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Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School

Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review

2013

First Amendment

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Ask Me No Questions And I’Ll Tell You No Lies: The First Amendments And Falsehoods In Ballot Question Campaigns, Michelle Roberts May 2013

Ask Me No Questions And I’Ll Tell You No Lies: The First Amendments And Falsehoods In Ballot Question Campaigns, Michelle Roberts

Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review

American voters have come to expect exaggeration, distortion, and mudslinging in political campaigns, but do campaigners have a First Amendment right to blatantly lie—to simply make up false statistics and “facts”? A recent appellate court suggests that lying is permissible in initiative and referendum campaigns. However, providing constitutional protection for such statements undermines the most compelling justification for the right to free speech: preservation of enlightened self-government. Voters cannot be expected to govern wisely or in accordance with their consciences when they are subjected to a barrage of lies. The Supreme Court already recognizes discrete areas where free speech rights …