President Trump has been accused of using @realDonaldTrump to troll his critics. While the President’s tweets are often attributed to his personal views, they raise important Constitutional questions. This article posits that @realDonaldTrump tweets are government speech and, where they troll government critics, they violate the Free Speech Clause. I begin the article with an exploration of President Trump’s use of @realDonaldTrump from his time as a private citizen to President. The article then chronicles the development of the government speech doctrine and the Supreme Court’s factors that differentiate private speech from government speech. I argue that, based on the factors in Walker v. Tex. Div., Sons of Confederate Veterans, Inc., @r...
New expressive technologies continue to transform the ways in which members of the public speak to o...
New expressive technologies continue to transform the ways in which members of the public speak to o...
When government operates a communications medium, it may either promote first amendment values, by e...
President Trump has been accused of using @realDonaldTrump to troll his critics. While the President...
The Supreme Court has held that when the government speaks, it faces few constitutional constraints,...
Although government entities frequently engage in issue-related campaign speech on a variety of cont...
Alarm regarding government speech is not new. In earlier decades, scholars worried that the governme...
The government speech doctrine permits the government to convey its stance on issues through its act...
Although government entities frequently engage in issue-related campaign speech on a variety of cont...
Although government entities frequently engage in issue-related campaign speech on a variety of cont...
This Article explores the wider constitutional and democratic consequences of a president’s refusal ...
Although government entities frequently engage in issue-related campaign speech on a variety of cont...
As social media popularity grows, so too does the constitutional conflicts between the First Amendme...
This analysis examines the implications of social media platforms in connection to free speech and p...
Although government entities frequently engage in issue-related campaign speech on a variety of cont...
New expressive technologies continue to transform the ways in which members of the public speak to o...
New expressive technologies continue to transform the ways in which members of the public speak to o...
When government operates a communications medium, it may either promote first amendment values, by e...
President Trump has been accused of using @realDonaldTrump to troll his critics. While the President...
The Supreme Court has held that when the government speaks, it faces few constitutional constraints,...
Although government entities frequently engage in issue-related campaign speech on a variety of cont...
Alarm regarding government speech is not new. In earlier decades, scholars worried that the governme...
The government speech doctrine permits the government to convey its stance on issues through its act...
Although government entities frequently engage in issue-related campaign speech on a variety of cont...
Although government entities frequently engage in issue-related campaign speech on a variety of cont...
This Article explores the wider constitutional and democratic consequences of a president’s refusal ...
Although government entities frequently engage in issue-related campaign speech on a variety of cont...
As social media popularity grows, so too does the constitutional conflicts between the First Amendme...
This analysis examines the implications of social media platforms in connection to free speech and p...
Although government entities frequently engage in issue-related campaign speech on a variety of cont...
New expressive technologies continue to transform the ways in which members of the public speak to o...
New expressive technologies continue to transform the ways in which members of the public speak to o...
When government operates a communications medium, it may either promote first amendment values, by e...