first amendment

'Things have changed': GOP senator suggests First Amendment no longer 'the ultimate right'

One Republican member of the U.S. Senate is now hinting that she may be in support of curbing First Amendment rights in the future, given the current political climate.

Semafor recently reported that Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.) is adjusting her attitude toward the First Amendment (which guarantees freedoms of speech, press, assembly, religion and petition) in the wake of the murder of MAGA activist Charlie Kirk last week. Lummis said Federal Communications Commission (FCC) chairman Brendan Carr was justified in threatening to revoke the broadcast licenses of ABC stations that continued to air late night host Jimmy Kimmel's show (after Kimmel's Monday night monologue accusing "the MAGA gang" of trying to "score political points" from Kirk's death).

"An FCC license, it’s not a right. It really is a privilege," Lummis told Semafor.

"Under normal times, in normal circumstances, I tend to think that the First Amendment should always be sort of the ultimate right. And that there should be almost no checks and balances on it," she continued. "I don't feel that way anymore."

“I feel like something’s changed culturally. And I think that there needs to be some cognizance that things have changed,” the Wyoming Republican added. “We just can’t let people call each other those kinds of insane things and then be surprised when politicians get shot and the death threats they are receiving and then trying to get extra money for security.”

After Carr said that ABC stations could do things "the easy way or the hard way" over their FCC licenses, media conglomerate Nexstar announced it would preempt Kimmel's show with other content. Their statement was followed almost immediately by ABC saying Kimmel would be off the air "indefinitely." ABC's action has been widely condemned by both political commentators along with CBS late night host Stephen Colbert and even former Disney CEO Michael Eisner.

Nexstar is currently seeking FCC approval to acquire competitor Tegna, which would expand its reach to approximately 80 percent of U.S. households if approved.

Click here to read Semafor's report in full.




'Extortionate': Legal expert shreds Trump's 'impermissible' war on 'constitutional rights'

President Donald Trump's pattern of exerting strategic pressure on various groups into supporting his agenda by threatening their federal support is blatantly unconstitutional, according to one legal expert.

In a Friday op-ed for the Washington Post, University of Pennsylvania law and philosophy professor Mitchell Berman observed that during the first five months of his second term, Trump has demonstrated a willingness to use everything from federal grants, to security clearances, foreign visas and press credentials as "leverage" to arm-twist American institutions into submission.

Berman alluded to Trump threatening to pull federal funding from public universities that have diversity, equity and inclusion programs, withholding press credentials from media outlets that don't use his preferred name for the Gulf of Mexico and denying security clearances for law firms that represented clients Trump disagrees with politically, among other examples.

READ MORE: Nicolle Wallace reveals what may finally convince Trump to 'back away from the people'

"Different targets, but one common tool: leverage," Berman wrote. "Trump uses federal funds and other government benefits to pressure individuals and institutions into exercising their constitutional rights as he prefers. This is extortionate. And therefore unconstitutional."

In his essay, Berman pointed out that Stephen Miran, who is the chairman of the Trump White House's Council of Economic Advisers, admitted that the president "views tariffs as generating negotiating leverage for making deals," saying that "access to the U.S. consumer market is a privilege that must be earned, not a right." Berman argued that even though federal funding for education and research is also a privilege, Trump is nonetheless taking that same approach to American institutions despite those institutions having explicit rights spelled out in the First, Fifth, Sixth and Tenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.

"[I]t’s impermissible to withhold benefits for the purpose of shaping or punishing American institutions for exercising the rights they do have — including free speech," Berman said.

"The courts have long recognized that such power requires constitutional limits," he added. "The president may not withhold otherwise available funds, or deny access to government benefits, to make it costly for Americans to exercise their constitutional rights."

READ MORE: Trump says 'there is no tariff' after announcing 50% tariff on major trade partner

Click here to read Berman's full op-ed in the Post (subscription required).

'The president lies daily': Watch this Al-Jazeera reporter show the correct way to interview a Trump defender

CNN’s Jim Acosta lost his White House press credentials after a testy exchange with President Donald Trump at a post-midterms press conference, where Trump accused him of being a “rude, terrible person.” But truth be told, Acosta was very polite—especially in comparison to the aggressive, no-nonsense grilling that Steven Rogers (an advisor for Trump’s 2020 campaign) recently received from Al-Jazeera’s Mehdi Hasan.

Posting a video of his interview with Rogers on Twitter, Mehdi wrote, “Hey U.S. media folks, here, I would argue immodestly, is how you interview a Trump supporter on Trump’s lies.”

It was obvious during the interview that Rogers wasn’t talking to Fox News’ Sean Hannity when Hasan (who was born and raised in the U.K. but is now based in Washington, DC) asserted that “the president lies daily, multiple times.”

Hasan cited several examples, including Trump’s claim that the U.S. is the only country in the world that offers birthright citizenship. Mehdi demanded to know if Trump’s claim was “true or false,” and Rogers responded that it was a “misstatement” without admitting that it was a lie.

Hasan also demanded that Rogers address Trump’s claim that there were riots in California over illegal immigration and sanctuary cities—and when Rogers insisted that there were, Mehdi responded that according to the president of the California Police Chiefs Association, there were no riots in response to sanctuary cities.

“There were no riots,” Hasan stressed. “He was just making it up.”

Hasan cited other Trump fabrications as well, including his claim that U.S. Steel would be opening six new steel mills as a result of his economic policies.

“There is no evidence of six new steel mills,” Hasan stressed. “He just made it up.” And Rogers couldn’t offer any evidence to the contrary, responding only that “the American people are doing well.”

Hasan told Rogers, “I’ve just put to you multiple lies, and you’ve not been able to respond to any of them.”

In addition to his work with Al-Jazeera English, Hasan (a Shiite Muslim who is a strong proponent of secular government) hosts the “Deconstructed” podcast for The Intercept.

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