuit in Expressions Hair Design v. Schneiderman as a timely springboard for analyzing these issues. In September 2016, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear Expressions Hair …


Underinclusivity And The First Amendment: The Legislative Right To Nibble At Problems After Williams-Yulee, Clay Calvert Jan 2016

Underinclusivity And The First Amendment: The Legislative Right To Nibble At Problems After Williams-Yulee, Clay Calvert

UF Law Faculty Publications

Using the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2015 opinion in Williams-Yulee v. Florida Bar as an analytical springboard, this Article examines the slipperiness — and sometimes fatalness — of the underinclusiveness doctrine in First Amendment free-speech jurisprudence. The doctrine allows lawmakers, at least in some instances, to take incremental, step-by-step measures to address harms caused by speech, rather than requiring an all-out, blanket-coverage approach. Yet, if the legislative tack taken is too small to ameliorate the harm that animates a state’s alleged regulatory interest, it could doom the statute for failing to directly advance it. In brief, the doctrine of underinclusivity requires …