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No First Amendment Exception for Professional-Client Speech: States Can't Ban "Conversion Therapy" Speech for MinorsFrom Justice Gorsuch's opinion for a nearly unanimous Court today in Chiles v. Salazar (only Justice Jackson dissented):
The Court held that the law was an unconstitutional viewpoint-based restriction on the counselors' speech, and in the process held that there's no general First Amendment exception for professional-client speech:
I'll be posting more on another facet of the majority opinion—the conclusion that the law here should be seen as a speech restriction, not a conduct restriction—as well as on Justice Kagan's concurrence (joined by Justice Sotomayor) and on Justice Jackson's dissent. James A. Campbell (Alliance Defending Freedom) argued on behalf of Chiles; Hashim Mooppan of the Solicitor General's Office argued on behalf of the federal government as amicus. The post No First Amendment Exception for Professional-Client Speech: States Can't Ban "Conversion Therapy" Speech for Minors appeared first on Reason.com. |
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