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Tuesday, June 26, 2007
Bill Murchison :: Townhall.com Columnist
Free Speech And The Politicians
by Bill Murchison
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Free speech -- which means, to entirely too many self-styled liberals, "speech I agree with" -- won a modest victory this week in the U.S. Supreme Court. A conservative majority of five reminded their four liberal brothers and sisters that the First Amendment to the Constitution encourages us to chatter on till kingdom come.

That's to say (a wonderful word, "say") that trying to limit political speech by law is a goal worthier of dictators than of democrats.

Wisconsin Right to Life, in 2004, had urged that Wisconsin voters urge their U.S. senators -- Russ Feingold and Herb Kohl, Democrats both -- to help end a Democratic filibuster against President Bush's judicial nominees.

Sounds like good ole free speech, yes? Turned out to sound entirely too much like it under provisions of the McCain-Feingold (yes, that Feingold) Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002, signed by George W. Bush. Said provisions of said act ban corporate or union advertising 30 days before a primary or 60 before a general election.

Sen. Feingold's constituents were being urged by Wisconsin Right to Life not to burn crosses on his lawn, not to pelt him with rotten tomatoes whenever he left home. No, just to tell him what they thought. Members of Wisconsin Right to Life -- Feingold constituents all -- wanted their senator's help in unbarricading the confirmation process for judicial nominees of the Bush administration. That was it. Except that McCain-Feingold provided that Wisconsin Right to Life couldn't use Feingold's name in the 30-day window before a primary. Though he had no opponent.

Don't we think that's just a little bit high-handed and undemocratic? The high court majority both thought so and said so, if by another of those pencil-shaving-thick majorities that characterize the top court of a divided nation.

As Chief Justice John Roberts observed, "[T]he First Amendment requires us to err on the side of political speech rather than suppressing it." Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito offered that official reproach to censorship; Justices Clarence Thomas, Antonin Scalia and Anthony Kennedy, while agreeing, allowed that they would have gone further, striking down the whole disputed section of McCain-Feingold telling Americans what to say and how to say it. Continued...

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About The Author
Bill Murchison is a senior columns writer for The Dallas Morning News and author of There's More to Life Than Politics.
 
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McCain
Who said John McCain is respected? I don't know anybody that respects him anymore. The only thing he ever did that was worthy of respect was be a POW.

Question
The first sentence reads: "Free speech -- which means, to entirely too many self-styled liberals, "speech I agree with" -- won a modest victory this week in the U.S. Supreme Court."

First, what is a "self-styled liberal" and how is that different from a regular liberal? Later in the article, Murchison uses the term "so-called liberal". Apparently he has trouble using the term "liberal" by itself, without a negative adjective in front of it.

Second, there are plenty of conservatives who also think that free speech means "speech I agree with". That sentiment is by no means confined to (some) liberals only. (Or maybe I should have written "self-styled liberals" or "so-called liberals" in that sentence.)
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